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News

Volunteers provide legal help for city’s homeless

By Malcolm Gay Special to the Daily Planet
Tuesday October 23, 2001

When Kalief LaHutt saw his tattered green and white RV released in front of the impound lot, he was overwhelmed.  

“It’s like getting a whole new lease on life,” said LaHutt, who has lived in the camper for more than two years. “I feel like I can get on with my life.”  

LaHutt, 44, is unemployed. Since the city impounded his camper on Aug. 24 for lack of registration and five outstanding parking tickets, he has been sleeping on roofs and under bushes. The release of his RV was the first success of the student-run Suitcase Clinic, a pilot program, which uses attorneys from the East Bay Community Law Center and law students from UC Berkeley’s Boalt Law School to offer legal advice to the city’s homeless. With the clinic’s assistance, LaHutt got the City Council to pay the $1,600 to get his camper back last month. 

Working out of Berkeley churches and shelters, the Suitcase Clinic has offered a number of services to the area’s homeless during the last 13 years. Staffed by undergraduate volunteers, the clinic offers on-site services ranging from medical exams and social worker services, to foot washing and haircuts.  

“Suitcase Clinic is run by undergraduates,” said Tirien Steinbach, a lawyer with the EBCLC and the driving force behind the project, in a six-month testing period. “It just seemed like a natural expansion of services would be to have law students involved.”  

While the clinic has long provided biweekly legal advice through lawyers of the Homeless Action Center, Steinbach said, homeless discussion groups expressed a need for expanded legal counseling. After a six-month assessment, Steinbach, local lawyers and legal interns from Cal’s law school began offering legal advice last month at all three of the Suitcase Clinic’s weekly clinics. And while the EBCLC is not officially involved in the project, its lawyers and interns are working overtime to make it a success. 

At the clinic’s service sites eight or so undergraduate volunteers are there just to talk with the scores of homeless milling about. Lawyers and interns now set up tables to provide legal counseling. The interns are accompanied and advised by local attorneys who have volunteered their services – “keeping in mind that we’re law students,” said second-year student Margaret Richardson. “We don’t necessarily have the answers, but we can search for them with people.”  

Program administrators say if a legal question cannot be resolved in one session, students research the case further. 

Steinbach said the new services are tailored to the needs expressed by homeless people. Some clients need help filing for divorce, while others have questions involving copyright protection for their writings.  

“The issues that come up every week run the gamut,” she said. 

“I always now ask: ‘Well, what do you want to happen?’” she said. “And it might be the sun, and the moon, and something that I cannot do, but at least I’ll have some sense of what they think is what needs to happen. Sometimes I’m there to say: ‘Well, this is the parameters of what is a legal solution,’ and unfortunately there’s not a lot. A lot of what I have to say is that there are not a lot of options.”  

Still, she said, there are many things they can help with, including police citations, civil rights, and bench warrants.  

Citation defense is particularly important for the homeless, Steinback said. 

“Once you’ve become involved in this swinging, revolving door of arrest and citations, and warrants and jail, and arrest and citations, and warrants and jail, it’s very hard to get out of it,” she said.  

Few homeless people can afford to pay fines for citations, Steinbach said, and one of the project’s main objectives is to help people navigate and defend themselves within the legal system.  

“The bottom line for me is empowering people to advocate for themselves, and, when we need to, advocating on their behalf,” she said.  

But Steinbach stressed that the clinic’s legal services cannot provide formal legal representation. Its primary focus, she said, is to give legal advice and refer clients to groups such as the EBCLC or individual attorneys to represent them.  

With that in mind, the Suitcase Clinic attempts to address the interplay of homeless clients’ legal, health, mental and housing problems. “Maybe you have to talk not just about getting a warrant cleared up,” said Mark Davey, an intern with the EBCLC, “but also about getting drug and alcohol treatment.”  

Steinbach said without formal consent of the client, they do not discuss cases.  

Project coordinators say they do not pressure clients to do anything they’re not ready to do. 

“Some people are working very hard not to be homeless,” Steinbach said. “Others simply want their rights enforced.”  

No two cases are alike, she said. And with each case, the program will not push clients into anything – it just provides services. 

In the case of LaHutt, he didn’t want to get off the streets. He just wanted his camper back. For years, he said, he had parked it in five or six spots throughout the area, but when he lost his job as a sales associate for the San Francisco Weekly a year ago, he said he thought he’d lost his ability to get it out of impound.  

“I had an idea of what I wanted to do,” said LaHutt, whose legal name is Gregory Hayes. “What I needed was advice. I needed to know legally what kind of action I could take.” 

Steinbach assisted LaHutt in putting the issue before the City Council. On Sept. 13, the council voted to pay for his camper’s release. Since the vehicle had not been registered, LaHutt said, the tickets could not be attributed to him.  

“It just seemed like it was such an absurdity that we were having a person that was using their vehicle as their residence and that the vehicle was taken from them.” said Councilmember Kriss Worthington, who voted to pay for the camper’s release. 

It was a great moment for LaHutt, the EBCLC and the Suitcase Clinic. Still, it was a small victory in what Steinbach says is the much larger battle of creating a community more sensitive to the needs of the homeless.  

Worthington said working on an individual’s case is not enough. “I don’t think we’ve really addressed the issue of people in their vehicles. It’s a tiny positive step for a small number of people who appear to be homeless.”  

“The city plays the important buffer role between community service providers, local businesses, the homeless population, and homeowners,” said Jane Micallef, a community services specialist for the city. “From the city’s standpoint, we have to take into account both where people without homes sleep, and how that impacts the rest of the community.”  

While LaHutt may have his camper back, nothing ensures it will not be impounded another time, or if it is impounded, that the city will bail him out again. And LaHutt continues his battle with the system. A few hours after he received his camper, police arrested him for not paying a ticket he recieved for “disturbing the peace” while he was playing music outside the Ashby BART station flea market. 

“(Berkeley is) a city, and it’s got a lot of big city issues,” Steinbach said. “You only have to walk down Telegraph Avenue a few times to see that.”  


Guy Poole
Tuesday October 23, 2001


Monday, Oct 22

 

 

Franciscanism, Understanding  

the Vision 

1 - 2 p.m. 

Franciscan School of Theology 

1712 Euclid Ave. 

Graduate Theological Union presents seminar exploring the lives, times and writings of and about Francis and Clare of Assisi. 848-5232 

 

Interfaith Couples Look at  

Love and Choices 

7:30 - 9 p.m. 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St.  

Two films to stimulate discussion about interfaith families, love and identity. $25 per couple. 548-0237 

 


Tuesday, Oct. 23

 

 

UNtraining White Liberal  

Racism 

2 - 5 p.m. 

The UNtraining offers personal work in a supportive setting for white people to address our unconscious racial conditioning. $10. Private residence, call 235-6134 for address.  

 

Low-cost Hatha Yoga Classes 

6:30 -8 p.m. 

James Kenney Rec. Center 

1720 Eighth St.  

The City is offering low- cost Hatha Yoga classes for adults. Taught by certified instructor. Drop-ins are welcome. Bring a mat or towel. $6. 981-6650 

 

Berkeley Farmers’ Market 

2-7 p.m. 

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

548-3333 

 

Berkeley Camera Club 

7:30 p.m. 

Northbrae Community Church, 941 The Alameda 

Share your slides and prints with other photographers. Critiques by qualified judges. Monthly field trips. 

531-8664 

 

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 

 

Similarities between Jewish  

and Deadhead Spirituality 

7:30 - 9 p.m. 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St.  

It’s been observed that a disproportionate number of deadheads are Jews. Dr. Leora Lawton, researcher of deadhead culture, explores the fascinating parallels between Jewish and deadhead rituals. $25 public, $15 members. 548-0237 

 

Unitarian Universalists at UC 

12:30 p.m. 

UC Berkeley Faculty Club 

Professor Michael Nagler, Chair of the Peace and Conflict Studies program, speaks on non violent solutions to current events and his new book, "Is There No Better Way?" Open to the public. (925)376-9000  

 


Wednesday, Oct. 24

 

 

Free Legal Workshop 

7 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. 

Women’s Cancer Resource Center 

3023 Shattuck Ave. 

This workshop will provide information about State and Federal disability programs that provide cash benefits and health insurance for people unable to work due to a serious health condition. 

 

Toddler Storytime 

7 p.m. 

West Berkeley Library 

1125 University Ave. 

For families with children three years or younger, a program to expose the youngest readers to multicultural stories, songs and finger plays. 

Every Wednesday through Nov. 28 

 

Prose Writers’ Workshop 

7 - 9 p.m. 

Berkeley/Richmond Jewish Community Center Library 

1414 Walnut St.  

From Op-ed to fiction, memoir to the feature article - a community 

writers' group to support and encourage a community of interests. Workshop format. Free. 524-3034 

 

Yoga for People with HIV/AIDS 

10:45 - 11:45 a.m. 

Center for AIDS Services 

5720 Shattuck Ave.  

Free Kundalini Yoga class for people with HIV/AIDS. Mats provided, you may bring a towel. Eating within an hour of class is not advised. Wear loose, comfortable clothing. Beginners and drop-ins welcome. 841-4339 

 

Socratic Circle 

6 - 7 p.m. 

Cafe Eclectica 

1309 Solano Ave., Albany 

Does your brain need a work out? Free and open to all. 527-2344. 

 


Thursday, Oct. 25

 

 

Free Quit Smoking Class  

5:30 - 7:30 p.m. 

2344 6th St. 

With the option of acupuncture. Six Thursday evenings through Dec. 6. 

Contact the Berkeley Tobacco Prevention Program to register and for more information, 644-6422 or e-mail QuitNow@ci.berkeley.ca.us 

 

“Town Hall” Community  

Meeting 

7 p.m. 

San Pablo Park 

2700 Park St. 

San Pablo Park Neighborhood Council with support from the City, will be hosting this community meeting. Scheduled to attend: Mayor Shirley Dean, Council Member Margaret Breland, Michael Caplan from the City Manager’s Office, Recreation Director Madeline Law, and Berkeley Police Personnel. 848-2427 

 

Latin Dance Class 

7:30 p.m. 

Berkeley/Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St. 

Salsa, Cha-cha, Merengue... $10, No partner necessary. All ages and levels welcome. 508-4616 

 

Berkeley Community Fund 

Eighth Annual Awards Dinner 

6 p.m. 

Radisson Hotel 

Berkeley Marina 

Bestowing the Benjamin Ide Wheller Medal and Berkeley Community Awards. 843-5202 www.berkfund.org  

 

 

Peace Satsang with Swami Sitaramananda 

7 p.m. 

First Congregational Church of Berkeley 

2345 Channing Way 

Open gathering for prayer, chanting, meditation, healing and peace talks 

honoring the victims of the Sept. 11. 273-2447 

 


Friday, Oct. 26

 

 

Listen to James Joyce’s Ulysses 

1 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave.  

Hulse Rauh leads a group listening. All are welcome.  

 


Saturday, Oct. 27

 

 

Bay Area Coalition to End the Sanctions on Iraq 

5 p.m. dinner, 7 p.m. program 

Berkeley Friends Church 

1600 Sacramento  

Speakers Hans Von Sponeck, former United Nations Assistant Secretary General, who resigned his position as humanitarian coordinator for Iraq to protest U.N. policies, and Kathy Kelly, founder of Voices in the Wilderness, who has taken 39 humanitarian aid trips to Iraq, Call for an end to the U.S. led bombing and sanctions on Iraq. 538-0209 www.endthesanctions. org 

 

 

Greening Our City Centers 

9 a.m. - 10 p.m. 

The Gaia Building 

2116 Allston Way 

The Second Heart of the City Seminar celebrating the opening of Berkeley’s new showcase ecological building and the Gaia Cultural Center. Discussions will focus on strategies and tactics for generating awareness and implementing greener city centers. 649-1817 www.ecocitybuilders.org 

 

 

Targeting Civilians 

7 p.m. 

Berkeley Friends Church 

1600 Sacramento St. 

Former UN official Hans von Sponeck and Voices in the Wilderness’ Kathy Kelly will discuss the war on Iraq and the current bombing of Afghanistan. $10 Benefits Voices in the Wilderness.  

 

 

Low-cost Hatha Yoga Classes 

9:30 - 11 a.m. 

James Kenney Rec. Center 

1720 Eighth St.  

The City is offering low- cost Hatha Yoga classes for adults. Taught by certified instructor. Drop-ins are welcome. Bring a mat or towel. $6. 981-6650 

 

 

Medical Mystery Festival 

1 - 4 p.m. 

Hall of Health 

2230 Shattuck Ave. 

A Halloween celebration that introduces children to the field of medical science and health-related issues. 549-1564 

 

Disaster First Aid 

9 a.m. - noon 

Office of Emergency Services 

997 Cedar St. 

Free classes in Community Emergency Response Training (CERT). 981-5605 www.ci.berkeley.ca.us 

 

Help Cerrito Creek 

10 a.m. 

Meet at El Cerrito's Creekside Park (south end of Belmont Street). 

Join Friends of Five Creeks in removing invasive non-natives to improve  

habitat on lower Cerrito Creek. Bring shovels and work gloves if you have them. 848 9358, www.fivecreeks.org 

 


Sunday, Oct. 28

 

 

Archaeological Institute of  

America 

1:30 - 3:30 p.m. 

Shorb House 

2547 Channing Way 

AIA Sunday Symposium: Reports from the Field — Dr. Ian Morris on the 6th century BCE site of Monte Polizzo in Sicily; Dr. Marian Feldman on prestige goods of the Late Bronze Age in the eastern Mediterranean; Dr. Christine Hastorf on early architecture at Chiripa in the Titicaca Basin of the Bolivian Andes. 415-338-1537 barbaram@sfsu.edu 

 

Our Visual Heritage 

1 - 4 p.m. 

Ashkenaz 

1613 San Pablo Ave. 

Deaf and Hearing Project of Berkeley presents an ASL (American Sign Language) accessible event, in recognition of World and Domestic Violence Prevention Disability Awareness Month featuring, music, dance, information and more. $10, Children under 12 free. 644-2003, 644-2000 (TTY) 

 

 


More to Common Ground than in the paper

Tessa StraussBerkeley High Junior
Tuesday October 23, 2001

Editor: 

I am a junior in Common Ground, and also an editor on the Berkeley High School paper, The Jacket. I have been reading your reports on our small school, and I am outraged. I understand that you must back up your staff, and that you have certain views on certain subjects. As news reporters, your job is not to state your opinion, but, more importantly, to inform your readers about what is going on in the community. I know that to publish an article or editorial, there are often intense discussions that precede publication. When we printed the story about the Common Ground Yosemite trip, we had talk after talk about what kind of publicity we wanted to focus around. As it was a news story, we definitely did not want to sensationalize it. What we opted for was just the facts, negative and positive. Besides just printing the Yosemite story, and then forgetting about Common Ground altogether, in our next issue we are printing a story on the field studies that many students are involved in and enjoying immensely.  

No one ever told you to “sit down and shut up.” The parents who wrote to you only hoped that you would include positive slants when you write about Common Ground. So many newspapers print negative views on life; it would be more original to print the good things as well. To report on the wilderness and communications committees that the Common Ground students have formed, along with the problems that occurred in Yosemite, would be honorable.  

As for the trip itself, for me, the point of going was to bond with fellow students and teachers in a beautiful environment. I did just that. I made new friends, took a wonderful scenic walk, and just had fun. Only a small percentage of our group took advantage of the low supervision ratio, and the rest of us had an amazing time. All this despite the obvious lows of having to leave early and having to have to see our teachers, whom we all love dearly, standing before us telling us that we all messed up, that we are leaving, and seeing the tears in their eyes. As for that, yes, we messed up, but it was on everyone, the students and the teachers.  

Our teachers gave us the two things young people have been wanting forever from adults – respect and trust. Because of these teachers, I love going to school. Last year I was just enrolled in BHS, not in a small school. I had many teachers who were not inspired, who didn’t enjoy teaching. I hated school, and was overjoyed when my English teacher told me about Common Ground. My friends and I immediately signed up. All the teachers in Common Ground want to be there, they want to help the school, they want to inspire us students. I can’t wait to get to school each day, and I can’t wait to join the projects that my amazingly creative group of peers come up with. While Common Ground is just shakily getting on its feet, it has amazing and dedicated students and teachers backing it up, trying, and succeeding greatly, to make it the perfect environment. 

 

Tessa Strauss 

Berkeley High Junior 

 


Staff
Tuesday October 23, 2001

MUSIC 

924 Gilman St. Oct. 26: Influents, Plus Ones, Divit, Summerjack, Robot Adrenaline, Claredon Hills; Oct. 27: (Halloween show, $1 off if you’re in a (non-punk) costume!) Babyland, Tsunami Bomb, Scissor Hands, Dexter Danger; All shows start a 8 p.m. unless noted; Most are $5; 924 Gilman St. 525-9926 

 

Blake’s Oct. 22: The Steve Gannon Band and Mz. Dee, $4; Oct. 23: Felice, $3; Oct. 24: Erotic City, DJ Maestro, $2; Oct. 25: Psychotica, $5; Oct. 26: Planting Seeds, $6; Oct. 27: Felonious, $6; Oct. 29: The Steve Gannon Band and Mz. Dee, $4; Oct. 31: Erotic City, DJ Maestro, $2; All shows 9:30 p.m. 2367 Telegraph Ave. 848-0886 

 

Cal Performances Nov 8: 8 p.m. Gypsy Caravan 2: A Celebration of Roma Music and Dance, $18 - $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; Oct. 19: Little Jonny and the Giants; Doors open at 8 p.m. unless noted. 3629 Martin Luther King Jr. Way, Oakland. 655-6661 

 

 

THEATER 

“Prometeh in Evin” Oct. 28: 8 p.m., A drama about political prisoners in Iran, performed by the brave and innovative Parsian Group. Julia Morgan Center for the Arts. $25, Children, $15 2640 College Ave 845.8542 www.juliamorgan.org. 

 

“Approach” Through Oct. 27: Thur. - Sat., 8 p.m. An examination of the search for intimacy as our most precious form of survival. Written by Susan Wiegand, Directed by Katie Bales Frassinelli. $15 general admission, $10 students and seniors. Eighth Street Studio Theatre, 2525 8th St. 655-0813 www.shotgunplayers.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 

 

“me/you...us/them” Nov. 8 though Nov. 10: Thur - Sat 8 p.m., matinee on Sat. 2:30 p.m. Three one-acts that look at interpersonal, as well as societal relationships from the perspective of the disabled. $10 - $25. Julia Morgan Center for the Arts, 2640 College Ave. 925-798-1300 

 

“Nocturne” Through Nov. 11: Tues./Thurs./Sat. 8 p.m., Weds. & Sun. 7 p.m, matinee on Thurs./Sat./Sun. 2 p.m. Mark Brokaw directs Anthony Rapp in One-Man Show. Written by Adam Rapp. $38 - $54. Berkeley Repertory’s Thrust Stage, 2025 Addison St. 647-2949 www.berkeleyrep.org 

 

“Travesties” Through Nov. 17: Fri. - Sat., 8 p.m., and Thurs., Nov. 15, 8 p.m. A witty fantasy about James Joyce meeting Lenin in Zurich during World War I. Written by Tom Stoppard, Directed by Mikel Clifford. $10. Live Oak Theatre, 1301 Shattuck. 528-5620 

 

“Macbeth” Nov. 9 though Nov. 18: Fri. - Sat., 8 p.m., Sun. 5 p.m. Presented by the Albany High School Theater Ensemble. $7 adults, $5 students and seniors. Albany High School Little Theater, 603 Key Route Blvd. 559-6550 x4125 theaterensemble@hotmail. com 

 

“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 

 

FILM 

Pacific Film Archive Theater Oct. 22: 7 p.m., The Closed Doors; Oct. 23: 7:30 p.m., Super-8mm Films by Theresa Cha; Oct. 24: 7:30 p.m., The Rainy Season and Wai’a Rini; Oct. 26: 7:30 p.m., The Passion of Joan of Arc, 9:15 p.m., Vivre sa Vie; Oct 27: 7 p.m., New Music for Silent Films by UCB Composers; Oct. 28: 5:30 p.m., Vampyr; Oct. 29: 7 p.m., A Time for Drunken Horses; Oct. 30: 7:30 p.m., An Evening with Leslie Thornton; Oct. 31: 7:30 p.m., 9:20 p.m., Saudade do Futuro. 

2575 Bancroft Way, 642-1124 www.bampfa.berkeley.edu 

 

EXHIBITS 

“First Annual Art Show” UC Berkeley Life Drawing Group Reception, Through Oct. 26: 7 - 10 p.m. Figure studies from the workshops at UC Berkeley. 1014 60th St., Emeryville. 923-0689 

 

“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  

 

“Cut Plates and Bowls” Annabeth Rosen, “Just Jars” Sandy Simon Through Nov. 3; Saturdays 10 - 5 or by appointment. Trax Ceramic Gallery, 1306 3rd St. 526-0279. cone5@aol.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. Mon. - Fri. 8 a.m. - 6 p.m. U.C. Berkeley, Graduate School of Journalism, North Gate Hall, Hearst and Euclid. Free. 642-3383 

 

“Jesus, This is Your Life - Stories and Pictures by Kids” Through Nov. 16: California children, ages four through twelve, from diverse backgrounds present original artwork, accompanied by a story written by the artist. “Cleve Gray, Holocaust Drawings” Oct. 15 through Jan. 25: 21 works on paper inviting the viewer to consider the atrocity of the Holocaust in ways unattainable through words or text. Mon. - Thur. 8:30 a.m. -10 p.m., Fri. 8:30 a.m. - 6 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m. - 6 p.m., Sun. 12 p.m. - 7 p.m. Flora Lamson Hewlett Library, 2400 Ridge Rd. 649-2541. 

 

“Changing the World, Building New Lives: 1970s photographs of Lesbians, Feminists, Union Women, Disability Activists and their Supporters” 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. 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 

 

“2001 James D. Phelan Art Awards in Printmaking” Honorees: Bridget Henry, David Kelso, and Margaret Van Patten. Oct. 19 - Nov. 30 Tues. - Fri. noon - 5 p.m., other times by appointment. Kala Art Institue, 1060 Heinz Ave. 549-2977 www.kala.org 

 

“The Whole World’s Watching: Peace and Social Justice Movements of the 1960s and 1970s” Through Dec. 16: A documentary photo exhibition which examines the rich history of the social movements of the 1960s and 1970s. 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 Oct. 22: J.M. Redmann reads from “Death By the Riverside”; 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 Telegraph Ave. Oct. 26 Sage Cohen & Mari L’esperance read their poetry; All shows at 7:30 p.m.; 2454 Telegraph Ave. 845-7852 

 

Eastwind Books of Berkeley Nov. 10: 4 p.m. Ruthanne Lum McCunn reads from her novel “Moon Pearl”; Nov. 18: 4 p.m. Noel Alumit, M.G. Sorongon, and Marianne Villanueva read from their contributions to the anthology “Tilting the Continent: Southeast Asian American Literature”; 2066 University Ave. 548-2350 

Ecology Center Oct. 22: 7 - 9 p.m. Toby Hemenway presents a slideshow and reads from “Gaia’s Garden: A guide to Home Scale Permaculture”; 2530 San Pablo Ave. 548-220 x233 

 

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 Sun., 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Rides: Sun., 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; Oct. 25: A Storytelling Pajama Party, 6 - 7 p.m.; Oct. 27: 4th Annual Habitot Halloween; Oct. 28: Family Arts Day; Oct. 31: Sugar-Art Halloween Frosting; Nov. 3: Tales from the Enchanted Forest, 11 a.m. - 12:15 p.m.; Nov. 9: Living with the Earth; Nov. 17: Recycle that Stuff; $4 adults; $6 children age 7 and under; $3 for each additional child age 7 and under. Mon. and Wed., 9:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.; Tues. and Fri., 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Thur., 9:30 a.m. to 7 p.m.; Sat., 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sun., 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. 2065 Kittredge St. 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. Mon. through Fri., 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sat. and Sun., 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.  

 

University of California Berkeley Art Museum Pacific Film Archive has reopened after its summerlong 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. 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  

 

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


City Council splits in redistricting struggle

By John Geluardi Daily Planet staff
Tuesday October 23, 2001

The result of the recent redistricting brawl is a bitterly divided City Council, with one faction charging the other with gerrymandering and a group of citizens vowing to put a referendum on the March ballot to challenge the newly-approved districts. 

The dust hasn’t begun to settle and some residents are suddenly weighing the value of having council districts at all.  

“Council districts have been a mixed bag,” said Councilmember Betty Olds. “In San Francisco they got rid of district elections and now they have them back again, which tells you there’s no Utopia either way.” 

Utopia is the last thing anyone would call the atmosphere on the City Council when “redistricting” is mentioned. The recent redistricting process, required by the City Charter every 10 years after the release of the census data, has council moderates stepping up the usual bitter council debate by charging the progressives, who hold a one-person majority on the council, with taking advantage of a census undercount to gerrymander districts that favor progressives and weaken moderates. 

Progressives have fought back equally as hard saying moderates know the approved district plan best fits the City Charter requirements and that moderate charges are sour grapes and little more than negative campaign sound bites meant for next year’s mayoral election. 

Furthermore, a newly formed political action group, Citizens for Fair Representation, announced the launch of a petition drive last week to put a referendum on the March ballot to reverse the districts approved by 5-4 City Council vote on Oct. 2. 

There was a time 15 years ago when there were no districts in Berkeley and the council had to find other things to fight over. 

According to former Councilmember Nancy Skinner, who opposed district elections when they were on the ballot in 1986, residents had become disenchanted with citywide council elections in 1982 when city election day was switched from April to November. 

She said November elections resulted in 20,000 more register voters participating in city elections than in the April elections. 

The higher turnout resulted in a more left-leaning council. In fact, according to Olds, there were eight Berkeley Citizens Action (progressive) councilmembers to just one Berkeley Democratic Club (moderate) Councilmember. 

“Barbara Lashley was the only moderate on the council then,” Olds said. “Despite being outnumbered she still went to all the meetings. I don’t know why.”  

There was a strong feeling that the two political factions were too powerful and that only those who were connected with the political machine could run for the City Council, according to former Councilmember Carla Woodworth, who was then chair of the Progressive Coalition for District Elections. 

“We had an at-large system and there was a hue and cry from some neighborhoods that they weren’t being represented,” Woodworth said. “The idea was that districts would make it less expensive to run for the council and that would result in more people running, which would be more democratic.” 

The arguments supporting council districts on the June 1986 ballot included an end to party politics, council representatives more responsive to neighborhood issues and greater participation by grassroots activists who might want to run for office. 

Opponents argued that district elections would be more expensive because of a provision that when there was no clear winner in a particular district, there would be a run off. They further argued that the measure was a thinly-veiled attempt to thwart the voters’ will by unseating progressives and that minorities would lose representation on the council. 

“It turned out to be true that the number of African-Americans on the council dropped after the districts were approved,” said former Councilmember Skinner, “Before there were always three or four (African-Americans) and since there has not been more than two.” 

Skinner added that despite a the surface arguments that appeared in the 1986 sample ballot, there was another factor driving proponents of council districts.  

She said there was great deal of worry in some neighborhoods about a popular low-income housing program known as “scattered sites.” The program would choose various locations around the city to build a series of small developments, six to 10 units, instead of concentrating low-income housing in a larger development of 30 or more units. 

“Some neighborhood groups were worried about these projects cropping up in their particular communities and thought council districts would give them a better chance of fighting them.” she said. 

Councilmember Polly Armstrong said she was a big supporter of districts in the beginning but now has mixed feelings.  

“It was great that neighbors had someone to make sure the potholes were fixed, the trees were trimmed and the streets were safer,” She said. “But I’m afraid that little groups within certain districts have aggregated too much power and councilmembers are sort of required to dance on the head of a pin for a vocal minority.” 

Councilmember Miriam Hawley said she thought the council districts could use some tweaking. She said some councilmembers get so involved with the issues in their districts that they lose sight of what’s good for city at large.  

“Residents have more clout with a single council person and I don’t think anyone really wants to get rid of the districts,” she said, “but voters might be willing to make some changes.” 

Hawley suggested that reducing the number of districts to five and having three councilmembers elected at large would assure a broader perspective on city issues.  

Former Councilmember Woodworth agreed. She said one of the larger citywide issues that residents lost interest in after the districts went into effect was the Telegraph Avenue and Downtown districts. 

“These are areas that generate millions in city revenue every year and there had always been a citywide concern about the health of those areas,” she said. “But after the city was divided into districts people who didn’t live in those areas were no longer interested.” 

Councilmember Kriss Worthington who represents the Telegraph Avenue area and beat Woodworth in a run-off election in December 1996, said he is more effective as a district councilmember because he can focus on his district’s needs while still paying attention to larger citywide issues.  

“Segmenting the city into eight council districts makes the load for each councilmember more manageable,” he said. “I spend most of my time on issues in my district, but I’m also very involved in citywide issues such as transportation and pedestrian safety.” 

While there is disagreement about the value of council districts as they currently exist and the brouhaha over the recently-approved district boundaries is ongoing, no one has heard of a serious movement to go back to citywide elections. 

“You hear people questioning the districts once in a while but I haven’t heard anyone who is motivated enough to go out and start collecting signatures,” Olds said. “It would take an extreme situation for the city to go back to citywide elections.” 


Time to unite

Gamaliel “Gamie” Gamboa San Diego
Tuesday October 23, 2001

Editor: 

Thank you for the detailed article “Local firefighter recalls personal NYC effort.” That article reinforced my confidence that I spent four great years living in Berkeley to attend the finest university in the world, and your article gave me hope for Berkeley during these times of uncertainty.  

Still, I have disagreements with the city manager’s decision to ban large American flags on Berkeley fire trucks, and I also disagree with the City Council’s 5-4 vote calling for an end to bombings of Afghanistan. Yes, I do know that smaller American Flags are allowed on Berkeley Fire Trucks (I spoke to someone at the city manager’s office via telephone and I did read the media’s over-blown story with skepticism). In addition, I know that flag waving war supporters were in equal number to the anti-war protesters in the city hall meetings. In addition, I know that the mayor said that the phone calls of war proponents out number the phone calls of war opponents 2-1.  

Finally, I deplore the death threats to the anti-war Berkeley politicians (i.e. Rep. Barbara Lee), and I also deplore the flag vandalism which has occurred. In my views, the perpetrators of the death threats and instigators of the flag vandalism are under the same category as each other.  

Nevertheless, we must be united during these times of crises. We must take note to the words of President Abraham Lincoln and the bible, “A House Divided Cannot Stand.”  

My years of living in Berkeley from 1989-1993 has shaped my intellect and life in positive ways. Things are different living in this Conservative Navy Town in which I grew up, San Diego. Nevertheless, despite our differences (I am a proud Republican), I believe we can find common ground and unity amidst the diversity of thoughts and opinions in the greatest country of the world, the United States. The Daily Planets’s article on the local firefighter really moved me, and the article/the firefighter’s recollection has given me hope for Berkeley, hope for the United States, and hope for these times of chaos and uncertainty.  

I know that our diverse views and opinions will continue to find common ground and unity(despite how difficult of a struggle that would be). Our ability to find common ground and unity will “allow our house to remain undivided and allow our house to stand.”  

Therefore, “our house will not be divided and our house will not fail to stand.”  

 

Gamaliel “Gamie” Gamboa 

San Diego 


Some will boycott others will come because of stand

Lloyd AndresBerkeley
Tuesday October 23, 2001

The Daily Planet received this letter addressed to Mayor Shirley Dean: 

 

I read that you are receiving considerable correspondence condemning the City of Berkeley’s stand to end the bombing of Afganistan as soon as possible. But what else could Berkeley do? Certainly we don’t support the killing of innocents in this country or abroad.  

When leaders take us down the path of action that leads to more innocent deaths and destruction, what do we do? Is it unpatriotic to ask that justice be done without causing hardship to those who were not involved in the crime?  

Its alright to carry the flag for truth and for “liberty and justice for all”.  

( I wouldn’t want to carry it for any other reason.)  

Its alright to differ from what the majority believe.  

This is why I like living in the United States and especially Berkeley. 

There will be some who will boycott Berkeley business because of the city’s call to end the bombing as soon as possible. Then again there will be others attracted to Berkeley business because of our stand against the killing of innocents.  

I like to think that Berkeley is not one to isolate itself from the hardships faced by others, either here at home or around the world.  

Lloyd Andres 

Berkeley 

 


Some will boycott others will come because of stand

Lloyd Andres Berkeley
Tuesday October 23, 2001

 

The Daily Planet received this letter addressed to Mayor Shirley Dean: 

 

I read that you are receiving considerable correspondence condemning the City of Berkeley’s stand to end the bombing of Afganistan as soon as possible. But what else could Berkeley do? Certainly we don’t support the killing of innocents in this country or abroad.  

When leaders take us down the path of action that leads to more innocent deaths and destruction, what do we do? Is it unpatriotic to ask that justice be done without causing hardship to those who were not involved in the crime?  

Its alright to carry the flag for truth and for “liberty and justice for all”.  

( I wouldn’t want to carry it for any other reason.)  

Its alright to differ from what the majority believe.  

This is why I like living in the United States and especially Berkeley. 

There will be some who will boycott Berkeley business because of the city’s call to end the bombing as soon as possible. Then again there will be others attracted to Berkeley business because of our stand against the killing of innocents.  

I like to think that Berkeley is not one to isolate itself from the hardships faced by others, either here at home or around the world.  

 

Lloyd Andres 

Berkeley 

 


E = H2O: Water is energy

Alice La Pierre
Tuesday October 23, 2001

One wouldn’t think that watering a lawn and garden or washing a car would have any effect on California’s tense energy situation, especially since these activities don’t use hot water. 

But according to East Bay Municipal Utility District data, the winter runoff into the Pardee Reservoir in the Sierra foothills (our main water source) was only 56 percent of normal this year.  

While this is enough to meet current customer demand, it means we are heading into the fall with a shortage. So how does this affect our energy supply? 

California is currently the largest producer of renewable energy in the United States – approximately 15 percent of our energy comes from hydroelectric power, according to the California Energy Commission. 

There are 386 hydro-electric plants producing 41,617 gigawatt-hours of electricity, creating a dependable capacity of 14,116 megawatts of electricity. Some of that electricity is generated through pumping stations, where water is pumped uphill during off-peak times, and let flow back through the turbines to generate electricity during peak-use times. As the demand for water increases, more water must be let through to meet consumer needs, making less water available for pumping stations. 

Hydroelectric is non-polluting, unlike coal- and gas-generated electricity, which not only generate pollution, but heat water to make steam which turns the generators – wasting more fresh water. 

Data from the World Resources Institute’s 2001 Report shows that we have only half the amount of fresh water available per person worldwide than was available in 1960. By the year 2020, it is calculated we will have only half as much per person as we have now. The lack of fresh, clean water is likely to be one of the key factors limiting economic growth in the 21st century.  

Heating water is about half of the average family’s natural gas bill. The less hot water used, the more money a family saves. 

Reducing water usage can be achieved through a variety of ways. Immediate methods include: 

• Take shorter showers – a five-minute shower can save eleven gallons of water over a 10-minute one, as well as the energy costs to heat that extra water.  

• Wash clothes in cold water, and make sure you wait and only run the washer when you have a full load. 

• Scrape plates and bowls thoroughly before putting them in your dishwasher, and run the shorter wash cycle. There is a water heater inside your dishwasher, and roughly 80 percent of the energy used by dishwashers goes toward heating the water; the rest is used to run the motor that sprays the water, operates the heater unit, and the fan that dries the dishes. Air-dry dishes by turning off the machine and opening the door just as the drying cycle kicks in. 

Long-term water reduction steps include: 

• Reducing lawn size and planting native plants and drought-tolerant varieties of flowers and fruiting vines and shrubs. Good plants for Berkeley’s climate include pineapple guava, kiwi, citrus, poppies, sticky monkey flower, mugworts, plums, figs and almonds. Check with your local nursery for drought-resistant varieties. Trench soaker hoses underground permanently to reduce evaporation (and cut down on weeds!) 

• Replace old clothes washers with new, energy-efficient and water-conserving front-loading machines. You can get a double rebate on this appliance – one from PG&E, and the other from EBMUD, for a total of about $150 cash back until the end of December 2001. And don’t forget to use a solar dryer (clothesline). 

• Replace older dishwashers with a new EnergyStar model, and use the energy-saver features it has. PG&E has a rebate of $50 available for residential dishwashers purchased before December 2001, or until funds are depleted.  

For a complete list of rebate programs on all appliances, visit the website of the California Energy Commission at: www.consumerenergycenter.org/rebate/index.php 

EBMUD has a variety of water conservation programs, including irrigation rebates, free residential showerheads and aerators, plus a low-flow toilet rebate program for both residential and business consumers. For complete program details, visit their website at: www.ebmud.com/services/conservation/residential.html  

If energy conservation isn’t enough to convince you to conserve water, remember that water prices are going up. Water bills are divided into four parts: the service charge, the Seismic Improvement Program surcharge (started in 1995 and payable over 30 years), the actual usage charge, and an elevation surcharge for locations over 200 feet. While water is still reasonably inexpensive at first look, remember that the total costs of water and energy are greater than what appears on your bill. 

For more information on saving water and energy, visit the Energy Office website at: www.ci.berkeley.ca.us/ENERGY 

 

 

Alice Pierre is the city’s energy officer. The Daily Planet runs “power play” the first and third Tuesday’s of the month as a public service. 

 

 

 

 

 


Act to stop the war, but not as councilmember

Tom McHenry Berkeley
Tuesday October 23, 2001

Editor: 

I’m saddened to see that members of our City Council are again trying to use their elected positions to promote their personal political views on national issues, by expressing them as letters from the “City of Berkeley”. 

While I applaud the courage and conviction of Ms. Spring and others’ personal beliefs in the uselessness of the war in Afghanistan, and encourage her and others to work tirelessly as individuals to promote those views, it is a deep misunderstanding of our representative democracy, and of the rule of law, to think that election to a position of responsibility for the civic affairs of our town is a lucence to advocate a personal political position in the name of us all. Its a divisive, indeed, corrosive view that is widespread in our community; many board and commission members similarly seem to think that appointment to a position of responsibility somehow validates their personal views and opinions, regardless of the actual legal scope of their mandate – witness the recent ZAB meeting where a member rejected the findings of the Design Review Board, the legal entity entrusted with aesthetic decisions, because he personally thought a design was “ugly.” 

The legal charter, and social contract, we have with our City Council is that they run the city. Its an honest and important job, and done with intelligence and dedication may give its members greater credibility in their individual endorsement of larger political views, or their search for a larger constituency. They are welcome to it. But please, do not presume to make those endorsements, or seek that constituency, in the name of us all...Whether or not we agree with those views, it is abuse of our trust to attempt to do so. 

 

Tom McHenry 

Berkeley 

 


Bay Briefs

Staff
Tuesday October 23, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO — As the impact of last month’s terrorist attacks ripples through the Bay Area’s economy, communities from San Francisco to Monterey are mulling cuts to public programs and the possibility of furloughing some workers. 

San Francisco, which like Santa Cruz and Monterey depends heavily on hotel taxes and tourist spending, could eliminate new programs such as hepatitis health education and tree planting. In San Jose, spending on parks, recreation programs, sewer maintenance and stop lights are under scrutiny. 

Officials across the region are bracing for even worse times next fiscal year, which begins in July. 

“The real question is how much money we’ll get for next year and how much we’ll be able to continue offering services,” said Matthew Hymel, San Francisco’s chief assistant controller. 

Santa Cruz Mayor Tim Fitzmaurice sees trouble sooner than that. 

“We might not have the money to do basic city business,” he said. “We see real trouble ahead if we’re not careful.” 

 

 

SAN JOSE — A San Jose engineer seeking to hike America’s three premier trails in one year may accomplish his goal by week’s end. 

On January 1, 2001, Brian Robinson embarked on his attempt to hike the Appalachian Trail, the Continental Divide Trail and the Pacific Crest Trail. 

To finish the Appalachian Trail — the last of the trio he has to walk — Robinson must still hike Maine’s Mt. Katahdin. Barring bad weather, he hopes to trek the 118 miles left of the trail in six days, according to his Web site. 

Robinson, 40, has already completed the Pacific Crest Trail and the Continental Divide Trail.  

 

OAKLAND — A 14-month-old Pinole boy bitten by a rattlesnake in the backyard of his home was in stable condition Monday at Children’s Hospital. 

The boy was moved from the intensive care unit to a regular room Monday morning, said hospital spokeswoman Carol Hyman. 

The snake bit him Sunday on his right thumb, according to the Pinole Fire Department. Firefighters found the snake behind some garden pots and killed it. 

Young, immature snakes, like the one that bit the boy, are particularly dangerous because they do not regulate how much venom they release in a single bite, said fire Capt. Brian Larry. 


Dissent – defense against tyranny

Carmel Hara Berkeley
Tuesday October 23, 2001

Editor: 

Kudos to Judith Scherr on her column of October 19. I couldn’t agree with her dissent more.  

As Thomas Jefferson said “Our liberty depends on freedom of the press and that cannot be limited without being lost.”  

This should be our motto, and must never be forgotten. It is our strongest defense against corruption or tyranny. 

 

Carmel Hara 

Berkeley  


Protege seeking Condit’s seat in Congress

By Brian Melley The Associated Press
Tuesday October 23, 2001

SACRAMENTO — Assemblyman Dennis Cardoza said Monday he is running for Rep. Gary Condit’s seat in a move that marks a public split between the longtime friends and political allies. 

As Condit’s protege, Cardoza had long said he would not run unless his former boss retired. 

But with Condit on the ropes from the Chandra Levy scandal and little word on his future plans, Cardoza decided to enter the ring. 

“I don’t think he can win,” Cardoza said. “I also don’t believe he can be as effective as he was in the past.” 

While Condit hasn’t formally announced his plans, he has begun collecting signatures to run for re-election, indicating the two could face each other in the Democratic primary for the 18th Congressional District. 

Condit’s chief of staff, Mike Lynch, said Cardoza’s move was not a sign of bad blood between the two men. 

“This is America, anybody can run for anything,” Lynch said. 

The connections between Condit and Cardoza run deeper than a common interest in farming, the future University of California campus in Merced and water. 

Condit hired Cardoza as an aide years ago and when Cardoza rose through the ranks to lawmaker, he repaid the favor. He hired Condit’s son, Chad, at one point and still employs Condit’s sister, Dovie Wilson, as an office manager. 

Chad Condit’s wife, Helen, was paid as a fund-raiser last year and another in-law, Jamie L. Filice, was hired as a senior field representative. 

In recent weeks, the relationship between Condit and Cardoza has become strained, Cardoza said. 

“Oh, I think it’s splitsville,” said Sandra Lucas, chairwoman of the Stanislaus County Democratic Central Committee in Modesto, the heart of the district. “Right now I assume the friendship is not that strong.” 

Cardoza, of Atwater, said he decided to run after Condit canceled his annual “Condit Country” fund-raiser because of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. The fund-raiser had been scheduled for last Saturday. 

Cardoza would not elaborate but said he didn’t believe that was why Condit canceled the barbecue. 

The attacks on New York and Washington gave Condit a reprieve from headlines after months of bad publicity. 

Polls show that Condit’s support has tanked since his relationship with Levy, a federal intern who vanished in May, became the top news story of the summer. 

Although police say he is not a suspect in the disappearance of the 24-year-old Modesto woman, he admitted he had an extramarital relationship with her, according to police sources. 

Sources said Condit had encouraged Cardoza, who cannot run for re-election because of term limits, to run for the state Senate. 

Cardoza, 42, said he never planned to enter national politics at this point in his career, but the opportunity was too great to pass. 

“It might have been a gift if it had been someone else in his situation. It was very painful to watch a close friend go through the trauma that he’s gone through,” Cardoza said. “I take no joy in Congressman Condit’s troubles whatsoever.” 

Cardoza planned to formally launch his campaign Tuesday in Modesto and later in Merced, the county where his grandparents immigrated from Portugal to start a dairy and crop farm. 

He said he was “healthy as a horse” after losing 80 pounds since May when he underwent intestinal bypass surgery. He said the procedure cured his cravings and relieved nerve problems in his feet. 

Cardoza will face Tom Ciccarelli, executive director of Inter-Faith Ministries in Modesto, who announced plans last week to run for the Democratic nomination. 

Two Modesto Republicans, Sen. Dick Monteith and City Councilman Bill Conrad, have announced they are running. 

Cardoza, who once ran a bowling alley that hosted mud wrestling matches, vowed not to run a dirty campaign. But it’s likely that some mud will fly in the fight for the congressional seat. 

“Probably, there will be some blood,” Lucas said. “But the good thing is there will be blood on the other side as well.”


NASA 2001 Mars Odyssey spacecraft nears Red Planet

The Associated Press
Tuesday October 23, 2001

LOS ANGELES — The 2001 Mars Odyssey was nearing the Red Planet on Monday, poised to fire its main engine for the first and only time to slow the robotic spacecraft and allow it to settle into orbit after a six-month trip from Earth. 

If the satellite is captured into orbit Tuesday night, it will mark NASA’s first successful mission to Mars since the loss of two spacecraft, Climate Orbiter and Polar Lander, in 1999. 

During the maneuver, scheduled to begin at 7:26 p.m., Odyssey’s engine will burn through 579 pounds of propellant in just under 20 minutes. The burn should leave the satellite orbiting Mars every 20 hours or so on an elliptical path. 

Entering orbit could be the riskiest move the unmanned probe will make during a $297 million mission to map the makeup of the Martian surface: two of the last three orbiters the National Aeronautics and Space Administration sent to Mars failed, both just before or upon arrival. 

Controllers plan to direct Odyssey to dip into the fringes of Mars’ atmosphere in a technique called aerobraking to gradually lower and circularize the orbit. NASA’s Mars Global Surveyor, already at work over the Red Planet, used the same process to reach the altitude from which it has made highly detailed images of the surface since arriving in 1997. 

One of the Odyssey probe’s three instruments was designed to image Mars in the infrared to probe the distribution of minerals on the planet’s surface. Another is intended to measure gamma rays coming from the surface to pinpoint specific elements, including hydrogen, most likely in the form of buried deposits of water ice. 

Wielding those tools as would a prospector, Odyssey will assay Mars, eventually building up what will be the first inventory of the planet’s global makeup. 

A third instrument — which suffered glitches after launch — was designed to assess the radiation risks that future human missions to Mars may encounter.


Flying ban eased on private planes, but some businesses still remain grounded

By Tom Harrigan The Associated Press
Tuesday October 23, 2001

LOS ANGELES — Before Sept. 11, Jerry Hider’s one-man, one-plane business was towing banners promoting products and entertainment over Los Angeles area beaches, stadiums and residential areas. 

Six weeks after the terrorist attacks, the federal government has begun lifting many restrictions on some private commercial aircraft, but not all.  

Hider believes it’s time the authorities let him get back into business. 

“Pulling banners along the beach from Malibu to Orange County used to be our main gig,” he said, estimating he has lost more than $5,000 in income since Sept. 11. 

On Monday, the Federal Aviation Administration lifted many restrictions on private planes equipped with transponders for five cities including Los Angeles, San Francisco and Las Vegas. 

San Diego airspace will be added on Tuesday for private planes observing visual flight rules, which are used by about 90 percent of the nation’s 500,000 private pilots. 

Some types of aircraft still face tight restrictions, however, including planes towing banners, which are not allowed within three miles of large gatherings. Sightseeing, TV news and traffic-reporting aircraft also are banned within 25 miles of major airports, as are airship blimps. 

Hider said the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association and the Southern California Aerial Advertising Association are asking the FAA to loosen those restrictions. 

“I don’t see how having a Cessna 172 modified to tow banners and fly at only 50 miles an hour constitutes a terrorist threat,” he said. 

Threatening or not, one person who doesn’t miss the advertising aircraft is Charles Thompson, a spokesman for the Rose Bowl in Pasadena. 

“Neighbors hate the planes,” he said. “They’re dangerous. They’ve almost flown into each other. They’re noisy, and no one pays attention to them.” 

The return of other general aviation aircraft to the nation’s skies was welcomed by Lt. Col. Bill Cowman of the California Civil Air Patrol Wing, with 6,000 members 

“It’s about time,” he said. “The flight restrictions have been a detriment to a lot of people in private aviation.” 

The loosening of post-Sept. 11 restrictions have allowed operations at Van Nuys Airport to return almost to normal.  

The San Fernando Valley facility, with its 1,200 to 1,500 arrivals and departures a day, is the nation’s busiest general aviation airport. 

Things are also getting back to normal at Santa Monica Airport, just eight miles north of Los Angeles International Airport. Eighty percent of the airport’s 500 planes were grounded until Monday. 

Not that the general aviation pilots allowed back into the air have the freedom they once had. 

“General aviation has been cautioned not to be doing loops or any other abnormal flying that would attract the attention of air controllers,” said FAA spokesman Mike Fergus. “The last thing they want to do is call for a DOD (Department of Defense) escort.” 


Report: UC must spend millions to attract grad students

The Associated Press
Tuesday October 23, 2001

LOS ANGELES — The University of California system needs to spend $215 million annually to expand programs and financial support to attract graduate students, according to a commission’s report. 

The Commission on the Growth and Support of Graduate Education in a report to UC regents next month will warn that the system needs to add 11,000 graduate students to remain competitive and maintain UC’s research mission. 

The UC Board of Regents, deans, professors and outside academics agree that steps must be taken soon or the UC system’s goal of attracting top-notch researchers will be threatened. 

“UCLA, as well as the other UC campuses, are losing some of the most talented and potentially creative and productive graduate students to other institutions,” said Jim Turner, assistant vice chancellor of graduate studies at UCLA. 

The shortage of graduate students threatens all eight of UC’s general campuses, including longtime academic powerhouse UC Berkeley and younger institutions such as UC Irvine. 

California in the last decade was one of only five state where graduate enrollments declined. The other four were Arkansas, Kansas, Oklahoma and Connecticut. 

Undergraduate enrollment at UC campuses has doubled over the last three decades, but the number of graduate students has increased just 7 percent. The figures do not include students in professional programs, such as law, business and medicine. 

Unlike undergraduates, nearly all graduate students receive financial aid consisting of tuition reimbursement, fellowships, teaching assistant positions and health insurance. 

UC officials said they are trying to compete with private schools that have billion-dollar endowments. Some schools offer better financial packages and waive out-of-state fees. 

The high cost of housing near most UC campuses also is making the financial squeeze on students even tighter. 

Most UC schools have made limited efforts to raise money for graduate fellowships. UCLA has raised millions of dollars in the last seven to eight years, but less than 1 percent has gone to help graduate students, Turner said. 

UC Berkeley, like other UC campuses, is starting to address the problem individually. The school has launched a campaign to raise $200 million for graduate fellowships, said Mary Ann Mason, dean of the graduate division. 

UC Berkeley also is looking to partner with private developers to provide more affordable graduate student housing and UC Irvine is going to ask the regents to approve two major housing projects to serve graduate students.


Pediatricians’ conference in San Francisco addresses bioterrorism

By Ritu Bhatnagar The Associated Press
Tuesday October 23, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO — Pediatricians are urging officials to take steps to protect children against bioterrorism, saying they are especially vulnerable to its effects. 

The American Academy of Pediatrics’ annual conference this weekend offered panels addressing how to treat infants and children if they become infected with a bioterrorist agent. 

“They live closer to the ground, so aerosol agents with heavy particles will affect them more,” said Dr. Frederick Henretig, one of the speakers at a panel Sunday. “Their skin is thinner and they can be affected developmentally.” 

The doctors noted the recent anthrax infection of a 7-month-old baby in New York. The infant is the child of an ABC employee and had been in the network’s offices, where authorities believe the baby may have contracted the disease. 

“We know that children are much more vulnerable to a chemical exposure,” said Dr. Steve Berman, president of the academy. “There’s been talk about decontamination or special uniforms or equipment, but what if those don’t fit children or don’t allow children to be cared for? 

“If we embark on smallpox vaccine or anthrax vaccine, what happens if there are complication rates for children or aren’t as effective for them? It is absolutely critical that people with pediatric specialties are involved in disaster planning,” he said. 

Berman quickly pointed out that there is no need for parents or pediatricians to become overly alarmed, creating panic. 

Other sessions, part of a disaster-related series, focused on psychological concerns, such as how to talk to children about crisis and loss. 

Doctors from around the world attended the conference, fearing that anthrax and other types of bioterrorism could affect their countries. 

“I attended a similar conference in Chicago last week and am understanding how important it is to create a network of colleagues around the world to get better prepared,” said Dr. Sally McCarthy, an emergency physician from Australia. 

Some doctors noted that bioterrorism agents are typically easy and cheap for terrorists to obtain, even though it’s often difficult to weaponize such materials. 

“Any of you with two semesters of microbiology can go out and grow this stuff yourself,” said Dr. Theodore Cieslack. 

Cieslack said another problem that could arise in a crisis situation is a lack of facilities or equipment to treat many people. 

“Botulism, as of 2000, is survivable. But you have to put the patient on a ventilator for seven months after infection,” he said. “Imagine what would happen if 10,000 people are infected at the same time and there aren’t enough ventilators?” 

Cieslack said he considered the most harmful agents to be anthrax, smallpox and the plague, because very few samples are needed to produce illness or death on a large scale. 

Doctors said diagnosing smallpox in children can be particularly difficult since the early stages of the rash can easily be confused with chicken pox. 

“It’s tough to suspect that you’re dealing with something sinister,” Cieslack said. “One saving grace that smallpox has is that it has a long incubation period — 12 days — so you can immunize within a couple of days of infection.” 

——— 

On the Net: 

http://www.aap.org 


BART insists last offer is best; union still threatens strike

By Colleen Valles The Associated Press
Tuesday October 23, 2001

OAKLAND — With a strike deadline looming Monday at midnight, Bay Area Rapid Transit officials and members of the transit system’s smallest union remained at odds over job security. 

Management at the commuter train network says its offer of a 22 percent pay raise and benefits package is the best it can do. The union, which represents 238 train controllers and supervisors, says it’s satisfied with the compensation but worries jobs will be outsourced. 

The offer is reportedly similar to the contract that BART unions representing maintenance and train operators accepted September 4.  

Those contracts called for a 22 percent wage increase over the next four years, increased pension plan contributions and continued health care coverage at no added cost to employees. 

If the two sides don’t agree by midnight Monday, the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Local 3993 could strike. Leaders of the largest two unions have said they will honor AFSCME’s picket line, but BART officials insist they will find a way to keep trains running for 300,000 commuters. 

The supervisors’ union rejected BART’s “best and final” offer Oct. 15. BART officials asked the union to return to the bargaining table and local elected leaders have been trying to get both sides to settle. 

In a written statement, Willie Kennedy, president of BART’s board of directors, said local elected leaders would do best to encourage both sides to stay at the table and finish negotiations, rather than rush a settlement. AFSCME representatives could not be immediately reached Monday.


Celebrity fan mail scrutinized in wake of anthrax attacks

By Chelsea J. Carter The Associated Press
Tuesday October 23, 2001

LOS ANGELES — Fan mail — that old barometer of an entertainer’s popularity — has become off-limits for many in Hollywood since the anthrax mail attacks in New York City, Washington and Florida. 

Studios, networks and publicists say thousands of letters have been returned to sender or just set aside. Some celebrities have signed up with services that open fan-mail for them; others have simply stopped opening mail. 

“For the time being, we are just not opening fan mail. Just to be careful, we are putting it off for now,” said publicist Pat Kingsley, who represents actor Tom Cruise, among others. 

Thousands of unsolicited letters pour in to celebrities every week. Although most are simple declarations of admiration, precautions have long been taken to check for suspicious letters and packages. 

“There is always a concern with celebrity fan mail because it comes from unknown people. But anthrax has added a new element,” said PMK publicist Tracy Shaffer, who represents such acts as singers Evan and Jaron. 

The FBI has not received a specific threat related to celebrity mail, said Cheryl Mimura, an FBI spokeswoman in Los Angeles. 

“We haven’t sent out any sort of advisory in Hollywood,” she said. 

Shaffer said some of her clients contacted her after a letter containing anthrax was received in the New York office of NBC anchor Tom Brokaw. 

“We are directing our clients to use fan-mail services,” she said. Such services open mail for celebrities, and return photographs and autographs to fans. 

Studio Fan Mail Services, one of the oldest and largest fan-mail services in the country, has begun advising fans to send postcards rather than letters. 

“Most of the mail our clients get is from children. We’re telling them to write a postcard. That way they can still send their message,” said owner Jack Tamkin. 

Others suggest e-mail. 

“We are returning fan letters and sending a note along asking them to correspond by e-mail,” said Scott Rowe, Warner Bros. vice president of communications.  

Movie studios and TV networks receive the bulk of fan mail, and some have stopped delivering it. 

Rocker Pat Benatar said she always was careful with fan mail and “I’m trying really hard not to wig out on this. I’m trying to keep a perspective on it. But when we get the mail I’m careful about it. I tell my children not to touch it.” 

Fan mail is important to many actors and celebrities. 

“It’s somebody that takes time to buy a card or get a piece of paper and pencil, collect some thoughts and put them on a piece of paper. That means something,” said David Brokaw, who along with his brother Sanford make up the Brokaw Co., which represents Bill Cosby among others. 

Brokaw would not comment on mailroom procedures implemented because of the anthrax scare. 

“We are being vigilant. But I also say we are by no means hysterical about it,” he said. 

Soap-opera actor Steve Blackwood is no stranger to threatening letters. Playing bad-boy Bart on NBC’s “Days of Our Lives,” he said fans sometimes confuse him with his character. Typically, he has ignored such letters. But recently he received one that left him feeling uneasy. 

“In two previous story lines, we blew up a restaurant and we blew up a part of fictional Salem. I get this letter that says, ’How do you feel about giving terrorists ideas,”’ he said. “I got kind of spooked.” 

Blackwood said he has stopped opening fan mail at home. 

“For now, we just have to take precautions and ride it out,” he said. 


UC Berkeley gay rugby player seen as hero for all

By Margie Mason Associated Press Writer
Tuesday October 23, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO — Mark Bingham was a strapping 220-pound, 6-foot-5 rugby player who had fought off muggers on the street and run with the bulls in Spain before taking on the terrorists on United Flight 93. 

One of the heroes to emerge from America’s biggest tragedy, Bingham has also become a symbol of hope to the nation’s gays — a man whose sexual orientation made no difference when lives were at stake. 

“I think Mark was always my personal hero,” said Paul Holm, Bingham’s former partner of six years. “We didn’t run around waving gay flags, but we were very proud to be gay and if people asked, he told them.” 

Flight 93 was en route from Newark, N.J., to San Francisco on Sept. 11 when Bingham, 31, called his mother saying they had been hijacked by three men who said they had a bomb. Bingham, sitting within reach of the cockpit, is believed to be one of those who fought the terrorists and caused the plane to crash into a Pennsylvania field instead of its apparent target in Washington. 

Now, liberals and conservatives alike invoke Bingham’s name as an example of America’s strength and spirit. 

California’s top politicians presented Holm with an American flag, and San Francisco Supervisor Mark Leno wants to build a Bingham memorial in the city’s predominantly gay Castro District. 

“If he knew that lives were at stake, I’m convinced with every bone in my body that he would have jumped into action,” Holm said. “He was physically fit and strong and guns and weapons didn’t bother him.” 

He fought off muggers in New York and San Francisco, wrestling a gun away despite being hit on the head. Over the summer, he was gored while running with the bulls in Spain. 

Bingham, who lived most of his life in Northern California but moved to New York not long before the terrorist attacks, also was a proven leader. He had coached his gay rugby team, the San Francisco Fog, was president of his fraternity at the University of California at Berkeley and started his own public relations firm, the Bingham Group, in San Francisco and New York. 

“He was a true competitor, and it went from everything from Scrabble to card games,” Holm said. 

Recently, after his rugby team was accepted into the straight California Rugby League, he e-mailed a pep talk to his teammates. 

“We have the chance to be role models for other gay folks who wanted to play sports, but never felt good enough or strong enough. More importantly, we have the chance to show the other teams in the league that we are as good as they are,” Bingham wrote. 

“Gay men weren’t always wallflowers waiting on the sideline. We have the opportunity to let these other athletes know that gay men were around all along — on their little league teams, in their classes, being their friends. This is a great opportunity to change a lot of people’s minds.” 

Among gays, reactions to Bingham’s death are a mix of pride and sadness, frustration and hope. 

“I wish people could just understand that wherever they go, they will meet us. It’s just very sad to me that it takes a brave young man like Mark Bingham to lose his life so horribly for people to begin to understand that,” said Cleve Jones, a gay activist who created the AIDS quilt in San Francisco. 

Jones choked back tears as he talked about a soldier boyfriend being shipped out to the Middle East. He said Bingham’s heroism should serve as the catalyst that ends the military’s “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy on gays. 

“I think this would be a very good time for the president to put his name on a piece of paper and end this stupid policy,” Jones said. “We are all needed.” 

The attacks have helped lead to some political change: Republican New York Gov. George Pataki decided that partners of gays killed in violent crimes can get benefits from the New York Crime Victims Board. 

“Do you think for a minute that one of those men or women fleeing the towers trying to save themselves ... do you think one of them thought for a minute, ‘I wonder what the sexual orientation of that fireman is?”’ Pataki said. “This is still the greatest country in the world, but we can make it a little better. We can learn a little bit from Sept. 11.” 

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., a supporter of “don’t ask, don’t tell,” wants Bingham and other Flight 93 passengers to get a Congressional Gold Medal, Congress’ highest civilian honor. Bingham, a Republican, had met McCain briefly and wanted to see him elected president. 

“I may very well owe my life to Mark and the others,” McCain said in a tearful eulogy. 

Bingham is not the only gay hero to emerge from the attacks. Nine others killed on Sept. 11 were remembered at a memorial attended by nearly 1,000 people at New York’s Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender Community Center. 

For many, the testimonials were a profound counterpoint to suggestions by televangelists that God let the attacks happen because of the influence of gays, feminists, abortionists and others. 

“One of the things I found most painful of this whole experience is that the trade center is still smoldering and they’re still dragging bodies out and Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson can’t do anything but go on TV and blame this on the ACLU and gays and lesbians,” Jones said. 

Falwell later retracted his remarks. 

Bingham’s mother, Alice Hogland, said she hopes her son educated others by destroying preconceptions. 

“He was a very masculine, crazy kid who left his dirty dishes under the bed and dirty clothes behind the door in the bathroom,” she said, laughing. “There was nothing about him that fit into any stereotype of what we perceive of as a gay person, which goes to show you we cannot rely on our stereotypes.” 

——— 

On the Net: 

http://www.markbingham.org 

http://www.gaycenter.org/press/clinton-remarks.htm 


Can you cut corporate subsidies in war time?

By John Cunniff The Associated Press
Tuesday October 23, 2001

NEW YORK — If corporate welfare were to be eliminated, a paper published by the Cato Institute contends, the federal government could give taxpayers tax cuts that would make earlier rebates seem small. 

Picking its way through federal budget numbers, it finds at least $87 billion in federal subsidies — also called handouts — to private-sector companies, including General Motors Corp., Dow Chemical Co. and General Electric Inc. 

Keeping a wary eye on government spending is fundamental to Cato, a Libertarian think tank that tends to equate government growth with restraints on individual liberty and free, competitive markets. 

Government has its proper role and the private sector it’s, and Cato says the joining of the two produces problems. Well, for one, for taxpayers, to cite and example. 

“How much did some federal departments give away?” it asks. It answers: Agriculture, $35.8 billion; Transportation, $10.3 billion; Housing and Urban Development, $7.5 billion; Energy, $5 billion. 

Alas, at least from Cato’s viewpoint, it is destined to get worse. There are important roles for government, such as the security of the nation. And in that role, recent events have compelled government to grow. 

The nation’s airlines are getting a $15 billion bailout, the rationale in part being that they are essential to the public welfare. And warding off recession involves $40 billion of emergency spending. 

It could be just the beginning.  

Other industries, important to local and regional interests or to national security, may seek assistance, and in doing so further blur the separation of public and private sectors. 

Bioterrorism dictates changes, and a federally appointed advisory commission is already believed ready to advise the creation of a government-owned facility to assure a stockpile of vaccines. 

A weak economy also demands or, it is argued, justifies government spending to stimulate activity, such as measures to improve the nation’s transportation system. Or to extend welfare benefits for laid-off workers. 

In such ways, Cato suggests, government spreads its power. But you can’t blame government entirely. Private sector businesses cooperate in government spending, their lobbyists even initiating the process. 

President Bush’s first proposed budget sought to cut about $12 billion in corporate welfare, but it also included increases for other programs, including aid to oil and aerospace companies. 

And, you might argue, isn’t such assistance eventually in the interest of national security? Ah, that’s the problem. Of course a strong private sector is in the nation’s interest, but how do you draw the line? 

Because of current events, the arguments pro and con have now been made even less distinct. Cutting has become more difficult, spending more easily justified. And longer-run consequences have been put on hold. 

Nevertheless, the Cato paper, written by Stephen Slivinski, a fiscal policy analyst, offers a possible solution: the convening of a corporate welfare reform commission. 

That commission, says Slivinski, could function like the successful military base closure commission, proposing to Congress a list of cuts on which members of Congress would have to declare themselves. 

End Adv PMs Tuesday, Oct. 23. 


MusicNet names new CEO, moves headquarters to NY pending launch

By Ron Harris The Associated Press
Tuesday October 23, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO — MusicNet, the joint venture between three major record labels, named MTV veteran Alan McGlade as new chief executive Monday and announced it would move headquarters from Seattle to New York. 

MusicNet promises to launch this fall and provide subscribers with a way to download music from the Internet through various online retailers. Software maker RealNetworks formed the service with record labels Warner, BMG and EMI. 

A competing service from Universal and Sony, called pressplay, is also set to launch this fall. No firm launch date has been set for either service. 

The MusicNet board of directors confirmed McGlade as CEO Friday. He replaces RealNetworks’ CEO Rob Glaser at the top MusicNet post. 

McGlade previously headed The Box Music Network, an MTV Networks company that provided 24-hour, interactive music television. 

“I want to create a huge community of users,” McGlade said Monday. He acknowledged that MusicNet’s early days would be a process of “trial and error,” but promised to seek more content from labels not yet licensed with MusicNet. 

MusicNet’s long-term goal is too amass partnerships and provide a platform to deliver as much music online as possible, McGlade said. He did not rule out working with Sony and Universal. 

“We need to acquire all the music that is out there,” said McGlade, who also will serve on the MusicNet board of directors. 

Much of the demand for online music grew from the popularity of Napster, which the recording industry sued in an attempt to stop the unauthorized trade of music files over the Internet. 

Napster has been offline since July, but says it will relaunch in the near future. It is now primarily financed by Bertelsmann AG, the German media giant that owns the BMG record label. Napster also struck a deal to license music from MusicNet earlier this year, marking a turnaround from days past when everything on the service could be had for free. 

Meanwhile, the Justice Department is investigating MusicNet and pressplay for allegedly anticompetitive practices. Both companies were recently subpoenaed to produce documents related to their formation and planned operations. 

Glaser, who remains chairman of MusicNet, said the company is cooperating fully with the investigation. MusicNet will try to win over users by convincing them the network is easy to use, he said. 

“We have to remind people of the incredible value you get when you get access to a catalog with tens of thousands of selections,” Glaser said.


Yahoo bids for more users, ad revenue

The Associated Press
Tuesday October 23, 2001

SUNNYVALE — Yahoo! Inc. is enhancing its instant-messaging service with a variety of new virtual “environments” for online chats, in a bid for more users and advertising revenue. 

Beginning Monday, Yahoo is adding themed backgrounds to its messenger service. The real-time chats will appear in new forms such as in frames or thought bubbles in a comic strip, for example. 

The backgrounds are meant to make the service more fun to use and more attractive to advertisers because they can include links to pages with products for sale.  

Yahoo has signed on the Peanuts, Dilbert and Hello Kitty cartoon franchises, plus Nintendo and the rock band Garbage. 

The new service satisfies two of Yahoo’s aims: to make online advertising more appealing and to move up from its third-place position in number of instant messaging users, behind America Online and Microsoft’s MSN. 

“It’s a new way for users to express emotions and their thoughts,” said Lisa Pollock, Yahoo’s director of messaging products. “We think this is going to catapult us in usage.”


7.6 million jobs funded by venture capitalists

The Associated Press
Tuesday October 23, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO — Venture capitalists have helped launch U.S. companies that created 7.6 million jobs while generating $1.3 trillion in total revenue during past three decades, according to a report released Monday by the industry’s biggest trade group. 

The report, compiled by economic researchers DRI-WEFA for the National Venture Capital Association, estimated that employers created one job from every $36,000 of venture capital invested between 1970 and 2000.  

The study looked at independent companies that received early financing from venture capitalists, as well as venture-backed start-ups now owned by other firms. 

California, long considered fertile ground for venture capital, benefited most from the industry’s rise, the report said. Venture capitalists invested $108.8 billion in California start-ups. 

years covered by the study, creating 1.4 million jobs and spawning $270.6 billion in total revenue. 

Massachusetts start-ups received the second biggest sum of money — $26 billion — and parlayed the investments into 318,433 jobs and total revenue of $48.4 billion. Texas companies did more with less venture capital, turning investments of $17.2 billion into 676,158 jobs and total revenue of $158.2 billion, the study reported. 

The report, which expanded on preliminary figures released in May, highlighted an industry that is wrapping up the worst year in its history


Infrastructure pact signed for Hong Kong Disneyland

The Associated Press
Tuesday October 23, 2001

HONG KONG — The government signed the first infrastructure contract for Hong Kong’s planned Disney theme park Monday with a mainland Chinese construction company. 

Lau Ching-kwong, the territory’s civil engineering director, signed a $267 million contract with China State Construction Engineering Corporation to build facilities at Penny’s Bay, off the outlying Lantau Island, a government statement said. 

The contract was the first of five for Disneyland infrastructure and will include work on roads, a sewer system, a drainage system, water supply systems, landscaping, dredging and land reclamation. 

The project will begin on Wednesday and is scheduled to be completed in April 2005, the statement said. 

Plants and trees supplied locally as well as imported from China, Southeast Asia and Australia will be planted “to create instant lush greenery effect,” said the statement. 

So far, a project to reclaim about 190.27 acres of land has been completed, as has most of the dredging work, said Lau. 

The government is collaborating with Burbank-based Walt Disney Co. to build the $3.55 billion theme park in Hong Kong, which is due to open in 2005.  

The government has been criticized for supplying the land and footing most of the bill for the park, but said it hoped the project will create jobs and attract tourists. 


AOL Time Warner signs first-time deal to broadcast in China

The Associated Press
Tuesday October 23, 2001

BEIJING — AOL Time Warner Inc. announced a landmark deal on Oct. 22 that will make it the first foreign TV broadcaster in China. In exchange, it will carry Chinese state television’s English-language channel on U.S. cable systems. 

Financial terms were not disclosed. 

Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp. is trying to negotiate a similar arrangement with China and its rapidly developing television audience. 

Chinese officials regard television as a key propaganda tool and strictly control it, though millions of Chinese already watch foreign broadcasts on illegal satellite dishes. Beijing appeared to be willing to relax those controls slightly in exchange for getting access to American audiences. 

Under the terms of the deal, AOL’s Chinese-language channel CETV would be carried on cable systems in the southeastern province of Guangdong beginning next year. It will be the first time that a foreign broadcaster reaches Chinese audiences with government approval. CETV, based in Hong Kong, already is seen in Taiwan, Singapore and elsewhere in Asia. 

CETV’s programming is a mix of Chinese entertainment shows, cartoons, game shows, movies and sports. It also carries versions of some U.S. shows like “Miami Vice” and the cartoon “Johnny Bravo” dubbed into Chinese. 

Tricia Primrose, an AOL Time Warner spokeswoman, said the channel carries no news programs. She had no details on whether the agreement includes provisions for Chinese censorship of CETV programming. 

In exchange, the Chinese government’s English-language CCTV-9 will be available to American audiences in New York City, Los Angeles and Houston. 

Viewers in Guangdong can already see television broadcasts from neighboring Hong Kong. The former British colony is not covered by central government censorship, and its stations are livelier — and their news reporting more aggressive — than state-run mainland media. 

The English language channel put out by China’s state broadcaster resembles a less adventuresome version of U.S. public broadcasting channels, with an emphasis on educational and cultural programs. 

It carries a mix of news, music and cooking shows, documentaries on nature and travel, Chinese lessons and sports. However, production quality is uneven and shows are staid and slow-paced compared to U.S. television. 

A Hong Kong-based Chinese network in which News Corp. subsidiary STAR is a stockholder, Phoenix, has been granted permission to broadcast to the economically booming Pearl River Delta in the southern province of Guangdong near Hong Kong, the state-run Yangcheng Evening News reported on Oct. 20. 

 

BROADCASTING: 

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Scripps Networks has signed several long-term agreements with Time Warner Cable to boost distribution of its lifestyle channels by nearly 12 million viewers within the next two years. 

The agreement allows Time Warner Cable to carry HGTV (Home & Garden Television), the Food Network and the DIY Network (Do It Yourself), all of which Scripps owns. 

Time Warner also will carry Scripps’ newest network, Fine Living, which is set to launch in early 2002. 

Financial terms were not disclosed. 

“Time Warner Cable has given a tremendous vote of confidence to our established networks,” said Susan Packard, president of new ventures for Scripps Networks. “In addition, by committing to Fine Living months before its launch and by greatly increasing DIY’s distribution, those convergent networks are similarly poised to become mainstays in American homes.” 

The Food Network will be added to Time Warner Cable systems in markets including Houston; Tampa, Fla.; Minneapolis; Milwaukee; and Charlotte, N.C. 

Time Warner also will add HGTV to some of its systems that aren’t now carrying it. 

Food Network is now distributed to 67 million homes; HGTV, 74 million homes. DIY Network, primarily available through satellite systems, is expected to reach 20 million subscribers by 2003, with Fine Living reaching 5 million in its first year. 

Scripps Networks, based in Knoxville, is an operating unit of The E.W. Scripps Co., a media corporation based in Cincinnati. Time Warner Cable owns and manages cable operations serving 12.7 million customers. 

——— 

On the Net: 

http://www.scrippsnetworks.com/ 

http://www.aoltimewarner.com/ 

+++++ Minnesota Public Radio to expand in St. Paul 

ST. PAUL. Minn. (AP) — Minnesota Public Radio, which produces 14 national programs, said Oct. 18 it plans to stay in St. Paul and expand its downtown headquarters. 

Network officials said the plan to purchase two properties near its headquarters is the first phase in a five-year effort to expand programming, content and distribution. 

MPR will receive a forgivable three-year, $3.3 million city loan, and grants from four foundations to help fund the expansion. MPR is working on plans for a capital fund drive to cover other development and construction costs. 

Minnesota Public Radio employs more than 260 people and has been complaining since 1999 that it had outgrown its 45,000-square-foot headquarters. It expects to add at least 100 jobs over 10 to 15 years. 

Its shows, which include Garrison Keillor’s popular “A Prairie Home Companion,” are heard by 7.6 million listeners each week. 

——— 

On the Net: 

Minnesota Public Radio: http://www.mpr.org 

+++++ 

 

INTERNET: 

 

AOL unveils radio service as part of revamp 

NEW YORK (AP) — America Online introduced a new radio feature as part of an upgraded version of its service, AOL 7.0. The Oct. 16 announcement came a day after rival Microsoft Corp. announced an upgrade of its online service, MSN. 

AOL, which is part of the media and entertainment conglomerate AOL Time Warner Inc., said the new service would carry 75 different channels of music as well as news, sports and talk programming. 

Kevin Conroy, head of AOL’s music division, called the radio service the cornerstone of AOL’s music offerings to its 31 million subscribers. AOL’s music offerings include Spinner, an early entrant to Internet music broadcasting. 

AOL said it would offer the 7.0 upgrade to existing customers for no extra charge. 

Microsoft said the new version of its MSN service and Web portal would more heavily promote the company’s paid Internet services and be closely tied to its new operating system, Windows XP. 

 


Washington Post in slump, earnings low

The Associated Press
Tuesday October 23, 2001

WASHINGTON — The Washington Post Co. reported a 95 percent decline in third quarter net earnings due to an advertising slump and charges to write down investments. 

The company, whose properties include The Washington Post and Newsweek, reported net income of $1.6 million, or 14 cents per share, compared with $33.5 million, or $3.51 per share, in the period a year ago. 

Excluding the effect of about $26 million in investment write-downs, earnings for the most recent quarter were $15.1 million, or $1.56 a share, above the $1.39 per share analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial/First Call were expecting. 

The company attributed the decline to a 19 percent drop in advertising revenue at its advertising-based businesses. That includes its flagship newspaper, where ad revenue fell 20 percent in the quarter, as well as at its television stations, which saw a 23 percent decline. 

However, Newsweek magazine had what the company described as a “significant spike” in newsstand sales following the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. Revenues were also higher at its Kaplan test preparation and educational services division. 

Total revenues fell 1 percent to $595.5 million from $602.4 million in the period a year ago. 

 

 

 

ORK (AP) — The New York Times Co. reported a sharp drop in earnings for its third fiscal quarter as declining advertising revenues fell further in the wake of Sept. 11. 

The Times posted net earnings of $43.8 million in the three months ended Sept. 30, down 42 percent from $75 million in the period a year ago. Taking out one-time gains and charges, which included expenses related to staff reductions, profits fell 27 percent to $46.3 million versus $63 million. 

Total revenues fell 9 percent to $696.9 million, versus $767.7 million in the period a year ago, and were led by a decline of 16 percent in advertising revenues to $452.7 million. Excluding revenues from properties that were sold, overall revenues declined 8 percent and advertising revenues fell 15 percent. 

Earnings per share fell to 30 cents, compared with 37 cents in the year-ago period. The results were in line with analyst estimates reported by Thomson Financial/First Call. Like other newspaper publishers and media companies, the Times warned investors last month that its third-quarter earnings would be affected by the terrorist attacks. 

The company said it lost $1.8 million in advertising revenues from its eight television stations as regular programming was interrupted for full-time news coverage following the attacks. 

The company also reported that advertising revenues in its newspaper group fell 15 percent in September compared to September 2000. 

Chief executive Russell T. Lewis told investors that despite the increase in news-related costs, the company still managed to record a 4.8 percent decline in overall expenses for the quarter. The Times has scaled back its work force this year and made other cost cuts due to the downturn in advertising. 

Lewis said the company received huge demand for its papers in the days following the attacks, and for several days printed three times the usual number of newsstand copies. 

For all of September, average daily circulation of the paper increased by about 130,000 copies, and Lewis said he is hopeful a good portion of the new readers will stay with the Times. 

Lewis added, however, that because the outlook for the fourth quarter remains unclear, the company could not offer investors guidance on how the next several months would play out. 

In addition to The New York Times, the company publishes The Boston Globe and 16 other newspapers. Newspaper publishing makes up 94 percent of the company’s revenues. 

——— 

On the Net: 

http://www.nytco.com 

+++++ Knight Ridder earnings fall 27 percent 

SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) — Knight Ridder’s net income plunged 27 percent in the third quarter as the Sept. 11 attacks led to a steep drop in newspaper advertising and higher costs associated with increasing news coverage. 

The nation’s second-largest newspaper publisher reported net income of $55.7 million for the three months ending Sept. 30, compared with $76.1 million in the period a year ago. 

Revenues slumped 10 percent to $693.1 million from $769.2 million. 

Per-share profits were 65 cents, in line with guidance the company issued a month ago and 2 cents above the estimate of analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial/First Call. Year-ago earnings were 87 cents. 

Chairman and chief executive Tony Ridder said the terrorist attacks cost the company $10 million, including $9 million in lost advertising revenue, after accounting for temporary increases from condolence ads, and additional costs of $2 million for extra editions and creating more space for news. Offsetting those costs were added circulation revenues of $1 million. 

Ridder said the attacks reversed a slight comeback in retail advertising. That combined with an already soft market for general advertising and help wanted ads turned September into a “memorably bad month,” he said. 

In a separate report, Knight Ridder said total advertising revenues at its newspapers fell 16 percent in September compared to September 2000. Year-to-date advertising revenues were off 7 percent. 

Ridder said that while the company’s prospects had started to look up in the weeks after the attacks, they fell back once the U.S. bombing campaign began in Afghanistan. But he noted that cost savings from a downsizing effort announced in April were paying off, and he added that newsprint costs were heading lower. 

He did not specifically lower the outlook for the company’s full-year earnings, which stand at $2.91 per share, as measured by Thomson Financial/First Call, but he noted that there still exists a “harsh revenue environment” and that achieving full-year earnings goals would be contingent upon “resumption of more normal business patterns.” 

Knight Ridder, based in San Jose, publishes 28 newspapers in major markets across the country, including the San Jose Mercury News, The Miami Herald and The Philadelphia Inquirer. 

——— 

On the Net 

http://www.kri.com. 

 


News reporter fired after jokingly sprinkling powder

The Associated Press
Tuesday October 23, 2001

DES MOINES, Iowa — A television news reporter was fired after he jokingly sprinkled face powder around the newsroom in front of co-workers, his lawyer said. 

Steve Oswalt, 48, who worked at KCCI-TV for 15 years, sprinkled the powder Oct. 15, attorney George LaMarca said. 

The prank was clearly done in a joking manner in front of managers who knew there was no threat, LaMarca said. 

“I don’t know how any reasonable person could believe that Steve had anthrax,” LaMarca said. 

News director Dave Busiek said Oswalt was no longer an employee as of Oct. 19. He declined to comment further. 

LaMarca declined to comment about possible legal action. 

“I won’t get caught up in hysteria,” he said. “We’re assessing the matter in a calm and reasonable fashion.” 

 

 

 

 

 


More Californians are driving to Las Vegas

The Associated Press
Tuesday October 23, 2001

LAS VEGAS — Traffic on Interstate 15 at the California-Nevada border in September spiked nearly 16 percent over September 2000, according to Nevada Department of Transportation data. 

By Sept. 13, traffic was up more than 19 percent, with 31,500 cars passing through Primm that day on I-15, the data showed. 

Kirk Anderson, vice president of radio broadcaster the Highway Stations, which compiled the NDOT numbers, told the Las Vegas Sun he’s never seen anything like it. 

“Over the last 20 years we’ve done research on the highway, it’s been evergreen ... up steadily 4 to 6 percent a year,” Anderson said. “Never have we seen the kind of instantaneous change that’s taking place.” 

Overall, I-15 traffic in September was up 3.9 percent to 1.08 million, but that number is misleading. 

From Sept. 1 to Sept. 10, the growth rate averaged 0.6 percent per day. Following the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks to Sept. 30, it averaged just under 7 percent. 

“It’s a silver lining in what otherwise looks like a pretty dark cloud,” said William Eadington, director of the Institute for the Study of Gambling and Commercial Gaming at the University of Nevada, Reno. 

The cause, most observers agree, is fairly obvious. 

“It means people don’t want to fly,” said Alan Feldman, spokesman for MGM Mirage, the largest hotel-casino operator on the Las Vegas Strip. “It’s the reason our occupancy is anywhere close to normal. Otherwise we’d probably all be down close to 60 percent (occupancy).” 

Numbers provided by McCarran International Airport Friday reinforce that theory. In September, McCarran reported 2.12 million passengers went through the airport for the month — down a whopping 28.3 percent from the year-ago period. 

To compensate for the decline, Las Vegas hotel-casino operators have cut room rates heavily since Sept. 11.  

And the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority has launched a targeted marketing campaign on certain key markets — particularly the major drive-in markets of Los Angeles, San Diego and Phoenix. 

The result has been weekend occupancy of close to 100 percent, but at far lower rates than normal. 

That continued to be the case over the weekend, Feldman said. 

“Occupancy was closer to normal, but rates were still substantially down,” Feldman said. “Revenues across the board remain down.” 

But Anderson doesn’t believe all the new drivers are necessarily bargain-hunters. Instead, Anderson said many are people who normally fly, who are turned off by long lines at the airports and concerned about safety. 

“These are not people that have historically driven, but have flown,” he said. 


Willie Brown gives State of the City address in SF

The Associated Press
Tuesday October 23, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO — Mayor Willie Brown’s State of the City address Monday wasn’t as optimistic as it’s been in past years, but he said he’s confident San Francisco will rebound from the dot-com crash and current economic slump. 

Brown called the dot-com collapse an “absolute disaster,” and said the city much switch its attention from dot-coms and tourism to biotechnology. 

“The one segment of the U.S. economy that has not been touched ... and that’s the world of biotechnology,” Brown said. 

He said a new biotechnology firm just signed a 10-year lease in the city, and he’s welcoming others. 

Brown asked for a moment of silence to remember those who died in the terrorist attacks Sept. 11 and assured citizens that everything is being done to boost city security measures and come up with a positive economic strategy to help relieve the $60 million to $100 million deficit. 

“That means without touching the surplus we’re in a position to manage our city,” Brown said. 

The mayor also discussed how hard the tourism industry has been hit as a result of the attacks and slowing economy. In response, he said the city has created a tourism outreach plan that is urging people to come to San Francisco, including calling potential visitors on the phone and personally inviting them. 


Thousands show support for Lee’s vote

By Yunji de Nies, Special to the Daily Planet
Monday October 22, 2001

Congresswoman opposed U.S. military action 

 

More than 2,000 people gathered at Frank Ogawa Plaza yesterday afternoon to rally in support of U.S. Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Oakland, who cast the lone vote Sept. 14 opposing the open-ended use of military force in the United States’ war against terrorism. 

The People’s Non-Violent Response Coalition of the East Bay, an ad-hoc group of East Bay elected officials, community leaders, artists and residents, organized the event, calling it, “A Community Gathering to Express Appreciation for Barbara Lee and her Courageous Vote.”  

Event organizer and Oakland City Councilmember Nancy Nadel said the gathering was, “to thank Barbara Lee for her courageous vote.” The event sought to support all families and innocent victims affected by the Sept. 11 attacks, including those in Afghanistan who are now under a military campaign that the United States began Oct. 7, Nadel said. 

Nadel said that the gathering was also intended to present alternatives to war, to end racial profiling of Arab-Americans and to honor the right to dissent. 

At the gathering, people held signs that read, “Barbara Lee for President,” as the American and world flag flew side by side. A variety of community leaders, including the Rev. Eloise Oliver of the East Bay Church of Religious Science, the Rev. Alfred Smith of Allen Temple Baptist Church, as well as Barbara Lee herself, spoke about the need for a mindful, rather than what Oliver termed, “impulsive” response. 

“God Bless you Barbara Lee for your courage to speak the truth, and your willingness to be all that God has designed you to be,” Oliver said. 

Celebrities, including Pulitzer-prize winning author Alice Walker and actor Danny Glover, also praised Lee’s vote. Glover read a Langston Hughes poem and ended by saying, “Thank you Barbara Lee for voting your conscience, for standing up for justice.”  


Out & About Calendar

Compiled by Guy Poole
Monday October 22, 2001


Monday, Oct 22

 

Franciscanism, Understanding  

the Vision 

1 - 2 p.m. 

Franciscan School of Theology 

1712 Euclid Ave. 

Graduate Theological Union presents seminar exploring the lives, times and writings of and about Francis and Clare of Assisi. 848-5232 

 

Interfaith Couples Look at  

Love and Choices 

7:30 - 9 p.m. 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St.  

Two films to stimulate discussion about interfaith families, love and identity. $25 per couple. 548-0237 

 


Tuesday, Oct. 23

 

UNtraining White Liberal  

Racism 

2 - 5 p.m. 

The UNtraining offers personal work in a supportive setting for white people to address our unconscious racial conditioning. $10. Private residence, call 235-6134 for address.  

 

Berkeley Farmers’ Market 

2-7 p.m. 

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

548-3333 

 

Berkeley Camera Club 

7:30 p.m. 

Northbrae Community Church, 941 The Alameda 

Share your slides and prints with other photographers. Critiques by qualified judges. Monthly field trips. 

531-8664 

 

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 

 

Similarities between Jewish  

and Deadhead Spirituality 

7:30 - 9 p.m. 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St.  

It’s been observed that a disproportionate number of deadheads are Jews. Dr. Leora Lawton, researcher of deadhead culture, explores the fascinating parallels between Jewish and deadhead rituals. $25 public, $15 members. 548-0237 

 


Wednesday, Oct. 24

 

Free Legal Workshop 

7 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. 

Women’s Cancer Resource Center 

3023 Shattuck Ave 

This workshop will provide information about State and Federal disability programs that provide cash benefits and health insurance for people unable to work due to a serious health condition. 

 

Toddler Storytime 

7 p.m. 

West Berkeley Library 

1125 University Ave 

For families with children three years or younger, a program to expose the youngest readers to multicultural stories, songs and finger plays. 

Every Wednesday through Nov 28 

 

Prose Writers’ Workshop 

7 - 9 p.m. 

Berkeley/Richmond Jewish Community Center Library 

1414 Walnut St.  

From Op-ed to fiction, memoir to the feature article - a community 

writers' group to support and encourage a community of interests. Free. 524-3034 

 


Thursday, Oct. 25

 

Free Quit Smoking Class  

5:30 - 7:30 p.m. 

2344 6th St. 

With the option of acupuncture. Six Thursday evenings through Dec. 6. 

Contact the Berkeley Tobacco Prevention Program to register and for more information, 644-6422 or e-mail QuitNow@ci.berkeley.ca.us 

 

“Town Hall” Community  

Meeting 

7 p.m. 

San Pablo Park 

2700 Park St. 

San Pablo Park Neighborhood Council with support from the City, will be hosting this community meeting. Scheduled to attend: Mayor Shirley Dean, Council Member Margaret Breland, Michael Caplan from the City Manager’s Office, Recreation Director Madeline Law, and Berkeley Police Personnel. 848-2427 

 

Berkeley Community Fund 

Eighth Annual Awards Dinner 

6 p.m. 

Radisson Hotel 

Berkeley Marina 

Bestowing the Benjamin Ide Wheller Medal and Berkeley Community Awards. 843-5202 www.berkfund.org  

Peace Satsang with Swami Sitaramananda 

7 p.m. 

First Congregational Church of Berkeley 

2345 Channing Way 

Open gathering for prayer, chanting, meditation, healing and peace talks 

honoring the victims of the Sept. 11th. 273-2447 

 


Saturday, Oct. 27

 

Disaster First Aid 

9 a.m. - noon 

Office of Emergency Services 

997 Cedar St. 

Free classes in Community Emergency Response Training (CERT). 981-5605 www.ci.berkeley.ca.us 

 

Greening Our City Centers 

9 a.m. - 10 p.m. 

The Gaia Building 

2116 Allston Way 

The Second Heart of the City Seminar celebrating the opening of Berkeley’s new showcase ecological building and the Gaia Cultural Center. Discussions will focus on strategies and tactics for generating awareness and implementing greener city centers. 649-1817 www.ecocitybuilders.org 

 

Targeting Civilians 

7 p.m. 

Berkeley Friends Church 

1600 Sacramento St. 

Former UN official Hans von Sponeck and Voices in the Wilderness’ Kathy Kelly will discuss the war on Iraq and the current bombing of Afghanistan. $10 Benefits Voices in the Wilderness.  

 

Medical Mystery Festival 

1 - 4 p.m. 

Hall of Health 

2230 Shattuck Ave. 

A Halloween celebration that introduces children to the field of medical science and health-related issues. 549-1564 

 


Sunday, Oct. 28

 

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 

 

Archaeological Institute of  

America 

1:30 - 3:30 p.m. 

Shorb House 

2547 Channing Way 

AIA Sunday Symposium: Reports from the Field — Dr. Ian Morris on the 6th century BCE site of Monte Polizzo in Sicily; Dr. Marian Feldman on prestige goods of the Late Bronze Age in the eastern Mediterranean; Dr. Christine Hastorf on early architecture at Chiripa in the Titicaca Basin of the Bolivian Andes. 415-338-1537 barbaram@sfsu.edu 

 


Monday, Oct. 29

 

Franciscanism, Understanding the Vision 

1 - 2 p.m. 

Franciscan School of Theology 

1712 Euclid Ave. 

Graduate Theological Union presents seminar exploring the lives, times and writings of and about Francis and Clare of Assisi. 848-5232 

 


Tuesday, Oct. 30

 

Berkeley Farmers’ Market 

2-7 p.m. 

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

548-3333 

 

Berkeley Camera Club 

7:30 p.m. 

Northbrae Community Church, 941 The Alameda 

Share your slides and prints with other photographers. Critiques by qualified judges. Monthly field trips. 

531-8664 

 

Compiled by Guy Poole


What is the true meaning of Council action?

Jim Mellander
Monday October 22, 2001

Editor: 

I am writing to express my disagreements with all of the published letters in the Friday, October 19, 2001 issue of the Berkeley Daily Planet. 

I recognize that Ms. Maio, being a politician, may wish to hide behind the literal wording of the resolution, as passed, but as many who condemn the current U.S. Government action state, perhaps we should look deeper for root causes. So lets examine the meaning of the resolution:  

Although not explicitly stated, there is a clear implication that the City Council believes (Part five) that America's usage of Middle Eastern oil is a contributing factor to the attack, and that our failure to eradicate the miseries of the Third World (Part 4) are also part of the root causes for this attack. There is no other rational explanation for the inclusion of these sections in the resolution, although the root causes argument is bogus (see below). The mildness of the wording of these sections tends to hide the clear implication that the council believes that the United States is partially responsible for the attack of Sept. 11. 

Once having established the backdrop against which the resolution is written, the meaning of Part two (ask our representatives to help break the cycle of violence, bringing the bombing to a conclusion as soon as possible, avoiding actions that can endanger of the lives of innocent people in Afghanistan, and minimizing the risk to American military personnel), comes into a different light than its carefully selected, non-confrontational wording. This is in fact, a clear condemnation of our bombing campaign, under which, unfortunately, innocent civilians are killed. 

Ms. Maio, maybe the media see the true meaning of the resolution, rather than the Clintonesque spin put on by Berkeley politicians. Berkeley would probably not receive any more national scorn than it already has by explicitly stating what is obfuscated in the resolution, that you do, indeed, condemn the bombing campaign. Have the courage of your convictions, and be honest about it. 

Although generally, I agree with Ms. Carroll’s sentiments in her letter, I disagree that all government officials should necessarily rally around the president in this time of national crisis. Fortunately, the vast majority have, but even Berkeley public officials enjoy the protection of the First Amendment. American blood has been spilt to purchase these freedoms, and likely will be spilt in the future defending our freedom.  

Of course, politicians (in Berkeley especially) must make sure that their public statements are politically correct, hence the watering down of the true sentiments of the City Council. 

I certainly applaud Mr. Azevedo’s efforts to learn to be peaceful within himself. Unfortunately, the hope that this will eventually lead to a peaceful world is naive. Each generation has had to learn the same lessons as past generations in the spiritual and emotional realms, as each person grows on the path of wisdom individually, initially from a childish perspective. Perhaps if the human life span was extended, the wisdom accumulated painfully through time might be better conserved. In the meantime, there are numerous examples of children with every advantage of parenting and education who have turned into monsters, thus turning back the cause of creating a peaceful world. 

Finally, the shrill, hysterical tone of Mr. Hartenstein’s letter impressed me as much as, I imagine, Sen. Feinstein. Although Mr. Hartenstein hasn’t seen evidence that bin Laden is responsible for the 9/11 attacks, that certainly doesn’t mean that such evidence doesn’t exist. It would be foolish for our leadership to unnecessarily tip our hand as to the evidence available, especially while our criminal investigation and military activities are in progress. Furthermore, bin Laden’s previous crimes are well-documented and, of themselves, deserve harsh punishment. 

Our government’s stated policy is a generalized war on terrorism, which eventually should, and hopefully will, cast a wider net than on just those specifically involved with the 9/11 attacks. The war will also target those states which foster terrorism. 

Mr. Hartenstein would have us believe that the U.S. is one such state. This seems eerily like an aspect of ‘Battered Wives Syndrome,’ in which the victim of domestic violence blames herself for the attack, rather than directing the justified anger outwards. This sort of introspective, self-defeating behavior is also evident in the search for root causes of the attacks, which always seems to come down to such fatuous phrases as “U.S. Imperialism” and “Give Peace a Chance.” 

Berkeley has an incredible number of therapists (I’ll not speculate why), whose profession includes the searching out the ‘root causes’ of their patient’s neuroses. It is interesting to note that while the individual search for root causes often takes years or decades, media pundits on Sept. 12 already were solemnly describing the root causes of the terrorist attacks. This suggests that the therapists may be ripping off their patients, or that the search for root causes is much more difficult than anyone admits, or (my guess) both. In any event, conflicts between the Arab world and the Western world predate U.S. intervention (check out these years: 1453, 1683, 1912). Any assignment of a root cause that doesn’t include the events of those, and many other years, will require ignoring significant facts that bear on this centuries-long conflict. 

The search for root causes will certainly take place, as historians piece together the history of these days, but it shouldn’t be used as as an excuse for inaction in the face of clear and present danger. I believe we must use our greatest gift, the rational facility which distinguishes us from all other creatures, and lies dormant in all too many people, to make judgments of right and wrong to chart our course towards a more just future. The Sept. 11 attacks cannot be judged as anything other than pure evil, despite any appeals to cultural relativism. This evil must and will be eradicated from the globe. 

 

Jim Mellander 

El Sobrante


Arts & Entertainment Calendar

Compiled by Guy Poole
Monday October 22, 2001

 

924 Gilman St. Oct. 26: Influents, Plus Ones, Divit, Summerjack, Robot Adrenaline, Claredon Hills; Oct. 27: (Halloween show, $1 off if you’re in a (non-punk) costume!) Babyland, Tsunami Bomb, Scissor Hands, Dexter Danger; All shows start a 8 p.m. unless noted; Most are $5; 924 Gilman St. 525-9926 

 

Blake’s Oct. 22: The Steve Gannon Band and Mz. Dee, $4; Oct. 23: Felice, $3; Oct. 24: Erotic City, DJ Maestro, $2; Oct. 25: Psychotica, $5; Oct. 26: Planting Seeds, $6; Oct. 27: Felonious, $6; Oct. 29: The Steve Gannon Band and Mz. Dee, $4; Oct. 31: Erotic City, DJ Maestro, $2; All shows 9:30 p.m. 2367 Telegraph Ave. 848-0886 

 

Cal Performances Nov 8: 8 p.m. Gypsy Caravan 2: A Celebration of Roma Music and Dance, $18 - $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; Oct. 19: Little Jonny and the Giants; Doors open at 8 p.m. unless noted. 3629 Martin Luther King Jr. Way, Oakland. 655-6661 

 

 

“Prometeh in Evin” Oct. 28: 8 p.m., A drama about political prisoners in Iran, performed by the brave and innovative Parsian Group. Julia Morgan Center for the Arts. $25, Children, $15 2640 College Ave 845.8542 www.juliamorgan.org. 

 

“Approach” Through Oct. 27: Thur. - Sat., 8 p.m. An examination of the search for intimacy as our most precious form of survival. Written by Susan Wiegand, Directed by Katie Bales Frassinelli. $15 general admission, $10 students and seniors. Eighth Street Studio Theatre, 2525 8th St. 655-0813 www.shotgunplayers.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 

 

“me/you...us/them”Nov. 8 though Nov. 10: Thur - Sat 8 p.m., matinee on Sat. 2:30 p.m. Three one-acts that look at interpersonal, as well as societal relationships from the perspective of the disabled. $10 - $25. Julia Morgan Center for the Arts, 2640 College Ave. 925-798-1300 

 

“Nocturne” Through Nov. 11: Tues./Thurs./Sat. 8 p.m., Weds. & Sun. 7 p.m, matinee on Thurs./Sat./Sun. 2 p.m. Mark Brokaw directs Anthony Rapp in One-Man Show. Written by Adam Rapp. $38 - $54. Berkeley Repertory’s Thrust Stage, 2025 Addison St. 647-2949 www.berkeleyrep.org 

 

“Travesties” Through Nov. 17: Fri. - Sat., 8 p.m., and Thurs., Nov. 15, 8 p.m. A witty fantasy about James Joyce meeting Lenin in Zurich during World War I. Written by Tom Stoppard, Directed by Mikel Clifford. $10. Live Oak Theatre, 1301 Shattuck. 528-5620 

 

“Macbeth” Nov. 9 though Nov. 18: Fri. - Sat., 8 p.m., Sun. 5 p.m. Presented by the Albany High School Theater Ensemble. $7 adults, $5 students and seniors. Albany High School Little Theater, 603 Key Route Blvd. 559-6550 x4125 theaterensemble@hotmail.com 

 

“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 

 

 

Pacific Film Archive Theater Oct. 22: 7 p.m., The Closed Doors; Oct. 23: 7:30 p.m., Super-8mm Films by Theresa Cha; Oct. 24: 7:30 p.m., The Rainy Season and Wai’a Rini; Oct. 26: 7:30 p.m., The Passion of Joan of Arc, 9:15 p.m., Vivre sa Vie; Oct 27: 7 p.m., New Music for Silent Films by UCB Composers; Oct. 28: 5:30 p.m., Vampyr; Oct. 29: 7 p.m., A Time for Drunken Horses; Oct. 30: 7:30 p.m., An Evening with Leslie Thornton; Oct. 31: 7:30 p.m., 9:20 p.m., Saudade do Futuro. 

2575 Bancroft Way, 642-1124 www.bampfa.berkeley.edu 

 

 

 

 

“First Annual Art Show” UC Berkeley Life Drawing Group Reception, Through Oct. 26: 7 - 10 p.m. Figure studies from the workshops at UC Berkeley. 1014 60th St., Emeryville. 923-0689 

 

“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  

 

“Cut Plates and Bowls” Annabeth Rosen, “Just Jars” Sandy Simon Through Nov. 3; Saturdays 10 - 5 or by appointment. Trax Ceramic Gallery, 1306 3rd St. 526-0279. cone5@aol.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. Mon. - Fri. 8 a.m. - 6 p.m. U.C. Berkeley, Graduate School of Journalism, North Gate Hall, Hearst and Euclid. Free. 642-3383 

 

“Jesus, This is Your Life - Stories and Pictures by Kids” Through Nov. 16: California children, ages four through twelve, from diverse backgrounds present original artwork, accompanied by a story written by the artist. “Cleve Gray, Holocaust Drawings” Oct. 15 through Jan. 25: 21 works on paper inviting the viewer to consider the atrocity of the Holocaust in ways unattainable through words or text. Mon. - Thur. 8:30 a.m. -10 p.m., Fri. 8:30 a.m. - 6 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m. - 6 p.m., Sun. 12 p.m. - 7 p.m. Flora Lamson Hewlett Library, 2400 Ridge Rd. 649-2541. 

 

 

 

 

 

“Changing the World, Building New Lives: 1970s photographs of Lesbians, Feminists, Union Women, Disability Activists and their Supporters” 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. 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 

 

“2001 James D. Phelan Art Awards in Printmaking” Honorees: Bridget Henry, David Kelso, and Margaret Van Patten. Oct. 19 - Nov. 30 Tues. - Fri. noon - 5 p.m., other times by appointment. Kala Art Institue, 1060 Heinz Ave. 549-2977 www.kala.org 

 

“The Whole World’s Watching: Peace and Social Justice Movements of the 1960s and 1970s” Through Dec. 16: A documentary photo exhibition which examines the rich history of the social movements of the 1960s and 1970s. 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 

 

 

Boadecia’s Books Oct. 22: J.M. Redmann reads from “Death By the Riverside”; 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 Telegraph Ave. Oct. 26 Sage Cohen & Mari L’esperance read their poetry; All shows at 7:30 p.m.; 2454 Telegraph Ave. 845-7852 

 

Eastwind Books of Berkeley Nov. 10: 4 p.m. Ruthanne Lum McCunn reads from her novel “Moon Pearl”; Nov. 18: 4 p.m. Noel Alumit, M.G. Sorongon, and Marianne Villanueva read from their contributions to the anthology “Tilting the Continent: Southeast Asian American Literature”; 2066 University Ave. 548-2350 

 

Ecology Center Oct. 22: 7 - 9 p.m. Toby Hemenway presents a slideshow and reads from “Gaia’s Garden: A guide to Home Scale Permaculture”; 2530 San Pablo Ave. 548-220 x233 

 

 

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 Sun., 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Rides: Sun., noon to 3 p.m., weather permitting. 486-0623


Miserable season continues for winless Bears

Staff By John Nadel, AP Sports Writer
Monday October 22, 2001

UCLA runs over Cal as Paus passes for 273 yards and three touchdowns  

 

PASADENA – California wasn’t about to let DeShaun Foster run wild, as Washington did a week earlier. 

Instead, it was Cory Paus who did the Golden Bears in. 

Paus passed for a season-high 273 yards and three touchdowns in less than three quarters Saturday night as No. 4 UCLA overcame a sluggish start to beat winless California 56-17. 

Foster, who entered the game as the leading rusher in the country with a 162.6-yard average, gained 117 yards on 24 carries and caught two passes for 61 yards. 

Held to 38 yards on 12 carries in the first half, the 6-foot-1, 215-pound senior scored on runs of 1 and 6 yards and a 34-yard pass from Paus. 

Foster ran for a school-record 301 yards on 31 carries and scored four touchdowns in UCLA’s 35-13 victory over Washington. 

“You saw the way they were playing defense – nine guys in the box,” Paus said. “We’re still going to run the ball. I’m just glad we were able to do some things we wanted to do.” 

Paus, who opened the game with an incompletion before connecting on his next 11 passes, finished 13-of-16 without being intercepted. He has attempted 189 straight passes, including 122 this season, without an interception. 

“Close to being perfect,” Paus said. “I would have liked being perfect. I’ll take it, for sure.” 

Paus also threw a 27-yard touchdown pass to Ryan Smith and a 4-yarder to Ed Ieremia-Stansbury – both in the third period. The Bruins have outscored their six opponents 72-0 in the third quarter. 

“I think he performed real well,” UCLA coach Bob Toledo said of Paus, a fourth-year junior. “They were packing the paint. For the most part, he made them pay for what they were trying to do. And they paid, dearly.” 

The defeat was the ninth straight for Cal – a school record. The Bears (0-6, 0-4) are off to the worst start in the program’s 119-year history. 

Cal has faced one of the country’s most difficult schedules; its opponents have a cumulative 33-2 record. 

The Bears played without quarterback Kyle Boller, sidelined with a back injury. Boller, a junior who has made 24 career starts, led his team to wins over UCLA in each of the last two seasons. 

Eric Holtfreter, making his first career start as Boller’s replacement, completed 11 of 29 passes for 102 yards and one touchdown before being relieved early in the fourth quarter. 

The Bruins put the game away by scoring three touchdowns in the third quarter and another on the first play of the final period – on Foster’s last carry of the game. 

One of the third-quarter touchdowns was a 16-yard blocked punt return by Devon Reese. Marcus Reese, no relation, got the block – the second straight game he has blocked a punt that resulted in a touchdown. 

Akil Harris’ 48-yard touchdown run with 4:22 left put UCLA ahead 56-10. Cal’s Terrell Williams scored on a 4-yard run with one second remaining. 

Joe Igber, who rushed for 91 yards on 17 carries, gained 39 yards on the game’s second play, helping the Bears get into position for Mark Jensen’s 39-yard field goal. 

The Bruins moved 55 yards on four plays the third time they had the ball, scoring when Craig Bragg ran 42 yards on a double reverse. 

The Bears responded by driving 80 yards on 15 plays, with Holtfreter throwing a 14-yard touchdown pass to Charon Arnold. 

The drive was aided by two offside penalties against UCLA, the first while Cal was punting. 

The Bruins moved 76 and 80 yards on their next two possessions to take a 21-10 halftime lead, with Foster scoring both touchdowns. 

The Bruins got a break on the Paus-to-Foster TD pass; Paus was hit by John Klotsche as he threw, and the ball fluttered to Foster, who was alone about 10 yards downfield and nowhere near the intended receiver. 

The game was played before a homecoming crowd of 65,366 at the Rose Bowl. 


Fire memories still burn

By Lena Warmack Daily Planet Correspondent
Monday October 22, 2001

It was a solemn Sunday morning at the Rockridge BART Station where community members and elected city officials came together to honor the lives lost in the 1991 Oakland Hills firestorm and the firefighters who fought bravely. 

“You will always remember what you were doing,” said Berkeley Mayor Shirley Dean, remembering the day of the fire. “We’ve come a long way.” 

At the “Phoenix: Looking Back, Moving Forward” 10th Anniversary Oakland/Berkeley Firestorm event, Dean reflected on the tragedy, marked as one of the worst urban-wildland fires in U.S. history. The fire, Dean said, claimed the lives of 25 people, injured 150 residents and fire fighters, and left more than 5,000 homeless. Dean spoke in front of the Fire Storm Community Mural Project made out of decorated tiles dedicated to the fire’s survivors. The mural lines the station’s walls on College Avenue. 

“Many people still have vivid memories and impressions of the fire,” said Berkeley Fire Chief Reginald Garcia. “As a community we have come together. We have survived.” 

Jan Marsh rebuilt her Oakland home after the fire but moved to a Berkeley apartment four years ago because she said the memories were too painful.  

“I lost everything,” Marsh said. 

Marsh recalls being surrounded by flames while she and husband and cat escaped but said an elderly woman who lived across the street did not make it. She holds the city of Oakland partly responsible. 

“I think the city of Oakland was totally unprepared and I feel that they let us down and totally got away with it,” Marsh said. 


Nothing comes of Nothing

Jahlee Arakaki
Monday October 22, 2001

Editor: 

I believe the City Council’s action on Tuesday, while a sincere desire to be a “beacon of light,” does nothing but illuminate the grandiose opinion five Berkeley City Council members have of themselves. It’s not about you, stupid. It’s about over 4,000 lives lost due to suicidal terrorists, and Berkeley is just background noise to a national tragedy. Perhaps the five council members should visit Afghanistan and observe women getting whipped to death for showing their faces and Afghani men plying their hashish trade, with the Taliban ruling over all. 

Yes, people suffer all over the world from corrupt governments and U.S. foreign policy, but Berkeley is an American city protected by a Bill of Rights that you will not find in Afghanistan and Berkeley deservedly uses its rights to the fullest. 

I would have more pride in Berkeley if it was accountable for the taxes it levies. If sewer taxes the city holds actually fixed sewers, mosquito abatement taxes actually abated mosquitoes, and decisions were made in the light of day, rather than “after midnight” deals that pander to special interests while honest citizens sleep. Therein lies the problem — the City Council would rather get attention than pay attention to the pragmatic business of running a city. 

Nothing comes of nothing, and that will be the result of the City Council’s resolution on Afghanistan. 

 

Jahlee Arakaki 

Berkeley


Cal women fall 2-0 to Cougars

By Jared Green, Daily Planet Staff
Monday October 22, 2001

The Cal women’s soccer team continued its October slump on Sunday, losing 2-0 to the visiting Washington State Cougars. 

The Bears were held scoreless for the second game in a row, the first time since 1996 they have gone two games without scoring. 

The Cougars took a 1-0 lead in the 61st minute when Katrina Stroh headed in a corner kick by Beth Childs. The Bears then scored an own goal when midfielder Ashley Valenzuela headed a Washington State cross into her own net eight minutes later. 

“It was the second half that we went flat,” Cal head coach Kevin Boyd said. “I don’t know what's going on. Two games in a row with no goals? They’re certainly not acting like a team in the Pac-10 part of their season that needs wins.”  

The Bears played the second half of Sunday’s game without the services of leading scorer Laura Schott, who sustained a concussion on Friday against Washington when she collided with Husky goalkeeper Hope Solo. Schott was questionable going into Sunday’s game, but Boyd decided to hold her out after the junior forward was hit in the head with a ball during warmups. 

“She tried to go for the first half,” said Cal coach Kevin Boyd. “She came out at halftime and said she didn’t feel completely there. In talking to her during the halftime, we thought it was unsafe for her to play.”  

After bolting out to an 8-1 record to start the season, the 15th-ranked Golden Bears have gone 2-3-1 since to fall to 10-4-1 overall (2-2 Pac-10). The Cougars’ first Pac-10 victory of the season improved their record to 6-5 (1-2).  

Cal has a shot to wrap up the month on a positive note when it travels to No. 8 Stanford this Sunday. The Bears have won the last three meetings with the Cardinal.


School finances get help from crisis team

By Jeffrey Obser Daily Planet Staff
Monday October 22, 2001

State financial fix-it experts officially came to the Berkeley Unified School District’s rescue this week. 

The school board heard Wednesday night from Joel Montero, a consultant with the Financial Crisis and Management Team, a non-profit financial consultancy set up under state legislation, and Alameda County schools superintendent Sheila Jordan, who helped the team come to Berkeley. 

“It’s going to take a little bit of time, but we’re going to get there,” Montero said. 

FCMAT — known as “fick mat” among board members and district administrators who have eagerly awaited its arrival — is based at the Kern County Office of Education and is currently involved in 16 school districts statewide. 

Montero said 30 percent of its activity here will be to resolve the fiscal muddle that led the county to “disapprove” the district budget, Montero said. The rest of its time, he said, will go toward changing management structures. 

“We have to fix those so that when we go away, the work we do can remain,” he said. 

The very first task would be to fix, he said, “the functions of the business office, the day-to-day operations,” including its creaking data-processing system. A full-time FCMAT consultant with a strong technology and business background will play the role of the district “CEO” or associate superintendent for business services until a replacement is found. 

Jordan declined Thursday to estimate how long the consultants would have to be engaged. 

“We’re not making those predictions right now,” she said. “We know it’s a big job because it’s systems job, and there’s a


Berkeley students express themselves through film

By Hank Sims, Daily Planet Staff
Monday October 22, 2001

UC freshmen corrupted by drugged-out Berkeleyans? Suburban youth, high on BART, attempting to sneak into a San Francisco peep show? Too-enthusiastic volleyball players spiking people on the street?  

All this and more was on display at the Third Berkeley High/Bay Area Film Festival, a student-organized exhibition of the works of young Bay Area filmmakers, which aired at the Pacific Film Archive Saturday afternoon. 

Students from Berkeley, Pittsburgh, San Francisco and San Leandro were on hand to show their films — which ranged from commercials and public service announcements to documentaries, from thrillers to comedies to art films — and to discuss how and why they were made. 

Two of the films, both by BHS students, offered different takes on the subject of teen violence. 

“Hot Boxing: Berkeley High Fight Clubs,” by Nick Smith, Kamal Young and Gavin Wagner, told of a phenomenon few in the audience knew existed — “fight clubs,” inspired partly by the movie of the same name, that meet after school hours for informal boxing matches. 

Small parts of several battles, in various and indiscernible locations, are shown; the combatants wear gloves and flail at each other — mostly ineptly, though the occasional shot to the chin does land.  

Interspersed with the fight scenes are interviews with combatants and spectators, and one unnamed BHS official who explains that because it was considered too dangerous, it was removed from the physical education curriculum some time ago. 

Most of the students interviewed in the film agree that some young men are drawn toward physical violence, and that the “fight club” is a relatively safe way to practice it. 

In “Clairvoyance,” by Zack Sultan and Daniel Sanders, a teenager walks down Shattuck Avenue, occasionally bumping against other young men. When they make contact, the frame freezes and the teenager, a clairvoyant, sees an episode of violence in his counterpart’s recent past. One of the young men was held up by two men carrying baseball bats, another was punched by his friend after a game of one-on-one got out of hand. 

The story is told almost completely through music and pictures. Flashback episodes are done partly in live action and partly with still photographs, which catch the emotional pain of the victims, and sometimes the perpetrators, of violence. 

Other films were somewhat more lighthearted. 

“Orange Shoes,” a short film by BHS student Calvin Gaskin — one of the curators of the festival — is an exploration of the roots and meanings of his fellow students’ choices of clothing.  

The subjects in the stylized documentary range from a full-on fashion diva, whose elaborate costumes draw positive and negative attention from her peers in equal measure, to a young man who buys all his clothes from Costco, because it’s the only place you can get “10 white T-shirts for six bucks.” 

One clothes horse says that he refuses to wear Armani — “not because it’s too expensive, but because it’s too bourgie (short for bourgeoisie).” 

“I wanted to express all the different styles and stuff you see at Berkeley High,” said Gaskin. 

Two other films by Berkeley High students were shown — “Gay Youth,” a documentary by Vanessa Duran, and “Beat It,” an anti-smoking public service announcement by Viki Rasmussen. 

After the films, the filmmakers took questions from the audience. One man said that when Berkeley High first started giving classes in video production, many teachers feared that the option to study video would take away from reading and writing programs. He asked the students whether they thought that was true. 

Imperial DeCastro, a Pittsburgh High School student whose public service announcement about teen suicide was a crowd favorite, said that pictures and sound, used in addition to good writing, enabled filmmakers to create moods that connect more deeply with an audience.  

“My film wouldn’t have been as powerful if it was just a written warning,” she said. “Video gives you the ability to get the message across much better.” 

Many of the students expressed an interest in pursuing a career in film or video. Stephen Reedy of California High, whose film, “Midnight in a Perfect World,” was one of the more visually interesting of the festival, said he was grateful for the chance to develop his skills at school. 

“It’s good, as young filmmakers, to develop your style before messing it up with substance,” he said. 


Pac-10 Football Roundup

Staff
Monday October 22, 2001

Stanford 49, No. 5 Oregon 42 

EUGENE, Ore. – Kerry Carter bulled in for a 3-yard touchdown run with 1:10 remaining for Stanford. 

Stanford (4-1, 3-1 Pac-10) rallied from a 42-28 fourth-quarter deficit by blocking a punt and intercepting Oregon’s Joey Harrington pass, turning both turnovers into touchdowns. But the Ducks’ Seth McEwen deflected Mike Biselli’s extra point with 5:32 left, leaving Oregon with a 42-41 lead. 

All Oregon (6-1, 3-1) had to do was salt away the clock, but on third-and-1 from his own 30, Harrington was hit by safety Tank Williams and the ball floated into the hands of diving defensive end Marcus Hoover at the 33. 

On third-and-goal from the 3, Carter was stopped at the line of scrimmage, but got a push from his line to get into the end zone for his fourth touchdown. 

Not only did Stanford stop Oregon’s nation-best 23-game home winning streak, it ruined an undefeated record by the Ducks for the eighth time since 1964. 

 

No. 15 Washington 31,  

Arizona 28 

SEATTLE – Two weeks after separating his throwing shoulder, Cody Pickett ran 3 yards for the winning touchdown with 13 seconds left in Washington’s latest fourth-quarter comeback. 

Pickett threw touchdown passes of 78 and 75 yards in the first quarter and finished 29-of-49 for a career-high 455 yards, with three touchdowns and four interceptions. 

The Huskies (5-1, 3-1 Pac-10) overcame five turnovers to bounce back from their first loss in 13 games. They haven’t lost two straight since coach Rick Neuheisel’s first two games in 1999. 

Arizona is winless in four Pac-10 games and has lost nine straight conference games. 

 

Arizona St. 41, Oregon St. 24 

TEMPE, Ariz. – The big things predicted for Delvon Flowers came true against Oregon State. 

Flowers, who missed last season because of a knee injury, ran for 226 yards and two touchdowns as Arizona State beat the Beavers 41-24 Saturday night. 

He scored on runs of 74 and 28 yards in the biggest game by an Arizona State running back in the last 28 years, and the sixth-best ever. His yardage on 23 carries was the most since Ben Malone set the record of 250 against Oregon State in 1973. 

“I don’t know what to say,” Flowers said. “I owe it to my line and (fullback) Mike Karney. They did a great job getting up there, laying their pads down and pushing the defense back.” 

Jeff Krohn threw a 63-yard pass that the receiver, Shaun McDonald, turned in another score when he recovered his own fumble in the end zone, Justin Taplin threw a 23-yard TD pass on a trick play and Tom Pace scored on an 11-yard run. 

 

Notre Dame 27, USC 16 

SOUTH BEND, Ind. – Carlyle Holiday has the Notre Dame offense running again and the Irish winning again. 

Holiday fell 2 yards shy of his third straight 100-yard rushing game Saturday as Notre Dame (3-3) overcame an 11-point deficit to beat Southern Cal 27-16 Saturday for its third straight victory after its first ever 0-3 start. 

Holiday, making his fourth start, had a 43-yard run to set up a field goal, a 35-yard TD run, and a 42-yard pass -- Notre Dame’s longest of the season. 

“He’s a weapon every time he touches the ball,” Irish coach Bob Davie said. 

The Irish lost 24-3 to Texas A&M in Holiday’s first start, but he only played the first half because of a neck injury. He’s led the Irish in rushing in each of their victories.


Company scouts new locations for A’s

Bay City News Service
Monday October 22, 2001

The Kansas City, Mo., company that designed Pacific Bell Park in San Francisco has been hired to scout locations for a new stadium for the Oakland Athletics. 

Oakland and Alameda County officials say building a baseball-only park is central to keeping the A’s in town. 

The team’s current ownership has never made a secret of its dislike of the Network Associates Coliseum, which was extensively remodeled for football when the Raiders returned to Oakland in 1995. 

HOK Sports Inc. is expected to complete its study by the end of November, and its findings will be presented to A’s officials by the end of the year, said Rosie Rios, director of economic development for Oakland. 


Cal volleyball pulls out win over UW

Daily Planet Wire Services
Monday October 22, 2001

The Cal women’s volleyball team broke a six match losing streak with a 3-0 victory (30-16, 33-31, 30-20) over Washington, Saturday night at Haas Pavilion. The Bears were again led by freshman Mia Jerkov, who tallied 19 kills and had 11 digs. On Friday, Jerkov had led Cal with 20 kills and 14 digs against Washington State.  

The Bears (6-11 overall, 2-8 Pac-10) also received strong play from sophomore Gabrielle Abernathy, who finished with seven kills and had a team-high 14 digs, while junior Reena Pardiwala had a .400 hitting percentage (eight kills, two errors, 15 attempts) and nine digs. Washington (10-10, 3-8) was led by Kara Bjorklund’s 11 kills. Cal outhit Washington, .254 to .154.  

The Bears set the tone of the match by jumping out to a 5-0 lead in game one and went on to win handily, 30-16. Game two was the most exciting of the match. Cal was down, 29-28 when the Bears were called for a net violation. Fortunately, freshman Camille Leffall responded with a kill to keep Cal alive. UW again took the lead, 30-29, but back-to-back kills by Jerkov gave the Bears a 31-30 advantage. The Huskies tied the contest again, 31-31, but Cal responded with block assists by Pardiwala and senior Candace McNamee and a kill by Leah Young to win 33-31.  

Game three was another strong performance by the Bears as they broke away from a 5-5 tie to win handily, 30-19. The three-game victory over Washington avenged an earlier loss to the Huskies, as Cal fell to UW, 3-0 Sept. 20 in Seattle.  

Cal will next host Santa Clara, Tuesday, Oct. 23 at 7 p.m. at Haas Pavilion.


S.F. spending $650K a year on shopping carts

Staff
Monday October 22, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO – San Francisco is spending $650,000 a year to deal with shopping carts left in public places, mostly by the homeless. 

The city collects, cleans and stores the carts. And it also keeps most of the confiscated possessions for months to protect itself from lawsuits, as many homeless people have challenged the city in recent years about missing belongings. 

Belongings are kept for at least 90 days, but only one percent of them are ever claimed. The carts are taken to a city yard off Cesar Chavez Street near Interstate 280. 

There, city workers typically pick through hazardous materials such as syringes, crack pipes, bottles of urine and clothing covered with bodily secretions.


Negotiators meet to discuss BART strike

Staff
Monday October 22, 2001

OAKLAND – For the first time in two weeks, BART officials and union negotiators met to try to keep workers from going on strike Tuesday. 

On Saturday, BART officials reviewed the latest offer from the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Local 3993, representing 238 workers. It drops a proposal for pay parity among employees doing the same jobs. 

BART officials asked the union to return to the bargaining table. 

Union officials say they are satisfied with the 22 percent raises over four years, but the sticking point is that they do not want union jobs going to consultants, contractors and other unions. 

If a compromise isn’t reached by Tuesday, leaders of the largest two unions have said they will honor AFSCME’s picket line. BART officials have said they will keep the trains running.


Pebble Beach visits slow

Staff
Monday October 22, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO – Golfers used to have to call about a year in advance to secure a place on the green and a room at the resort at Pebble Beach during the peak fall months. 

But nowadays, tourists are getting away with a far shorter lead time. 

Renata Anderson and Stephen Rue of Walnut Creek decided to get in a round of golf and were able to get reservations on two days notice. 

The ordinarily healthy Pebble Beach is being hit hard by the recent downturn. Pebble Beach Co. laid off 170 workers this month — 10 percent of its work force. The cuts follow a drastic drop-off in tourist numbers after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. 

Even a month after the attacks, business is down 20 to 30 percent compared with the same period last year. Pebble Beach Co. is even running ads in San Francisco Bay area papers to remind people they have spaces open. 

Officials say this slump has so far been worse than the downturns following the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake and the 1991 Persian Gulf War.


Many enroll in Arabic classes in attempt to understand region

The Associated Press
Monday October 22, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO – Schools offering classes in Arabic and other Middle Eastern languages are being inundated with students who believe that education is the key to understanding the state of today’s world. 

Schools nationwide have reported waiting lists for classes that once had lackluster enrollment from Los Angeles to Stanford to Washington, D.C. 

“The telephone is ringing off the hook every day,” said Shukri Abed, chairman of the languages department at the Middle East Institute in Washington, D.C. “It is unbelievable. Scores of students are coming. I’ve never seen anything like this.” 

Abed said he’s taking 40 to 50 calls a day from interested students. He typically has 90 students a quarter in his beginning Arabic class, but this year he has 130. 

There is a waiting list for Arabic at the University of California, Los Angeles Extension, where many adults take classes. Administrators there have decided to add another class for winter quarter. At the University of California, Berkeley Extension, an Arabic class was unexpectedly full starting Sept. 12. 

Many Americans say they feel helpless, and the only real difference they can make is by gaining knowledge. And some say they’re willing to dedicate years to learn a language that’s very difficult for native English speakers. 

“It looks as if there will be a lot of U.S. involvement, and people who can speak and read Arabic will be needed,” said Cari Sietstra, 26, a third-year law student at Stanford University. “Our policies in that region certainly will have to be reformulated.” 

Sietstra signed up for a class in Arabic after the Sept. 11 attacks and wants to work in the Middle East after graduation. 

“I knew I would feel better if I was doing something,” Sietstra said. “I can’t donate hundreds of thousands of dollars, and I can’t help fix what happened in New York and Washington, but I can do one small thing that may be useful.” 

The interest was partly spurred by a plea after the attacks from FBI Director Robert Mueller. He called for help from Americans who speak Arabic, Farsi or Pashto. More than 15,000 applications have since flooded the bureau to fill its 200 linguist positions. 

Stockbrokers, lawyers and Vietnam War veterans have signed up for language classes at the Monterey Institute of International Studies to try to help. 

But language experts warn students to not expect to start translating anytime soon. It takes an average of about 63 weeks to get a basic understanding of Arabic, compared to about 25 weeks for Spanish, French, Italian or Portuguese. 

“I thought they were speaking some other language,” said Rick Francona, a retired Air Force lieutenant colonel who served as Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf’s translator during the Persian Gulf War. “So you have to become conversant in the dialect.” 

And while teachers admire the flurry of interest, they say it’s sad it took a tragedy for people to become interested in the world. 

“It is insane for people like me who have been yelling at empty halls for 25 years,” said Khalil Barhoum, coordinator of Stanford’s program for African and Middle Eastern languages and literature. “Once you know people’s culture, they are not scary. And once you know their language, it is the key to the heart.”


Pediatrician conference addresses bioterrorism and children issues

By Ritu Bhatnagar, Associated Press Writer
Monday October 22, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO – Pediatricians and other child-health specialists are urging officials to take steps to protect children against bioterrorism, saying they are especially vulnerable. But the biggest challenge is to prepare for a biological attack without spreading panic. 

The American Academy of Pediatrics’ annual conference this weekend offered panels addressing how to treat infants and children if they become infected with a bioterrorist agent. 

“They live closer to the ground, so aerosol agents with heavy particles will affect them more,” said Dr. Frederick Henretig, one of the speakers at a panel Sunday. “Their skin is thinner and they can be affected developmentally.” 

The speakers illustrated their concerns by referring to the recent anthrax infection of a 7-month-old baby in New York. The infant is the child of an NBC employee and had been in the studios’ offices, where the baby was likely exposed. 

“We know that children are much more vulnerable to a chemical exposure,” said Steve Berman, president of the American Academy of Pediatrics. “There’s been talk about decontamination or special uniforms or equipment, but what if those don’t fit children or don’t allow children to be cared for? 

“If we embark on smallpox vaccine or anthrax vaccine, what happens if there are complication rates for children or aren’t as effective for them? It is absolutely critical that people with pediatric specialties are involved in disaster planning,” he said. 

Berman also was quick to point out that while there are many questions that need to be addressed regarding preparedness for bioterrorism and children, there is no need for parents or pediatricians to become overly alarmed creating panic. 

Doctors from around the world attended the conference, fearing that anthrax and other types of bioterrorism may soon spread to their countries. Other sessions, part of a disaster-related series, included psychological concerns as well, such as how to talk to children about crisis and loss. 

“It’s as much in the news (in Australia) as it is here. We’re upping preparation and facilities there,” said Sally McCarthy, an emergency physician from Sydney, Australia, attending the bioterrorism panel to learn more about the affects on children. “I attended a similar conference in Chicago last week and am understanding how important it is to create a network of colleagues around the world to get better prepared.” 

Some doctors said one problem with bioterrorism is that agents are typically easy and cheap for terrorists to obtain, even though it’s often difficult to weaponize materials. 

“Any of you with two semesters of microbiology can go out and grow this stuff yourself,” said Dr. Theodore Cieslack, who also spoke at the bioterrorism panel.


California’s northernmost counties adopt new ‘upstate’ designation

The Associated Press
Monday October 22, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO – An area of California that’s almost the same size as New York state has something else in common with New York: its “upstate” moniker. 

Tired of being unknown or confused with the San Francisco Bay Area when people refer to “Northern California,” the 20 northernmost counties of the Golden State have changed their collective name. 

Economic development officials are referring to the 46,900-square-mile area as “Upstate California,” in an attempt to lure tourists and businesses to the rural north. They’ve even given it a slogan; “Above it all.” 

Although other names, such as California North Country and California’s True North fared better in a survey of business people and public relations professionals, those who organized the campaign opted for “upstate” in order to make a clean break from names that included “north.” 

The new name is part of a $100,000 marketing campaign to give the region — which has about 30 percent of the state’s land and about 4.5 percent of its population — its own identity. The biggest city is Redding, with a population of 80,000. 

The northernmost part of the state has usually lagged behind the rest of California’s economy, with high unemployment that has grown with the closing of lumber mills and consolidation of the timber industry. 

It’s an affordable region, compared to the rest of California’s sky-high rents and land prices, and some high-tech companies, such as Hewlett-Packard Co. and Oracle, are already present there. And it’s still largely agricultural, with prunes and rice two of the major crops.


Analysis: Oracle deal could cost taxpayers 924 Gilman St. Oct. 26: Influents, Plus Ones, Divit, Summerjack, Robot Adrenaline, Claredon Hills; Oct. 27: (Halloween show, $1 off if you’re in a (non-punk) costume!) Babyland, Tsunami Bomb, Scissor Hands, Dex

The Associated Press
Monday October 22, 2001

SACRAMENTO – A $126 million contract with software giant Oracle Corp. has been lauded by state officials as a money-saving success, but a closer review has found that lawmakers may have been too hasty in their effort to approve the first statewide software deal, a newspaper reported Sunday. 

The contract gives all state employees access to Oracle databases for the next 10 years and is expected to save more than $100 million. But based on public documents and interviews, a San Jose Mercury News analysis has found that the deal may end up leaving taxpayers with unnecessary expensive technology. 

State officials relied on a consulting company, Virginia-based Logicon, that was pitching the Oracle deal to outline the savings and benefits of signing the contract, instead of an independent firm. State conflict of interest laws prohibit consultants from pitching technology they would benefit from if the deal was completed, the newspaper reported. 

Officials from the Department of General Services said they were unaware of Logicon’s connection to Oracle. 

“I just recently learned about it,” said Janice King, a procurement manager who helped negotiate the deal. 

King said Legicon “helped with the legwork” but she added that “they weren’t making the decisions. We were.” 

But outside consultants said those negotiating the deal should have been more thorough. 

“This contract goes against every piece of advice we would give our clients,” said Betsy Burton, analyst for Gartner, an independent technology consulting firm. “It makes some big, big assumptions that are very hard to back up.” 

Technology and procurement officials did not properly notify legislators about their bidding, the Mercury News reported. Those officials now admit they made some mistakes but are sticking by the deal they say will be a long-term winner, allowing the state to break even if the price was off by 50 percent. 

“There is a big fudge factor,” King said. “We felt we could be substantially off and still make a safe investment.” 

The oracle deal was calculated by looking at how much the state had spent on Oracle software over the past three years. From that, negotiators assumed that the state would continue buying the same amount of software at the same price it paid in 2000 over the next decade. 

Two weeks after the deal was sealed to meet the company’s May 31 deadline, Oracle cut the cost of some of its software by up to 50 percent. 

“Markets and pricing change so rapidly in information technology,” said Mark Shainman, senior research analyst with the high-tech industry tracing company META Group. “We never advise our clients to lock themselves into one product for 10 years.” 

Oracle insists the deal was fair. 

“We gave the state a fabulous price,” said Ken Glueck, Oracle’s vice president of corporate affairs. 

The state’s technology department also has been criticized for not seeking other bids. But the department has said no other company makes the database software it needed from Oracle. Analysts said that while the state got a steep discount on the software, other companies, such as IBM Corp., could have provided a competitive offer.


Energy secretary announces partnership to build power line

By Steve Lawrence Associated Press Writer
Monday October 22, 2001

SACRAMENTO – U.S. Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham announced a public-private partnership Thursday to ease a transmission line bottleneck that contributed to the blackouts that hit California earlier this year. 

The $300 million project will add a third line and make other improvements to Path 15, an 84-mile stretch in the Central Valley where high-voltage north-south transmission lines narrow from three to two. 

That narrowing caused problems in January when Northern California was hit by a power shortage and rolling blackouts and the overloaded Path 15 lines couldn’t bring more electricity from the southern part of the state. 

Abraham said a consortium that includes the federal Western Area Power Administration and the Transmission Agency of Northern California, a group of publicly owned power districts, will make the improvements and share ownership of the new line. 

Other participants are: 

• Pacific Gas & Electric Co., California’s largest privately owned utility and the owner of the two existing Path 15 lines, and one of its sister companies, PG&E National Energy Group. 

• Kinder Morgan Power Co., a Houston-based electricity generator. 

• Williams Energy Marketing and Trading Co., a power wholesaler. 

• Trans-Elect Inc., which offered in February to buy most of California’s power grid for $5.25 billion. Trans-Elect is partly owned by General Electric Co.’s investing arm. 

The Western Area Power Administration will oversee the work, prepare environmental studies and retain part ownership of the new line. But it won’t help pay to build the line and will only get enough revenue from transmission fees to cover its costs, officials said. 

“This proposal will benefit California ratepayers without burdening taxpayers,” Abraham said at a news conference in Palo Alto. 

Under a proposed ownership split, WAPA would own 10 percent of the new line, the Transmission Agency of Northern California would get 45 percent and the private companies would split the rest. 

Abraham said the improvements will allow for transmission of another 1,500 megawatts, approximately enough electricity to power 1.5 million homes. 

Bob Mitchell, vice president of Trans-Elect, said revenues from the new line will be regulated by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and will provide investors with a “modest return.” 

Transmission lines are “not a big profit maker but if you can get a fairly reliable rate of return of 11 to 11.5 percent you can do OK,” he said. 

Development of more power plants in Northern California would make Path 15 expansion less critical, but making the improvements would still be “the prudent thing to do,” Mitchell said. 

Consumer advocate Harvey Rosenfield criticized the deal, saying California would have been better off if the state had bought the transmission lines. 

“I don’t think it’s in California’s interest to have the federal government and a bunch of out-of-state energy companies on the spigot that controls the flow of electricity in California,” he said. 

But Mitchell said private ownership of transmission lines is a better idea. 

“There are other more pertinent tasks that government ought to undertake than getting into the energy business any further than they are,” he said. 

Steve Maviglio, a spokesman for Gov. Gray Davis, said the governor wouldn’t comment until he had seen details of the plan. 

Davis had proposed buying most of the state’s transmission lines as a way to ease the financial problems of California’s three major investor-owned utilities, but that plan was rebuffed by lawmakers and PG&E. 

Associated Press Writer May Wong contributed to this report.


Black firefighters want commitment to racial diversity

By Hank Sims, Daily Planet Staff
Saturday October 20, 2001

A group of Berkeley firefighters are charging the fire department’s chief, Reginald Garcia, has not done enough to promote racial diversity within the department. 

In a letter sent to elected officials and the press Tuesday, Capt. Wayne Dismuke, the president of the Berkeley Black Firefighters Association, claimed that a climate of racial discrimination exists in the Berkeley Fire Department. 

“There is an attitude and a policy being expressed by the current Berkeley Fire Department administration of ‘white only’ employment,” wrote Dismuke. “We have tried on several occasions to express our concerns to the current Fire Department administration, only to find that (they) have not received a positive response.” 

In an interview Friday, Dismuke, who joined the department in 1967, said the Association decided to make their complaint public after Garcia allegedly misled him about new hires during a telephone call. 

Dismuke said Garcia called him about six weeks ago to say the department planned to hire six new firefighters in the beginning of October. He said he was surprised when the department actually hired 10 new firefighters – none of them African-Americans.  

“What he told me he was going to do, he didn’t do,” Dismuke said.  

Dismuke said there were African-American candidates on the hiring list when the 10 new firefighters were selected. 

Dismuke said Garcia’s predecessor, Gary Cates, “understood our concerns” and addressed them.  

He said Garcia’s legacy could be discerned by his hiring record. Since he took over the department in 1997, Dismuke said Garcia has hired 41 new employees, three of whom were African-American. 

“He’s the kind of guy we feel we can’t really work with,” Dismuke said. “He been here four years and he hasn’t helped the problem – he’s just exacerbated it.” 

Garcia could not be reached for comment Friday. 

Part of the problem, Dismuke said, is Garcia has not given the Association details about what the department looks for when recruiting new hires. If the Association had guidelines for new hires, Dismuke said, they could actively recruit African-American candidates for new positions.  

“African-American candidates are a commodity,” Dismuke said. “There’s not very many of them out there, and we should be actively recruiting them. 

“This is the kind of thing they advocate in Berkeley, but they’re not practicing what they preach here.” 

Dismuke, now the longest-serving firefighter in the department, was himself, the product of an affirmative action campaign. He was one of six firefighters recruited by the BFD in 1967, at a time, according to a document on the department’s Web site, when “efforts to increase the diversity of the department became a priority.” 

Dismuke said he has taken his concerns to City Manager Weldon Rucker, but was not satisfied by his response so far. 

“The city manager said he was ‘sympathetic’ to our concerns,” Dismuke said. “Unfortunately, sympathy has not translated into action.” 

Rucker and BFD spokesman Dave Orth could not be reached for comment.


Out & About Calendar

– Compiled by Guy Poole
Saturday October 20, 2001


Saturday, Oct. 20

 

Private Elementary School  

Panel Discussion and Fair 

10 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. 

College Avenue Presbyterian Church 

5951 College Ave. 

Parents representing 12 selected schools will discuss issues parents encounter when searching for private elementary schools, including the admissions process. Sponsored by Neighborhood Parents Network. Open to the public. $5 - $10. 527-6667 www.parentsnet.org 

 

UC Berkeley Community  

Action Day 

9:30 a.m. - 4 p.m. 

People’s Park 

Haste and Hillegass avenues 

More than 300 students, faculty, staff, alumni, community members, and student groups will participate in an all day event, carrying out service projects throughout the city. 643-0306 kinyon@uclink4.berkeley.edu 

 

Earthquake Retrofitting 

10 a.m. - 5 p.m. 

Office of Emergency Services 

812 Page St.  

Free classes in Community Emergency Response Training (CERT). 981-5605 www.ci.berkeley.ca.us 

 

BART Job Fair 

9 a.m. - 3 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave 

BART will be recruiting to fill approximately 160 jobs that will be opening up next year. The jobs to be filled are in accounting, planing, engineering, insurance, purchasing, police, maintenance and electronics. 

 

Symposium on New Science  

of Aging 

10 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. 

Valley Life Sciences Building 

Room 2040 

UC Berkeley 

Lectures by prominent gerontologists and industry scientists will featured, plus leading biotechnology companies and research institutions will provide information about their research programs in aging and will discuss opportunities for collaboration and employment. 486-6096 http://crea.berkeley.edu/ 

 

Historical Society Walking  

Tour 

10 a.m. - 12 p.m. 

Berkeley Historical Society 

1931 Center St. 

Patrick Keilch will lead tour of the Berkeley Hills and relate his hands-on experiences and observations from the wildfire of 1991. 848-0181 www.ci.berkeley.ca.us/ histsoc/ 

 

Berkeley High School  

Workshop 

10 a.m. - 12 p.m. 

Berkeley Alternative High School 

1950 Derby St. 

Academic Workshop for parents on the graduation requirements for Berkeley High School. 644-8524 

 

Oakland Hills Fire  

Commemorative Walk and  

Pot Luck Dinner 

5 -9 p.m. 

5999 Grizzly Peak 

Walk led by Oakland Fire Department and CORE graduates. Participants should bring pot luck dishes to feed eight guests. 273-9111 www.nhphoenix.org 

 

Puppet Shows 

1:30 p.m. and 2:30 p.m. 

The Hall of Health 

2230 Shattuck Ave. 

The Kids on the Block perform two shows to promote acceptance and understanding of cultural and medical differences. 549-1564 

 

Discussion of Current Legal  

Issues 

9 a.m. - 11 p.m. 

Boalt Hall 

UC Berkeley 

Top litigators, legal scholars and media experts participate in several panels discussions concerning some of the nation’s most closely watched legal issues. 643-6673 

 


Sunday, Oct. 21

 

UNtraining White Liberal  

Racism 

2 - 5 p.m. 

The UNtraining offers personal work in a supportive setting for white people to address our unconscious racial conditioning. $10. Private residence, call 235-6134 for address.  

 

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 

 

Israeli peace speakers 

7 p.m. 

Israeli peace activists speak 

La Pena Cultural Center 

3105 Shattuck Ave. 

 

Halloween Magic 

1 - 2 p.m. 

Berkeley Richmond JCC Auditorium 

1414 Walnut St.  

Los Angeles Magician and Comedian “Hotei the Magic Guy.” For kids 2 through 12 and their parents. $7. 236-7469 www.thebuddyclub.com 

 

Berkeley Architectural  

Heritage Fall House Tour 

1 - 5 p.m. 

St. Clement’s Episcopal Church 

Claremont Blvd. & Russell St.  

This year’s tour “Around the Claremont Hotel” features ten houses in the historic neighborhood of residences and gardens that surround the landscaped park of the hotel. There will be a reception at one of the houses. $30. 841-2242 

 

Third Annual Sisters of Fire  

Awards 

3 - 6 p.m. 

First Unitarian Church of Oakland 

14th and Castro streets 

The Women of Color Resource Center will honor Congresswoman Barbara Lee with an award for Courage and Conscience. This year’s program, “Forward from Durban: Raising Women’s Voices Against War and Racism,” will also feature reports from women who traveled to the United Nations World Conference Against Racism in Durban, South Africa. $15 - $50 sliding scale. 848-9272 www.coloredgirls.org 

 

Run for Peace 

9 a.m. - 12 p.m. 

Berkeley Marina 

Participants can choose 10 K run, 5 K run or 5K walk. $18 per participant. For registration form call 849-1742 or e-mail unarunforpeace@yahoo.com 

 


Monday, Oct 22

 

Franciscanism, Understanding  

the Vision 

1 - 2 p.m. 

Franciscan School of Theology 

1712 Euclid Ave. 

Graduate Theological Union presents seminar exploring the lives, times and writings of and about Francis and Clare of Assisi. 848-5232 

 

Interfaith Couples Look at  

Love and Choices 

7:30 - 9 p.m. 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St.  

Two films to stimulate discussion about interfaith families, love and identity. $25 per couple. 548-0237 

 


Tuesday, Oct. 23

 

UNtraining White Liberal  

Racism 

2 - 5 p.m. 

The UNtraining offers personal work in a supportive setting for white people to address our unconscious racial conditioning. $10. Private residence, call 235-6134 for address.  

 

Berkeley Farmers’ Market 

2-7 p.m. 

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

548-3333


The Berkeley Tennis Club is really in Oakland

Susan Cerny
Saturday October 20, 2001

The Berkeley Tennis Club, located at 1 The Tunnel Rd., is tucked rather inconspicuously beneath the Claremont Hotel. Although both are officially in Oakland, the club was founded in Berkeley in 1906.  

The original Berkeley Tennis Club was located at 2624 Hillegass Ave. and consisted of two simple rolled earth tennis courts.  

Two years later, a woodsy shingled clubhouse was erected next to the courts. The club was so popular that by 1909 there were five tennis courts and a membership of more than 150.  

Although the original clubhouse was converted to a home after the club moved to its present location in 1917, the building retains most of its original charm.  

The main social room is paneled with unpainted redwood and has a high-pitched ceiling. The large fireplace is constructed of clinker brick. This clubhouse was designed by Walter Ratcliff, Jr. and Alfred Henry Jacobs and is a city of Berkeley Landmark.  

In 1917 the Berkeley Tennis Club moved to its present location on property leased from the Claremont Hotel, which opened in 1915. The architect of this sprawling building was Roland I. Stringham. Like the original clubhouse, the club’s “new” building also contains a large social room with wood paneling, maple flooring and exposed truss work. A small stage at one end of the room was included for theatrical productions.  

Historically, the Berkeley Tennis Club is associated with William C. (”Pop”) Fuller who served as an unofficial coach for the junior members for 26 years. Among his protégés were Helen Wills Moody and Helen Jacobs, who both played at Wimbledon. 

Jacobs was also selected twelve times to the Wightman Cup team. Hazel Hotchkiss (Wightman), who joined the Club in 1906, won 43 national championships and was elected to the National Lawn Tennis Hall of Fame. Maurice McLoughlin won the National Men’s Singles in 1912. Thomas Bundy was a Wimbledon finalist in 1913 and captain of the Davis Cup team in 1914. William M. Johnson won the National in 1915 and was also member of the Davis Cup team. The William M. Johnson award is given each year by the United States Lawn Tennis Association Hall of Fame. 

After the 1991 Firestorm, the Club provided shelter for 26 families. 

 

 

– Susan Cerny is the author of “Berkeley Landmarks.” She writes Berkeley Observed in conjunction with the Berkeley Architectural Heritage Association.


Redistricting lines explained

Mike O’Malley,Dave Blake
Saturday October 20, 2001

Editor: 

We’ll start responding to the empty exaggerations and invective in David Tabb’s “art of gerrymandering” letter to the Planet (10/16) by clearing up one easy point: The “O’Malley” in the “O’Malley/Blake” redistricting proposal is Mike, not his wife Becky. He’s the tall one, with the beard. He spoke for our plan at Council, so that’s one fact it shouldn’t have been hard for Tabb to get straight. 

Gerrymandering: Tabb tries to damn us with this accusation while evading any discussion of the odd line-drawing that actually constitutes gerrymandering. That may be because the most gerrymandered proposal submitted was the one he co-authored with District 8 Councilmember Polly Armstrong’s Planning Commissioner, MaryAnn McCamant. (For all Tabb’s complaints about dishonesty, he might have mentioned his role in this process.) Tabb is District 5 Councilmember Miriam Hawley’s Planning Commissioner. 

Tabb’s plan was to take the Bateman neighborhood around Alta Bates Hospital (south of Russell from College to Telegraph) out of District 7 (which needed more population, not less), annexing the entire neighborhood to District 8. We argued successfully to the Council that this plan was a gerrymander, drastically distorting for political advantage the district lines defined in the 1986 District Elections Initiative. Bateman neighbors agreed with us, and came to Council to speak for our plan and against Tabb’s. 

Our plan, in contrast, was designed “to preserve the Districts to the extent possible,” as the Charter states. We tried to make every change just one block off the lines; we moved eight scattered blocks (out of 1,100 in the entire city) to districts two blocks away. Tabb’s plan moved 23 blocks of Bateman as much as six blocks away into District 8. 

Defending student interests that Tabb claims we betrayed: perhaps we should have tried harder. The students called for creating a student super-majority district, one that would be heavily favored to unseat the incumbent and elect a student. Tabb proposed moving the single-family-home South end of District 7 into District 8, making District 7 (currently represented by a progressive) into a 65 percent student district; the progressive councilmembers could have moved the student-dense North end of 7 into District 8, making District 8 (currently represented by a conservative) a 65 percent student district. Instead, they chose to make both districts 50 percent student. It’s a telling sign of how conservatives feel about the student vote that it is this act of fairness that makes them howl. 

Procedural issues: Tabb’s accusations of secrecy, conspiracy, and last-minute underhandedness are red herrings. Our plan was delivered to Council on Aug. 15, and was available on the Internet soon after. Councilmembers requested a few changes. So what? Councilmembers change proposals all the time – it’s their job. The amendment Vice Mayor Shirek proposed at the second public hearing on Oct. 2 made minor refinements to our plan, moving one block back into District 1 and five border Bateman blocks back into District 7. Eight other blocks shifted minimally to balance the population differences caused by those changes. The measure was not voted on at the public hearing, but was continued so that the proposed changes could be documented by staff before the actual vote a week later.  

Sour Grapes: This term is outside the normal scope of political science, so it’s not surprising that Tabb misuses it to describe how he felt the progressives tried to characterize him. It means belittling a prize you failed to win. The correct phrase is Sore Loser. 

Mike O’Malley 

Dave Blake 

Berkeley 

The authors submitted the O’Malley/Blake redistricting plan, which formed the basis for the plan adopted by the Council on Oct. 9


One-man show “Nocturne” opens at the Rep

By John Angell Grant, Special to the Planet
Saturday October 20, 2001

The two Rapp brothers were not joined at birth, but they are joined in“Nocturne,” a play which opened Wednesday on Berkeley Repertory Theatre’s thrust stage as the first show in that company’s Parallel Season of less-traditional stage works. 

Thirty-three-year-old playwright Adam Rapp is the author of this award-winning one-man play. His younger brother, 29-year-old Anthony Rapp, is the performer. 

“Nocturne” premiered last fall at Cambridge's American Repertory Theater. It won Boston's Elliot Norton Award for Outstanding New Script, and Best New Play by the Independent Reviewers of New England. It was later selected as one of the Burns Mantle 10 Best Plays of the 2000-2001 season. 

Playwright Adam Rapp has a substantial literary resume, including more than a half-dozen stage works. In addition, his published novels include: “Missing the Piano” (Viking/HarperCollins), “The Buffalo Tree” (Front Street/HarperCollins), and “The Copper Elephant” (Front Street/HarperCollins). 

Anthony has an equally-impressive performance resume, with many New York stage credits. Most notably, he originated the role of Mark Cohen in the Pulitzer Prize-winning “Rent.” 

Anthony’s film performances include “Adventures in Babysitting,” “Road Trip,” and Ron Howard's upcoming “A Beautiful Mind,” starring Russell Crowe. He recently released a solo rock CD “Look Around.” 

“Nocturne” is a 90-minute show with no intermission. It tells the disturbing story of a 32-year-old writer sitting up all night in a spartan, book-strewn, New York East Village apartment, narrating to the audience how his unhappy life has played out since he decapitated his 9-year-old sister in an automobile accident 15 years earlier. That accident destroyed all family relationships.  

The telling of “Nocturne” becomes the narrator’s struggle to navigate back through this tragedy and see if there’s any way that he, or his remaining family members can recover their lives. 

An insomniac up all night in the darkest hours of isolation, this nameless narrator, known as The Son, meditates on the worst nightmare of his life. 

“Nocturne” divides into three story segments. In the first, the narrator tells of circumstances leading up to and immediately following the death. The second segment describes his ensuing flight to New York and isolation from the world. The third is his attempt to reconnect 15 years later. 

Despite its shocking story and gory details, the first segment is the Achilles heel in this play. Here we understand that the narrator has played the tragic death episode over and over in his mind for 15 years, hoping to see it some different way. 

As a writer, he analyzes the language of his accounts of the tragedy, looking for more meaning. 

Though it's a powerful segment initially, it goes on and on and eventually loses some of that power. You can squeeze only so much drama out of a traumatized man who has disconnected from the world, remaining obsessively isolated. 

Further, a couple of early story elements (the sister’s death, the father’s gun) threaten to play like potboiler fiction. 

Performance-wise, it also seems in this segment, the story underneath the text asks to be played against the grain of the text on the surface. But with Rapp's earnest and obsessive performance, he and director Mark Brokaw have chosen not to do that. 

In the second story segment, the family implodes after the death. The narrator flees his hometown in Illinois for New York's East Village, a minimalist job in a used book store and a literary career in isolation. 

Finally, 15 years later, he revisits a dying father to find some connection and peace after years of estrangement. 

This last segment is the most satisfying, since we finally experience a connected human relationship, as actor Rapp plays dialogue scenes between himself and his father. 

Set designer Neil Patel’s unusual, long, narrow, back-lit, horizontal panel extends the width of a dark, book-littered bare stage. Initially, the panel’s imposing light communicates late night insomnia. Later it reveals strings of words from the life of the emerging writer. Finally, it relaxes into a snowfall. 

“Nocturne” is a play about finding a way to grow beyond development-stopping traumas, and out of the pain and fear of isolation. It’s about working through deep grief and coming back to emotional life and sensibility, even if it’s years later. 

And perhaps because the audience spends a long time in the emotional desert of the show’s lengthy opening segment, when the reconnection and recovery payoff finally come in “Nocturne,” it is a moving experience. 

 

 

 

Daily Planet theater reviewer John Angell Grant has written for American Theatre, Back Stage West, Callboard and many other publications. E-mail him at jagplays@yahoo.com. 

 


Arts & Entertainment Calendar

Compiled by Guy Poole
Saturday October 20, 2001

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; Oct. 19: Little Jonny and the Giants; Doors open at 8 p.m. unless noted. 3629 Martin Luther King Jr. Way, Oakland. 655-6661 

 

Shafqat Ali Khan Oct. 20: 8 p.m. Concert of classical Ragaa, Sufi, Urdu, Persian Ghazel, and other popular musical styles from India. $20 general admission, $15 students. Julia Morgan Center for the Arts, 2640 College Ave. 845-8542 www.juliamorgan.org 

 

 

“Prometeh in Evin” Oct. 28: 8 p.m., A drama about political prisoners in Iran, performed by the brave and innovative Parsian Group. Julia Morgan Center for the Arts. $25, Children, $15 2640 College Ave 845.8542 www.juliamorgan.org. 

 

“Swanwhite” Through Oct. 21: Thur. - Sat., 8 p.m., Sun. 7 p.m. A new translation of the Swedish Play that asks the question what good is romantic love, directed by Tom Clyde. $20, Sundays are “Pay What You Can”. Transparent Theater, 1901 Ashby Ave. 883-0305, www.virtuous.com 

 

“Orestes” Through Oct. 21: Fri. - Sat., 8 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m. An adaptation of the classical play by Euripides that incorporates passages inspired or taken from various 20th century texts. Written by Charles Mee, Directed by Christopher Herold. $6-12. Zellerbach Playhouse on the UC Berkeley campus 642-8268 

 

“Approach” Through Oct. 27: Thur. - Sat., 8 p.m. An examination of the search for intimacy as our most precious form of survival. Written by Susan Wiegand, Directed by Katie Bales Frassinelli. $15 general admission, $10 students and seniors. Eighth Street Studio Theatre, 2525 8th St. 655-0813 www.shotgunplayers.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 

 

“me/you...us/them” Nov. 8 though Nov. 10: Thur - Sat 8 p.m., matinee on Sat. 2:30 p.m. Three one-acts that look at interpersonal, as well as societal relationships from the perspective of the disabled. $10 - $25. Julia Morgan Center for the Arts, 2640 College Ave. 925-798-1300 

 

“Nocturne” Through Nov. 11: Tues./Thurs./Sat. 8 p.m., Weds. & Sun. 7 p.m, matinee on Thurs./Sat./Sun. 2 p.m. Mark Brokaw directs Anthony Rapp in One-Man Show. Written by Adam Rapp. $38 - $54. Berkeley Repertory’s Thrust Stage, 2025 Addison St. 647-2949 www.berkeleyrep.org 

 

“Travesties” Through Nov. 17: Fri. - Sat., 8 p.m., and Thurs., Nov. 15, 8 p.m. A witty fantasy about James Joyce meeting Lenin in Zurich during World War I. Written by Tom Stoppard, Directed by Mikel Clifford. $10. Live Oak Theatre, 1301 Shattuck. 528-5620 

 

“Macbeth” Nov. 9 though Nov. 18: Fri. - Sat., 8 p.m., Sun. 5 p.m. Presented by the Albany High School Theater Ensemble. $7 adults, $5 students and seniors. Albany High School Little Theater, 603 Key Route Blvd. 559-6550 x4125 theaterensemble@hotmail. com 

“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 

 

 

Pacific Film Archive Theater : 7:30 p.m., Jungle Secrets, Yãkwa; Oct. 20: 3:30 p.m., Berkeley High/Bay Area Film Festival; 7 p.m., The Testament of Dr. Mabuse; 9:20 p.m., The Thousand Eyes of Dr. Mabuse; Oct. 21: 3:30 p.m., Kiss and Film, 5:30 p.m., Harakiri; Oct. 22: 7 p.m., The Closed Doors; Oct. 23: 7:30 p.m., Super-8mm Films by Theresa Cha; Oct. 24: 7:30 p.m., The Rainy Season and Wai’a Rini; Oct. 26: 7:30 p.m., The Passion of Joan of Arc, 9:15 p.m., Vivre sa Vie; Oct 27: 7 p.m., New Music for Silent Films by UCB Composers; Oct. 28: 5:30 p.m., Vampyr; Oct. 29: 7 p.m., A Time for Drunken Horses; Oct. 30: 7:30 p.m., An Evening with Leslie Thornton; Oct. 31: 7:30 p.m., 9:20 p.m., Saudade do Futuro. 

2575 Bancroft Way, 642-1124 www.bampfa.berkeley.edu 

 

“Ralph Bunche: An American Odyssey” Oct. 20: 1 p.m. The documentary chronicles Bunche, who rose to become Under-Secretary General of the United Nations, where he helped to bring about the Armistice in the 1948 Arab-Israeli War for which he was later awarded the Nobel Prize for Peace. $8. Oakland Museum, 1000 Oak Street Oakland, 652-3192 

 

 

“First Annual Art Show” UC Berkeley Life Drawing Group Reception, Oct. 20: 3 p.m.; Oct. 21- 26: 7 - 10 p.m. Figure studies from the workshops at UC Berkeley. 1014 60th St., Emeryville. 923-0689 

 

“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  

 

“Cut Plates and Bowls” Annabeth Rosen, “Just Jars” Sandy Simon Through Nov. 3; Saturdays 10 - 5 or by appointment. Trax Ceramic Gallery, 1306 3rd St. 526-0279. cone5@aol.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. Mon. - Fri. 8 a.m. - 6 p.m. U.C. Berkeley, Graduate School of Journalism, North Gate Hall, Hearst and Euclid. Free. 642-3383 

 

“Jesus, This is Your Life - Stories and Pictures by Kids” Through Nov. 16: California children, ages four through twelve, from diverse backgrounds present original artwork, accompanied by a story written by the artist. “Cleve Gray, Holocaust Drawings” Oct. 15 through Jan. 25: 21 works on paper inviting the viewer to consider the atrocity of the Holocaust in ways unattainable through words or text. Mon. - Thur. 8:30 a.m. -10 p.m., Fri. 8:30 a.m. - 6 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m. - 6 p.m., Sun. 12 p.m. - 7 p.m. Flora Lamson Hewlett Library, 2400 Ridge Rd. 649-2541. 

 

“Changing the World, Building New Lives: 1970s photographs of Lesbians, Feminists, Union Women, Disability Activists and their Supporters” 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. 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 

 

“2001 James D. Phelan Art Awards in Printmaking” Honorees: Bridget Henry, David Kelso, and Margaret Van Patten. Oct. 19 - Nov. 30 Tues. - Fri. noon - 5 p.m., other times by appointment. Kala Art Institue, 1060 Heinz Ave. 549-2977 www.kala.org 

 

“The Whole World’s Watching: Peace and Social Justice Movements of the 1960s and 1970s” Through Dec. 16: A documentary photo exhibition which examines the rich history of the social movements of the 1960s and 1970s. 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 Oct. 18: Patricia Nell Warren reads from her novel “The Wild Man”, Oct. 22: J.M. Redmann reads from “Death By the Riverside”; 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 Oct 18: Tamora Pierce talks about “Protector of the Small”; 1730 Fourth St. 559-9500 

 

Cody’s on Telegraph Ave. Oct. 10: Timothy Liu & Sam Will read their poetry; Oct. 14: Laurie Duesing & Mary Julia Klimenko read their poetry; Oct. 15: Amir Aczel poses The Riddle of the Compass: The Invention That Changed the World; Oct. 16: Kip Fulbeck talks about “Paper Bullets”; Oct. 17: Valerie Berry, Terry Ehret & Grace Grafton read their poetry; Oct. 18: Suzanne Antoneta & Micah Perks talk about “Body Toxic: An Environmental Memoir” and “Pagan Time: An American Childhood; Oct. 26 Sage Cohen & Mari L’esperance read their poetry; All shows at 7:30 p.m.; 2454 Telegraph Ave. 845-7852 

 

Coffee Mill Poetry Series Oct. 16: 7 - 9 p.m. Steve Arntsen and Kathleen Dunbar followed by open mike reading. 3363 Grand Ave., Oakland 465-3935 ksdgk@earthlink.net 

 

Eastwind Books of Berkeley Oct. 20: Miriam Ching Louie reads from “Sweatshop Warriors: Immigrant Women Workers Take on the Global Factory”; Nov. 10: 4 p.m. Ruthanne Lum McCunn reads from her novel “Moon Pearl”; Nov. 18: 4 p.m. Noel Alumit, M.G. Sorongon, and Marianne Villanueva read from their contributions to the anthology “Tilting the Continent: Southeast Asian American Literature”; 2066 University Ave. 548-2350 

 

Ecology Center Oct. 22: 7 - 9 p.m. Toby Hemenway presents a slideshow and reads from “Gaia’s Garden: A guide to Home Scale Permaculture”; 2530 San Pablo Ave. 548-220 x233 

 

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 Sun., 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Rides: Sun., 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; Oct. 21: United Nations Day; Oct. 25: A Storytelling Pajama Party, 6 - 7 p.m.; Oct. 27: 4th Annual Habitot Halloween; Oct. 28: Family Arts Day; Oct. 31: Sugar-Art Halloween Frosting; Nov. 3: Tales from the Enchanted Forest, 11 a.m. - 12:15 p.m.; Nov. 9: Living with the Earth; Nov. 17: Recycle that Stuff; $4 adults; $6 children age 7 and under; $3 for each additional child age 7 and under. Mon. and Wed., 9:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.; Tues. and Fri., 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Thur., 9:30 a.m. to 7 p.m.; Sat., 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sun., 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. 2065 Kittredge St. 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. Mon. through Fri., 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sat. and Sun., 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.  

 

University of California Berkeley Art Museum Pacific Film Archive has reopened after its summerlong 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. 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  

 

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


Eagles, referees too much for St. Mary’s to handle

By Jared Green,Daily Planet Staff
Saturday October 20, 2001

Harsh calls and clutch drive give Kennedy 35-30 win 

 

For quite a while on Friday afternoon, it looked as if the St. Mary’s football team had two opponents on the field at Kennedy High: the Eagles and the officials. 

The game was a good one, with the lead changing hands four times in the second half and spectacular plays on both sides of the ball. But what could have been a rousing win for the Panthers turned into a questionable 35-30 win for Kennedy when some terrible calls turned the game in the Eagles’ favor. 

With the Panthers up 30-29 in the fourth quarter, Kennedy’s Jamyah Fisher caught a short pass over the middle and fumbled the ball, with St. Mary’s recovering. But after some discussion among themselves, the officials ruled that Fisher’s forward progress had been stopped prior to the fumble and gave the ball back to the Eagles, saying that although a whistle had not blown before the ball came out, the play was dead at that point. 

Later in the quarter, St. Mary’s safety Trestin George appeared to break up a fourth-down pass that would have sealed the game for the Panthers. But once again, an officials’ conference resulted in a break for the Eagles, as George was called for pass interference. The resulting first down extended the drive that became the winning score for Kennedy. 

The Eagles, it must be said, took advantage of the breaks, as good teams do. On a 4th-and-1 on the St. Mary’s 39, Kennedy quarterback Ricky Duffy broke a sneak for 31 yards, putting the ball inside the 10. One play later, Joe Washington ran a reverse in for the winning touchdown. 

“I just took off and kept going,” Duffy said of his game-breaking run. “I just didn’t want to be tackled.” 

The Eagles won the game despite being being outgained on offense, 419-202. Penalties and special teams play, however, negated the St. Mary’s advantage, as several promising drives into Kennedy territory were rebuffed by flags on the Panthers. Throw in an 85-yard kickoff return for a touchdown by Fisher that tied the score at 22-22 late in the third quarter, and the picture gets a little clearer. 

“The first half we had a lot of penalties and missed opportunities,” St. Mary’s head coach Jay Lawson said. “Then the game turned into a track meet for a while.” 

Lawson restrained himself when commenting on the officials, although he and his fellow coaches made their thoughts clear during the game. 

“You never want to blame officials for a loss, but they killed three of our drives,” Lawson said. “But that’s what happens on the road. You’re just not going to get the calls.” 

The Panthers took their last lead at the end of the third quarter, as quarterback Steve Murphyspun out of a potential sack and found wide receiver Ryan Coogler open behind the defense. Coogler gained 64 yards on the play, and Murphy scored on a 3-yard keeper on the following play. George pounded a two-point conversion in to put the Panthers up 30-29. 

George had his usual stellar day on offense, picking up 178 yards and a touchdown on the ground. Coogler had 137 receiving yards, including a 67-yard touchdown catch-and-run to put his team up 15-0 in the second quarter.  

The Panthers had a lead at 22-15 after George’s 20-yard touchdown run, keyed by a nice downfield block by wideout Courtney Brown. But after Fisher’s big touchdown return, Murphy threw an interception when his arm was hit as he threw, and Duffy found Alan Drummond on a play-action pass on the next play for an 18-yard score and a 29-22 lead. 

Murphy threw for two scores in the first half and had 198 yards on the day, a number which could have been bigger. But a 31-yard pass to Chase Moore on the opening drive was called back for offensive pass interference, with the Eagles somehow getting both the yards for the penalty and the turnover on downs, the first of many calls that brought a furor on the officials’ heads from the St. Mary’s sideline.


Local schools incorporate nutritional awareness

By Jeffrey Obser, Daily Planet Staff
Saturday October 20, 2001

John Muir Elementary School held a Squash-o-Rama Friday, part of an ongoing effort in the district and around the state to promote nutritional awareness among young students. 

At lunchtime, students lined up to sample dozens of delectable frittatas, sautés, pasta-like casseroles, and even desserts, all prepared and served by parent volunteers. 

Nabil Abdelfattah, father of a third-grader, said the children had learned this: “There’s life beyond hot dogs.” 

Squash-o-Rama, and a mini student walk-a-thon afterwards, both stemmed from federal and nonprofit grants aimed at helping young kids appreciate healthy foods and exercise.  

“The main thrust of this is the rising trend of obesity, childhood diabetes, and poor nutrition that’s leading to chronic disease and cancer,” said Erica Peng, who supervises the school district’s Nutrition Network Program. 

In 1996, the U.S. Department of Agriculture began targeting a portion of its food-stamp funds toward education, encouraging healthier eating habits among kids from low-income households. 

This year, 10 Berkeley schools have divided up $1 million from those funds, distributed throughout the state health services department’s Nutrition Network program. Local governments, churches and colleges have also received money from the state to seed farmers’ markets and conduct health education. 

The school district pays stipends to about 30 teachers to teach gardening and cooking classes and find ways to incorporate nutrition into the broader instructional program. It also holds one-time trainings for afterschool coordinators and extended day care teachers, Peng said. 

The most visible result of the nutrition push has been salad bars offering Berkeley Farmers’ Market fare in school cafeterias – a popular addition, according to Peng. 

“The test will be that enough participation happens that a profit can be generated” to help sustain nutritional services beyond the grant money,” she said. 

In Berkeley, the program is supplemented by nonprofit aid, most significantly from the Center for Eco-Literacy. Four elementary schools (John Muir, Rosa Parks, Washington, and Oxford) and the Common Ground small school at Berkeley High have received $10,000 each from the Berkeley nonprofit. 

Nutrition Network funds are also at work elsewhere in the city. Berkeley’s public health department sponsors a part-time education instructor at the Berkeley High student health center, and the Berkeley Food Policy Council runs a Tuesday afternoon mini-farmer’s market at the Bay Area Hispano Institute for Advancement day care center at 1000 Camelia Street.  

California is one of 20 states participating in the federal grant, said David Ginsburg, a cancer prevention and nutrition expert at the state health services department. The state received about $48 million this fiscal year. 

“It’s a significant amount of money,” Ginsburg said. “We’re really excited about that because it has now allowed nutritional education to begin having a presence in local communities where it has had very little before.” 

The federal government’s generosity looks like it is set to shrink, though. When the grant first came into effect, California schools received funds if 40 percent of their students were eligible for free or reduced-cost lunches. (All students in participating schools then have access to the funded programs.) Other states all needed that ratio to be 50 percent, but California had a waiver. 

Last year, that waiver was not available. And the state recently notified the district that next year, only schools where 50 percent of the students receive free lunches, not reduced-cost lunches, will be eligible. 

“I would say the change in the administration” led to the added restriction, Peng said, adding that it could reduce the number of eligible schools from 10 to “four or five.” 

However, she and others plan to sign up more kids for the lunch program. 

“We’re partnering with afterschool programs, and they’re working with Lifelong Medical, a local nonprofit health provider, in trying to get sign-ups for free and reduced (meals),” Peng said. Due to stigma and language barriers, she said, the lunch program rosters “don’t reflect the actual numbers at the school site; they reflect who got the forms back.” 

Waters, the John Muir principal, said she was careful not to have nutritional education ruffle parents’ feathers back in the kitchen at home. 

“Kids are pretty open to the training or information they receive at school,” Waters said, “and then I think it’s an opportunity for them to have discussions with their families.” 

One John Muir teacher plans to fend off the Halloween sugar tsunami by challenging kids to bring in anything nutritious that is colored orange, black, or yellow. 

“So you might get the pumpkin muffin, but you wouldn’t get the white flour cupcake with the pile of icing on top,” Waters said.


Wake-up call

Ben Kroeger
Saturday October 20, 2001

The Daily Planet received this letter addressed to “All residents of Berkeley”: 

You people should wake up to reality. You all live in a dream world. Holding hands and singing peace songs with terrorists is not the way to handle this situation. The sad part about you people is that you fail to realize that the action that we as a nation are now taking in Afghanistan is to defend your right to protest and defend our way of life. The actions that your city council has taken in the month since the attacks are treasonous. IF YOU DON'T LIKE THE COUNTRY THEN GET THE HELL OUT. You people are insulting to even say that you are from AMERICA. 

Ben Kroeger 

Pinckney, MI


A circus with SOUL

Yunji de Nies, Special to the Planet
Saturday October 20, 2001

 

 

OAKLAND — A new circus is in town, bringing a twist under the big top by giving entertainment soul. 

The UniverSoul Circus, the only African-American owned and operated circus in the world, is in its second week of the “UnExpected Soul 2001” tour at Oakport St. in Oakland. From the outside, the circus looks like any other: A large blue- and white-striped tent, concession stands, and performers’ trailers littered across the parking lot. Inside, the show is anything but ordinary. 

It begins with lights, brightly-colored costumed figures dancing, flipping and twirling, to music. It is the music that carries the show, kicking off with a colorful African dance to fast-paced drum beats, then switching to the music of the Jazz Age in Harlem, with swing and tap, then moving to hip-hop, gospel and R&B. Much of the music is contemporary, and all of it is African-American. 

But the show is not geared simply toward an African-American audience, rather Ringmaster “Casual Cal,” Calvin Dupree, says it is for all families, to bring out soul.  

“Soul is not a color, it’s an experience,” he says. “Soul is in all of us, and once you feel it, get it, see it you become a better person behind it." 

It is this notion of soul that motivates much of the performance.  

Dupree introduces the acts by integrating comedy and positive messages to the audience.  

For the group high wire act, he stresses teamwork. When talking about the female performers, he emphasizes respect.  

And when Lunga, an 11-year-old contortionist from South Africa twists her body into extraordinary positions in one of the most astounding parts of the show, Dupree reminds the audience of the importance of encouraging and praising children. 

The performance never feels canned. The audience is constantly participating — there is even a throw back to SoulTrain, where people get into the ring and strut. Adults seem to be having as much fun as kids, and the show is flat out funny.  

Dupree, who co-founded the Atlanta-based group eight years ago, says he loves his job, partly because of the positive influence his work can have on the African-American community.  

“Most of all,” he says what makes him happy is, “seeing kids and families’ eyes, full of pride and ownership, and doing something different.”


’Jackets win a snoozer over helpless Emery

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Saturday October 20, 2001

Emery High took on a giant on Friday night, and got stepped on. 

The Berkeley Yellowjackets ran up 330 yards on the ground against the overmatched Spartans, winning 35-0 despite failing to complete a pass in the game. The ’Jackets held Emery to negative-eight yards in the game, allowing just two first downs, one via a Berkeley penalty. 

“This is a big victory for us. We got out alive and healthy,” Emery head coach Bernie O’Hara said. “This was David versus Goliath, and we just got beat.” 

The score could have been even uglier if Berkeley had been able to get their usual deep passing game going. But starting quarterback Raymond Pinkston injured his ankle on the second play of the game and left the game for good, leaving the ball in backup Lee Franklin’s hands. The Berkeley coaches decided to button up the offense, calling for 23 running plays on offense before allowing Franklin to throw a pass late in the second quarter. That pass should have gone for a touchdown, but wide receiver Jason Goodwin dropped Franklin’s bomb despite being wide open well behind the defense. It was the only pass Franklin would throw in the first half. 

The ’Jackets really didn’t need to air the ball out against the Spartans, as their offensive line opened up huge holes for the running backs. The opening drive consisted of 10 runs for 82 yards, with tailback Germaine Baird accounting for 65 of them on six carries, and fullback Aaron Boatwright pounded the ball into the end zone from five yards out for a 7-0 lead. 

Emery gained their lone offensive first down on the ensuing drive, and it was all downhill from there. They netted just eight yards in the first half, but avoided turning over the ball and managed to keep the ’Jackets off the scoreboard through halftime. 

Berkeley’s defense keyed the high-scoring second half for the ’Jackets, giving the offense four short fields to work with. First defensive lineman Justin Thepsoukmalay forced a fumble from Emery quarterback Keith Reynolds, with Greg Mitchell recovering on the Emery 15. Backup fullback Roger Mason did the rest, bulling his way up the middle for a score on the next play.  

Another Reynolds fumble gave Berkeley the ball at the Emery 35 on the next drive, and Boatwright punched the ball into the end zone from a yard out for his second score of the day. 

Emery’s next drive lost nine yards, and the ensuing punt died at their 33. Three plays later, Baird had his lone touchdown of the day to make the score 28-0 with nine minutes left in the game. O’Hara requested that the clock run for the rest of the game, in the interest of keeping the score decent and keeping injuries to a minimum.  

The ’Jackets could tack on just one more touchdown, a Craig Hollis nine-yard run.


Security personnel may be replaced at airport

By Carole-Anne Elliott, Special to the Daily Planet
Saturday October 20, 2001

As the Port of Oakland wrangles over whether to replace a private security firm at Oakland International Airport with law enforcement personnel, flight attendants and pilots arriving at the airport Thursday said they would be happy to see the government step in. 

“Anybody but regular people,” said Continental Airlines flight attendant Amanda Connelly. “I don’t think that they’re qualified and they pay some of them only minimum wage.” 

The Board of Port Commissioners on Tuesday postponed a decision on whether Oakland Police or Alameda County Sheriff’s Department personnel should take over functions now performed by ABC Security Service, Inc., of Oakland. ABC staff control traffic outside the airport’s two terminals and oversee security at vehicle entry gates. 

Recent news reports have highlighted security lapses at the airport. After the terrorist attacks Sept. 11, the Federal Aviation Administration put all airports on heightened alert and warned it would close airports if security breaches were found. 

“Because Sept. 11 happened, we have to look for ways to bring in a more professional level of security to the airport,” said airport spokesperson Cyndy Johnson. 

According to Port of Oakland aviation director Steve Grossman, non-sworn officers or para-professional employees of either the Oakland Police Department or the Alameda County Sheriff’s Department – or both – would take on the role now occupied by ABC staff. They would not be full-fledged police officers or sheriff’s deputies, Grossman said. They would be better trained, supervised by police or sheriff’s deputies, and paid more, “so the turnover would be less.” 

Most flight attendants and pilots interviewed asked not to be named, but said they thought upgrading private security staff was a good idea.  

“The background checks are much more thorough to be a police officer,” said one female attendant for Alaska Airlines. 

“Just look at how it is in foreign countries,” said Continental flight attendant Tiffany Allan, just off her second trip after the attacks.  

“Every single thing that goes into that airport and out is checked,” she said of the Tel Aviv Airport. Security is “very much on my mind. I’m about to quit, actually.” 

A one-year ABC employee hailing shuttles outside Terminal 1 volunteered information on his firm.  

“It’s just very unprofessional, the stuff that goes on here,” he said. “Just watch them,” he added, nodding to other security officers across the driveway. “They don’t really do a lot of things. They’re just talking.”  

He said he makes $10 per hour, not the $14 per hour he was promised when he was hired, and the company does not pay on time. 

Not everyone flying that morning thought replacing private security with law enforcement would do any good. An Alaska Airlines pilot awaiting his hotel shuttle said a police or sheriff employee controlling traffic would not do anything different from that which a private company employee does. 

While outside security personnel are being eyed, port officials are ignoring the security screening staff at passenger gates, the people who X-ray carry-on bags. They are hired and supervised by airlines, a practice that may soon be changed by legislation moving through Congress. 

But Jeff Zack, spokesman for the Association of Flight Attendants in Washington, D.C., said changing security screening staff is his organization’s biggest priority.  

“The current system, which is private firms, has been failing,” Zack said. “Anybody can take advantage of the system that’s in place. Terrorists have already shown that.” 

Zack said his association wants security screeners to be trained and employed by the federal Department of Justice, but improving just one aspect of airport security is unacceptable.  

“What the flight attendants are saying is, you can’t just plug one hole or two holes,” he said. “You need to plug them all.” 


No more denial

Thomas de Lackne
Saturday October 20, 2001

Editor: 

Two countries that have lived with terrorism for a long time, Spain and Ireland, come to mind, as examples that history does not give the United States of America much hope of winning the war against terrorism either in a few years or a few decades. In the meantime, we have seemingly forgotten that our scientists have been telling us that terrible things are in store for us as a consequence of our misuse of world resources and pollution of the environment, especially the effect on planetary weather patterns from global warming, and that a likely outcome is the end of civilization as we know it. Our scientists have even given us a prescription to remedy the situation, and I recommend the site www.naturalstep.org for anyone interested in looking further into the remedies. 

Simply put, we need to shift from the mentality which has created the insane advice of our leaders to buy, buy, buy if you are a good American, to a mentality which understands and accepts the concept of sustainable growth and sustainable industry, that is, creating a way of living that our children and their children can follow without destroying the means for subsistence on our planet. 

Wouldn't it be wonderful if our City Council members in Berkeley could address these life-threatening issues, by creating an environment in Berkeley for attracting sustainable and non-polluting industry? Wouldn't it be wonderful if we established a time-table for non-sustainable industries to make the transition to non-polluting sustainability? Wouldn't it be wonderful if our City Council offered special incentives for sustainable and non-polluting industry to move to this area and serve as a model for the rest of the country? 

The true madness in our country these days is the degree of denial that exists around the issues of pollution, degradation of the environment, global warming, in short, those things which are slowly but surely undermining the very basis for human life on the planet. While we find new ways to track down a few thousand terrorists, mother nature is not holding her breath to see if we can wake up. 

Thomas de Lackne Editor: 

Two countries that have lived with terrorism for a long time, Spain and Ireland, come to mind, as examples that history does not give the United States of America much hope of winning the war against terrorism either in a few years or a few decades. In the meantime, we have seemingly forgotten that our scientists have been telling us that terrible things are in store for us as a consequence of our misuse of world resources and pollution of the environment, especially the effect on planetary weather patterns from global warming, and that a likely outcome is the end of civilization as we know it. Our scientists have even given us a prescription to remedy the situation, and I recommend the site www.naturalstep.org for anyone interested in looking further into the remedies. 

Simply put, we need to shift from the mentality which has created the insane advice of our leaders to buy, buy, buy if you are a good American, to a mentality which understands and accepts the concept of sustainable growth and sustainable industry, that is, creating a way of living that our children and their children can follow without destroying the means for subsistence on our planet. 

Wouldn't it be wonderful if our City Council members in Berkeley could address these life-threatening issues, by creating an environment in Berkeley for attracting sustainable and non-polluting industry? Wouldn't it be wonderful if we established a time-table for non-sustainable industries to make the transition to non-polluting sustainability? Wouldn't it be wonderful if our City Council offered special incentives for sustainable and non-polluting industry to move to this area and serve as a model for the rest of the country? 

The true madness in our country these days is the degree of denial that exists around the issues of pollution, degradation of the environment, global warming, in short, those things which are slowly but surely undermining the very basis for human life on the planet. While we find new ways to track down a few thousand terrorists, mother nature is not holding her breath to see if we can wake up. 

Thomas de Lackne 

Berkeley


Slumping Bears fall to No. 20 Washington

By Dean Caparaz Daily Planet Correspondent
Saturday October 20, 2001

Sixteenth-ranked Cal continued its inconsistent play in women’s soccer, losing to No. 20 Washington, 1-0, at Edwards Stadium on Friday afternoon.  

After bolting out to an 8-1-0 record to start the season, Cal has gone 2-2-1 over the last five games.  

The Bears record now stands at 10-3-1 (2-1 in the Pac-10). Washington improves to 8-2-1 (2-0).  

In the loss to the Huskies, second-half substitute Erin Otagaki took advantage of a Cal defensive miscue to score the lone goal. In the 60th minute, Washington’s Caroline Putz crossed the ball from the left flank into the Cal penalty area. Cal defender Lucy Brining tried to clear it, but her clearance trickled to Otagaki, who slotted it past Cal goalkeeper Mallory Moser.  

Cal outshot the Huskies, 13-5, but not even star striker Laura Schott could save the Bears against fellow Hermann Trophy candidate Hope Solo, who played a strong match. The Huskies goalkeeper made nine saves, none bigger than the one in the 86th minute. Cal defender Kim Stocklmeir played a through ball into the Washington penalty area, and both Schott and Solo converged on it. Schott managed a quick shot before she collided with Solo, who corralled the ball.  

Schott, who entered the match as the Pac-10’s scoring leader with 27 points from 12 goals and three assists, had to leave the field and the stadium with what appeared to be an injured jaw. After the game, Schott’s status for Sunday’s home game against Washington State was unknown. Solo couldn’t remember which part of her body collided with Schott.  

“I know my leg is dead, my pelvic bone felt like it got crushed, my ribs are all crushed,” Solo said.  

The performance of Solo, a junior All-American keeper with U.S. national team experience, contrasted sharply with that of Moser, a freshman. Moser often came off her goal line late for loose balls and did not communicate well with her defense.  

The score was 0-0 at halftime despite some good scoring chances for both teams in the first half. Six of Cal’s seven first-half shots were on goal, with Schott accounting for three shots on goal. But a combination of Washington’s stingy defense and Cal’s inability to get behind the Husky defenders meant many of Cal’s shots came from long range and were not dangerous.  

“I did not feel we were aggressive going to goal today,” Cal coach Kevin Boyd said. “It was like we were satisfied just possessing the ball.”  

Boyd added, “Without the whole group committing to where they’re going and what they want to do, we’re going to keep outshooting teams and losing close games. We’ll win more than we lose just on the mere fact that we’re more talented. But when it really comes down to a tight game, I don’t think we’re going to come out on the positive side all the time.”


Need more info

Richard Graham
Saturday October 20, 2001

Editor 

In you article reporting the armed robbery at the medical marijuana club on University Avenue (Oct. 18) Jeff Jones of the Oakland Cannabis Buyers’ Co-op is quoted as saying “medical marijuana clubs generally run the same risks that other businesses do, and that some vigilance is called for.” How much is some vigilance? Your article quotes another operator in San Francisco as having increased security by firming up entrance facilities, having a staff training session, and learning how to do perimeter checks before opening doors and to exercise “preventative scrutiny.” Will the “The Old Brick House” adopt these measures before they re open next week? 

Frankly that is not the real issue for me because when I walk my 5-year daughter past their business, we will be OUTSIDE of their perimeter. The cannabis clubs will do what they have to do to protect their drugs and their money. What is the city of Berkeley going to do to protect the rest of us? They can start be allowing the Berkeley Police to tell the truth about what is happening at the five buyers’ clubs in Berkeley. Your reporter quotes The Berkeley Police as “unable to say whether other marijuana clubs in the city have been robbed.” Of course they know if others have been robbed. What I would like to know is why they are unable to tell the community.  

 

Richard Graham 

Berkeley


Governor may be ready to renegotiate power contracts

By Alisa Weinstein and Gina Comparini Special to the Planet
Saturday October 20, 2001

Under mounting public pressure, the Davis administration moved Friday toward renegotiating California’s costly, long-term power contracts, but refused to say what negotiations would mean to ratepayers. 

“We are analyzing the contracts we believe are ripe for renegotiation,” said Davis spokesman Steve Maviglio. “We are developing a strategy to renegotiate them.” 

Davis entered into the contracts at the height of the power crisis last spring and paid top dollar to secure long-term power supplies for the state. But with power prices considerably lower now, the Public Utilities Commission and the Legislature say Davis is locked into costs that are too high.  

The Davis administration’s acknowledgment of renegotiation possibilities is the first sign in months of a compromise that could end the feud over how to repay the state budget for the cost of keeping the lights on in California. 

The tension between state officials and the Public Utilities Commission spilled over in Oakland on Thursday at an Association of Bay Area Governments’ conference on energy and public policy.  

Speaking to local officials, business representatives and utility managers, State Treasurer Phil Angelides implored the PUC to approve a $12.5 billion bond sale that would help repay the state’s general fund. 

“Every day they don’t (approve the bond measure) they are sending this state into… fiscal crisis,” Angelides said, predicting more than a $10 billion deficit for California if the PUC hesitates.  

A defensive PUC President Loretta Lynch characterized the bond offering as “clunky” and said it would face litigation over the long-term power contracts the state signed with energy companies during the power crunch. She also bridled at the prospect of approving a bond sale that would force the commission to cede much of it’s authority to set utility rates. 

Citing the PUC’s historic role of protecting ratepayers, Lynch argued that consumers would be forced to pay a higher price than necessary for energy, which is why the long-term contracts must be renegotiated. 

The Angelides-Lynch exchange came as regional government associations warned the state that indecision over the role of market forces and regulation could lead to higher power costs, tax spikes and a less attractive business climate. 

“A clearer and more consistent set of rules is necessary to achieve regulatory stability and to send consistent signals to the market,” a report by ABAG, the Bay Area Council and the Bay Area Economic Forum stated. 

The report cited other industries’ successes with deregulation and urged policy makers not to abandon the idea for the power industry. Transition to deregulation can be challenging, the report said, but benefits of competition are “lower and more efficient prices, more efficient operating and investment decisions and improved product choice and service quality.” 

Thursday’s conference also covered the prospects for municipal power. 

Managers from municipal utilities in Alameda and Palo Alto, and representatives from the California Municipal Utilities Association told attendees that historically, the success rate of municipal power is varied.  

They urged city officials not to rush into municipalization, saying they should carefully weigh start-up costs against the long-term benefits of independent power sources. 

Neal DeSnoo from the Berkeley Energy Office said the City Council is waiting for a feasibility report from East Bay Municipal Utilities District before making any decisions about bringing municipally owned power to Berkeley.  

The council has been looking at EBMUD as a possible electricity provider, because the public utility’s structure is already in place and because it is an experienced provider of electrical power. 

“I think the overwhelming sentiment is people don’t want to be subject to the whims and the powers of these larger power generators,” DeSnoo said. “They want to take control over their own destiny.” 

 


Shame on Berkeley

Frank J. De Smidt
Saturday October 20, 2001

 

The Daily Planet received this letter written to the mayor and council: 

As a former Berkeley resident I am appalled at the action this council took in passing a despicable anti-American resolution. I am deeply offended by some of the comments contained therein. 

If I still lived at my former Berkeley address on Bonar Street near Bancroft Way I might even have the disdainful distinction of being represented by the misguided author of this abomination! 

How can Berkeley be in favor of stopping the bombing of evil terrorist thugs, who had no other goal in mind other than killing innocent Americans and citizens of 80 other nations? 

How can Berkeley call for us to “lessen our dependence on foreign oil from the Middle East” and not support offshore drilling and exploration in Alaska to reduce such dependence. Solar cells offer too little. Fuel cells will likely require oil based products. 

I will not visit your city or spend any my money there until such time as those, who support and voted for this hideous statement, are removed from office. 

 

Frank J. De Smidt 

Milpitas


Berkeley prof analyzes structural damage of the WTC

Pamitha Reynolds, Special to the Planet
Saturday October 20, 2001

Engineering expertise spies similarly-built local structures  

 

Concrete cracked, buckled and popped like a crumbling sugar cookie under more than 600,000 pounds of pressure at UC Berkeley today, but the steel frame it supported held firm.  

Dr. Abolhassan Astaneh-Asl, UC Berkeley professor of civil and environmental engineering, performed the experiment to demonstrate what he said could be a major breakthrough in disaster-safe building design. 

Many modern buildings are reinforced with steel plate shear walls – steel sheets bolted to columns and beams to increase stiffness and limit lateral motion.  

Steel, however, buckles when compressed, and concrete cracks under tension. 

Astaneh’s new shear wall is a marriage of the best of both materials – a six-inch slab of reinforced concrete bolted to the 3/8-inch steel plate. The concrete supports the steel wall and keeps it from buckling under stress. 

A 20-foot high section of steel and concrete, the half-scale prototype wall lay on its side in the hangar-like test lab.  

The concrete flaked and broke as a huge hydraulic pressed on its upper left corner, displacing it nine inches back and forth, but the steel never cracked. 

The wall prototype performed even better than expected, surviving an earthquake of more than magnitude nine without catastrophic failure.  

“We are very happy,” Astaneh said. “Without the concrete, a steel wall would be buckled by now.” 

Astaneh originally set out to design buildings that would survive severe earthquakes. Later, he realized the same designs would resist damage from car bombs and rocket attacks. 

Astaneh said the wall prototype is made out of ordinary materials, and would probably increase the cost of new buildings by no more than 2 percent.  

Older buildings could be retrofitted with the concrete slabs, which could be replaced after an earthquake. 

Astaneh recently returned from New York City, where he spent weeks sifting through the rubble of the World Trade Center, looking for answers.  

He stood before a table displaying pieces of the WTC and held up small pieces of twisted steel, lumps of concrete, and plastic baggies of powdered drywall and fireproofing. He also held up bits of aluminum, one printed with a serial number, which had been found stuck to steel columns from the twin towers. They were pieces of the airplanes. 

“I haven’t seen anything like this,” he said, holding up a foot-long twisted shard of steel. “It’s like a piece of bread, but it was high-strength steel.” 

From his research, Astaneh showed that the towers’ supporting columns withstood the original impact of the planes.  

They remained structurally sound until the heat of flaming jet fuel reached 1,000 degrees Celsius and began to melt the steel. The softened columns could no longer support the floors above, and the entire structure began to collapse. 

One of Astaneh’s main concerns was the collapse of Building Seven of the WTC, because there are several hundred similar buildings throughout the United States, including a few in San Francisco.  

“Why did Building Seven collapse?” he asked. “What made it burn for eight hours?” 

There have been some reports that there was fuel stored in the upper floors of the building, possibly for a small electrical power plant, which intensified the heat and duration of the fire. Astaneh refused to speculate on how well the building would have fared if the fuel had not been present. 

Astaneh spent some of his time in New York training iron and steel workers at the recycling yards to scan the 300,000 tons of steel wreckage for pieces of metal that may contain valuable clues to the structural collapse. 

Designed to withstand the impact of a Boeing 707, Astaneh wanted to assure people that the towers were well built. The buildings admirably withstood being hit by 767s.  

“That building in my opinion was really the best-designed building I’ve seen,” he said. “Our tall buildings are some of the best-designed structures in the world.” 

Astaneh also spoke about his experience sorting through the rubble in New York City.  

“You’re standing there and looking at something like this, and under it are 5,000 people like ourselves. It was terrible. It was part of us, it was like family,” he said. “Suddenly 5,000 of your people are no longer here.”  

He never went inside the ruins themselves.  

“I couldn’t go inside,” he said, “I wouldn’t walk on that.” 


Hard to boycott local businesses

Ted Vincent
Saturday October 20, 2001

Editor: 

It is a shame to hear of the boycott of that solid old Berkeley business, Ashby Lumber.  

On the other hand, most of Berkeley business is insulated from an economic boycott. Berkeley is not Emeryville with its neon generica chain stores, Berkeley is independent book stores with that volume to be found nowhere else. Berkeley is special video shops with that hard to find old movie. Berkeley is the ecology center store, the farmer’s market, great produce markets, a selection of stores for sick people needing medical marijuana, and Berkeley also has Good Vibrations, which most cities don’t have.  

From all over the Bay Area people come to Berkeley for things they can’t get in their town. Our clothing stores offer variety from saris to alpaca sweaters. Our cheese stores are unique. Our rock climbing establishment is considered one of the best in the west. We’ve got movie house row, the gormet ghetto, and the West Berkeley international smorgasborg of Thai, Ethiopian, Mexican, Japanese, Pakistani, Indian, and Chinese restaurants.  

Even our junk stores are distinctive. Where else do you find Urban Ore and our used backpack establishment? Clearly, many people are going to continue to support Berkeley business, some because of need, and some will probably come because they want to show their support for the City Council peace vote.  

 

Ted Vincent  

Berkeley


Air freshener won’t fix this stinky problem

by Tom and Ray Magliozzi and Doug Berman
Saturday October 20, 2001

Dear Tom and Ray: 

 

We have a '97 Ford Escort with 19,000 miles. Recently, we've noticed the strong smell of exhaust coming in through the air conditioner or heater almost every time we come to a complete stop. This only happens when we have the fan on with the vent intake open. I have to switch the air off every time I come to a stop in order to avoid this. We also notice the smell from the front seat when we have the windows rolled down. My wife confessed that she ran over a concrete parking barrier recently, and she feared there was some damage underneath. I took the car to our local Ford dealership and then to a national muffler chain. Neither of them found anything wrong. They both suggested I spray air freshener in the air vents. The smell is definitely exhaust, and we're concerned it might be dangerous. – Greg 

 

TOM: We're concerned, too, Greg. As you might know, one of the early symptoms of carbon-monoxide poisoning is confusion and poor judgment. And look -- you've already written to us for advice! 

RAY: You clearly have an exhaust leak, Greg. And it probably IS the result of your wife hitting the parking barrier. The front pipe of this car's exhaust system runs down from the engine under the front of the car, and it probably got jolted, creating a small leak somewhere. And the leaking exhaust is wafting up through the engine compartment and entering the ventilation system through the cowl in front of the windshield. 

TOM: And last time we checked, Lysol does not neutralize carbon monoxide (shame on those bozos for suggesting that). You need a mechanic who is willing to take a little time to find the leak. 

RAY: If it's a very small leak, the best way to pinpoint it is with an emissions wand -- the kind that's used in state emissions tests. The mechanic passes the wand around inside the engine compartment, and when the needle goes bonkers, he's found the site of the leak. 

RAY: Find someone who's willing to find this leak for you and who'll fix it, Greg. And in the meantime, if you catch yourself calling our radio show, seek medical attention immediately.  

 

 

If it ain't broke, you won't have to fix it! Order 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. 

 

Used car strategies 

 

 

Dear Tom and Ray: 

 

My beautiful, normally intelligent wife of 24 years and I disagree mightily about the best timing to buy and sell a vehicle. We're absolutely positive we're each right, and we're absolutely positive the other is wrong. The argument involves economics -- how to spend the least amount of money. I say you should buy a car with about 60,000-80,000 miles on it and drive it into the ground. She thinks it's better to buy a 1- or 2-year-old car and keep it only for two or three years. It's time to replace my "driven into the ground" '87 Nissan pickup, and we need your advice. – Kurt 

 

TOM: It's great to get letters from lovebirds like you two, Kurt. If this is all you've got to argue about, things must be pretty good. 

RAY: Here's the story. Speaking from a purely economic point of view -- how you spend the least amount of money on cars -- you're more correct than she is. If you buy an old car, which has already taken the bulk of its depreciation hit, and then drive it into the ground, you will spend the least. 

TOM: We actually wrote a pamphlet about this very subject, called "How to Buy a Great Used Car: What Detroit and Tokyo Don't Want You to Know." In it, we lay out several money-saving used-car strategies, and we prove mathematically that the "heap strategy"is the cheapest.  

RAY: Of course, there ARE downsides to the "heap" approach, Kurt. The biggest one is reliability. While the repair costs on a jalopy will never add up to the costs of new-car payments, breakdowns can be inconvenient and, in some cases, unsafe.  

So this strategy isn't for everybody -- your wife, for one, apparently. 

TOM: So another strategy we lay out in our pamphlet is to buy a car that's 2 or 3 years old. The ownership costs still come in way below those of a new car, but you get an almost-new car that's very reliable. Other advantages include getting most of the newest safety features, having a car that doesn't smell like someone else's b.o. yet and possibly getting some time left on a factory warranty. That's the strategy for your wife. 

RAY: And you guys just happen to be perfectly compatible. Let your wife buy a 2- or 3-year-old car and drive it for two or three years, and then she can sell it to you! 

TOM: Then you can drive it into the ground, and everybody's happy. You guys were made for each other, Kurt!  

*** 

Auto repairs can be costly! Save money 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? Write to Click and Clack in care of this newspaper, or e-mail them 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. 

 

CLICK AND CLACK TALK CARS 

THE CASE OF THE DISAPPEARING CLICKS  

BY TOM AND RAY MAGLIOZZI 

 

Dear Tom and Ray: 

I have a 1993 Mitsubishi Eclipse, and about two months ago I noticed a ticking noise coming from underneath the hood. I took it in to a mechanic, and he said my valve lifters were going out and I needed to replace them. I didn't have the $500, so I haven't done it yet. However, two weeks ago I noticed that the noise has disappeared. Does that mean my lifters have gone out completely? Is my car going to die on me? How much longer do I have? -- Rossanna 

TOM: Only your doctor can tell you how much longer you have, Rossanna. But your car is just fine. 

RAY: My guess is that one of two things was causing the ticking noise. It could have been a valve lifter. The valve lifters are responsible for keeping the valves properly adjusted by taking up the slack in the valve train. And they work by getting filled up with oil, which is under pressure from the oil pump. 

TOM: So it's possible that one or more of your lifters was not getting filled with enough oil. And when they're not working, what you hear is the clicking and clacking of the valves. Why they eventually got filled up with oil again, I don't know. Maybe there was a piece of debris in the way that finally got dislodged. But in any case, they're now working again, and all's right with the world. 

RAY: The more likely possibility, in my opinion, is that one of your valves got stuck. That would also cause a tapping noise that would be indistinguishable from the noise of a faulty valve lifter. And a stuck valve can get "unstuck" by itself, too. 

TOM: And in either case, your car is fine and there's nothing you need to do. As long as it's not making any noise now, I would forget about it entirely. Just change your oil and filter every 5,000 miles or so, and forget you ever wrote to us, Rossanna. 

*** 

Don't get stuck with a lemon. Read Tom and Ray's guide "How to Buy a Great Used Car: Things That Detroit and Tokyo Don't Want You to Know." Send $3 (check or money order) and a stamped (57 cents), self-addressed, No. 10 envelope to Used Car, P.O. Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853-6475. 

*** 

Got a question about cars? Write to Click and Clack in care of this newspaper, or e-mail them 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. 


High drama rings hallow

James Day
Saturday October 20, 2001

 

Editor: 

The City Council’s spats are usually just tiresome. This latest bordered on the obscene. 

Faced with the current horror and suffering, the council could do no better than to perform one of its self-important little dramas. 

The roles were certainly played to perfection. A progressive gets giddy with the sweep of events and the sound of bullhorns and dashes off an unnecessarily divisive resolution, followed by the usual backtracking, implausible denials and media-bashing. 

Not to be outdone, the mayor, know as the Queen of High Dudgeon to all those reporters in whose ears she has whispered of dark secrets and doom, performs her hand-wringing act, the one where she poses as the only person who really cares. A few days later, she latches (a little disloyally) onto the comments of some thick-brained patriots to prove that her opponents have once again harmed the city. 

The rest of the council hops up on stage (or is dragged on, in the case of Mim Hawley) to do their speaking parts, which consist largely of questioning the motives of the others, even though what’s going on outside is so awful that it demands we all try, more than we ever have, to be a little better than we usually are. 

It’s too bad. The truth is, all these people care about the city and want to do good, even if they don’t always act like it. And there was a time when such dramatics had some import, when there was real money to be spent (from block grants and other sources) and when the debates over land use and rent control were fresh and at a critical stage. 

Now it’s too often just cheap theater. They must know that even their hardcore district constituencies may grow weary and boot them off the stage. 

 

James Day 

Berkeley 

 

 

Webster says ‘dudgeon’ is a wood used especially for dagger hilts. -ed


Black officers work to end racial profiling

By Deborah Kong, The Associated Press
Saturday October 20, 2001

OAKLAND — As a black man, Ronald Davis believes he was once stopped by police simply because he was a minority driving a Mercedes-Benz. But as an undercover police officer, he has stopped young men on suspicion of drug dealing because they wore baggy jeans, carried pagers — and were black. 

Now Davis, the sole black captain in the Oakland police force, is leading an effort by the National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives to end racial profiling — even in a changing political climate. 

The Sept. 11 terrorist attacks have added a new wrinkle to the racial profiling debate, with Middle Easterners raising concerns they have become targets. There are also indications that frightened Americans might be more willing to accept profiling in the name of national security. 

A nationwide CNN-USA Today-Gallup poll conducted the weekend after the attacks found 58 percent of Americans would support requiring Arabs, including those who are U.S. citizens, to undergo more intensive security checks before boarding airplanes. 

But the black law enforcement group, 9,000 members strong, isn’t changing its stance. It still believes no matter which race is targeted, racial profiling is wrong, Davis said. 

“We have a personal stake in it,” Davis said. “I wear the badge. I’ve done car stops.” 

At the same time, when black officers take off their uniforms and are pulled over because of their race, “it’s a dose of reality,” he said. “When we get off duty, we are still African-Americans.” 

The cornerstone of the police group’s efforts are training sessions, which began in January. 

So far, the Alexandria, Va.-based group has conducted 15 sessions for officers of all races, including one meeting this week in Cincinnati, a city where three nights of rioting ensued after a white police officer fatally shot an unarmed black man this spring. A judge acquitted the officer of misdemeanor charges last month. 

Racial profiling happens when officers allow biases to seep into policing, Davis said. 

The black officers’ group believes the problem should be attacked by emphasizing community service and supervisor accountability. It also wants more training for officers on when it’s appropriate to use force. 

Members of the group say they know what it’s like to be profiled. 

Davis remembers driving his fiancee’s Mercedes in downtown Long Beach, Calif., a few years ago, looking for a restaurant. He passed a white policeman, who cut short a conversation and pulled Davis over, probably because “we didn’t fit the Mercedes-Benz,” Davis said. 

“You feel very violated, very offended,” Davis said. The indignity was worse because “these are my colleagues” who were doing the profiling, he said. 

Jerry Oliver, police chief in Richmond, Va., recalls being stopped by his own officers when he was new to the city. They asked for his driver’s license, but were reluctant to say why they stopped him. 

“The only reason why I was stopped is because I live in an area that’s predominantly white,” Oliver said. 

Occasionally, racial profiling is also used on white people in minority neighborhoods, police say. 

When he was a police officer in Arizona, Oliver said he stopped a white person in a black and Korean neighborhood late at night. Oliver said he didn’t know whether the person was lost, or perhaps seeking a prostitute. 

“I didn’t have any other information,” he said. “But I did approach them purely because of their race, because they were white and they looked out of place.” 

In Oakland, Davis admits he’s made similar stops. 

“I’m not a racist,” Davis said. But “I still applied my own stereotypes. At the time you’re engaged in this activity you’re really thinking you’re doing the right thing.” 

——— 

On the Net: 

National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives: http://www.noblenatl.org/ 


Bravo boycott?

Greg Freedman
Saturday October 20, 2001

Editor: 

Bravo to all those righteous companies and individuals that are choosing to boycott Berkeley-based businesses in light of our city’s resolution in favor of peace. There is no nobler way to force your views onto others than by driving good people out of business and ruining their lives. Even if it was 25 years ago, they should have known better than to open their business in Berkeley! 

I originally had no idea that the prospect of lumberyard managers and restaurateurs (and waiters and waitresses and busboys) being able to pay their rents was such a threat to our national security and unity. Thank you for enlightening me. 

It’s a good thing that when you have God and the president on your side, you don’t have to think about things like whom you are hurting. 

 

Greg Freedman 

Berkeley


God bless

Ed Dramer
Saturday October 20, 2001

Editor: 

Why? After the tragic events of September 11, I watched as members of the U.S. Congress stood on the steps of the Capitol Rotunda and sang one of their most patriotic songs, “God bless America!” Why should God do that? I challenge anyone to show me one, relevant action that the United States has taken, since before the Viet Nam War, that would beget God’s grace. The USA was once called ‘One Nation under God.’ Now however, you may quote their serving politicians who say, they are a nation who, “accepts the rule of law.” That is just another way of saying; they are a country ruled by lawyers. Several days later I watched again, as a U.S. Marine officer sang the same song on the balcony above the New York Stock Exchange. That symbol was far more distressing. Since the early days of the last century, the United States has used ‘gunboat diplomacy’ to enforce its economic will and push its life style and values on every far-flung corner of the world. 

I watched as President Bush, the counties ‘Chief-of-State /Lawyers’ lead the country in prayer. What? He is a corrupt, career politician. Virtually no eligible voter voted for him. Most people would not buy a used car from the individual. Is he now the Chief Priest of their culture? Muslim fundamentalists have every right to hate the ‘Great Satan’ which the USA has surly become. They are morally bankrupt, corrupt, and licentious. They are a nation driven by a need to fill-up every orifice with the latest consumer gimmick. Religion is practically nonexistent. They only have the most superficial form of Christianity left to assuage the conscience of the guilty and bury their dead. Let it be known, the next ‘500 Years War’ has begun. It is the war between the ‘haves’ and the ‘have not’s.’ It is the war between the ‘religious’ and the ‘profane.’ Let it be known that the United States cannot win such a war, because evil never wins in the end. They are about to go the way of Rome. They will get what they so richly deserve-- the next new war of the ‘Iconoclast.’ and may God have mercy on your souls.  

 

Ed Dramer 

Norfolk, VA


Bay Briefs

Staff
Saturday October 20, 2001

SAN JOSE — During the prime of the old New Economy last year, Silicon Valley paychecks were fatter than those of Manhattanites — historically the nation’s best-paid workers. 

That fact, reported Thursday by the Labor Department, could have fleeting significance given this year’s dot-com crash. 

Still, during 2000, Santa Clara County rode a 24 percent rise in average wages to overtake New York County as the county with the highest average yearly pay. Santa Clara residents made an average of $76,076, while those living in New York County — that is, the island of Manhattan — earned $71,115. 

San Mateo County residents jumped to third-best compensated, on the strength of a 30 percent growth in average pay over 1999. They earned $66,943 in 2000. San Francisco County registered sixth at $57,626. 

The national average was $35,296. 

The data were based on an analysis of employment and pay trends in the nation’s 315 largest counties. Labor economists warned that the pay raises in 2000 will not likely stick. 

 

 

MARTINEZ — Neighbors of an oil refinery that has leaked noxious clouds twice this week are pressing for tighter regulation of the plant. 

Accidents at the Equilon Martinez Refining Co. forced area residents to shelter in their homes Sunday and Wednesday, as plumes of yellowish, sooty smoke billowed from the plant. While no one reported serious injuries, the incidents are prompting Contra Costa County supervisors and the Bay Area Air Quality Management District to consider new controls over the plant. 

chemical releases. The county has issued two public nuisance citations against the company. 

The Martinez City Council will hold a town meeting Wednesday about the plant. Councilman Mark Ross said he has received several calls from people wanting to close the refinery, though that is unlikely. 

——— 

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — San Francisco International Airport will use a fingerprint scanner to conduct employee background checks. 

The Federal Aviation Administration is requiring major airports to recheck the backgrounds of employees who have access to tarmacs or planes. 

Airport officials said the $40,000 scanning system should be installed within weeks, making it the ninth major airport in the nation to install the Identix TouchPrint 2000 technology. 

The fingerprint reader, which is tied to a computerized database, means employee background checks will take hours instead of weeks, said SFO spokesman Ron Wilson. He said the airport has about 35,000 employees, most requiring new checks. 


Ten years later, some in the hills worry about the next fire

By Michelle Locke, The Associated Press
Saturday October 20, 2001

OAKLAND — Ten years after the fire that ravaged the Oakland-Berkeley hills, once-charred slopes have blossomed anew with handsome houses looking over the San Francisco Bay. But some of the underbrush that fueled the furious blaze has come creeping back, too. 

“Here we are 10 years down the road and we’re sort of halfway to the next big fire,” said Sue Piper, whose home was one of 3,000 destroyed by the fire that killed 25 people. “You can’t do much about the geography or the geology or the weather. The one thing people can do is prevention. If we don’t reduce the vegetation on a regular basis, we’re sitting ducks.” 

On Oct. 20, 1991, Piper had just driven home after dropping off her 4-year-old twins at a birthday party when she noticed smoke curling in the sky. It got darker and darker and she began calling neighbors, trying to gauge the danger. One of them called her back: “The fire’s crested the hill. Get out now.” 

Hustling her 9-year-old into her car, Piper backed out of her driveway and drove into a nightmare. Cars were jammed bumper-to-bumper on the one road out as flames raced behind and beside them. 

Piper had the air conditioning on high, but the heat outside was so intense she had to lean into the middle of the car. Dutifully waiting at a red light, she saw a grove of eucalyptus trees explode — “BOOM, right in front of us.” 

No time to obey traffic rules. She drove the wrong way down the street, looking for the first turn that would take her downhill — “I was just praying to God that we don’t run into the fire.” 

Hours after the Pipers made it to safety, the hills glowed orange, doomed houses silhouetted black against the flames. 

When the fire finally was out, stunned survivors returned to a world burned bare. Cars had melted; foundations had crumbled. 

“It was like a nuclear holocaust,” recalled photographer Len Blau. Watching the World Trade Center towers buckle and fall under the Sept. 11 attacks reminded him of walking through those destroyed neighborhoods in Oakland. 

“It’s different, but just seeing those images in New York, I really flashed back,” he said. “Just the personal feeling of seeing it and seeing the tragedy of other people’s lives.” 

After the fire came the recriminations. 

Officials were sharply criticized for their handling of the fire, which was a rekindling of a brushfire thought to have been extinguished the day before. Meanwhile, it was discovered that the fire department’s communication system had been overwhelmed and fire trucks from neighboring cities had been thwarted by Oakland’s nonstandard hydrant openings. 

That has all changed, said Henry Renteria, director of the fire department’s emergency services department. 

Firefighters now get forest fire training and have new equipment, including thermal imaging devices that can detect heat underground and portable hydrant systems. The city’s hydrants now have universal fittings. And new weather stations in the hills give the department early warning of “red flag” fire days. 

But in keeping hillsides stripped of underbrush, “we’ve had a roller coaster affair,” admitted Renteria. 

In 1993, the city established an assessment district, charging hills property owners a yearly tax for fire suppression programs. Four years later, that was voted down. 

This year, the city put the fire department in charge of keeping city-owned lands in shape with a $1.7 million budget. 

Residents say local officials aren’t doing enough to clear public lands. Renteria said the problem is that individuals aren’t clearing brush around their homes. 

Still, Renteria doesn’t share the view that another disaster is inevitable. 

“Since 1991, we’ve had several fires that have erupted within that same area. All of them have been contained and controlled. Ten years from today we should be even better prepared,” he said. “We’ve learned a lot from 1991.” 

Fires have always been a fixture in the hills. In 1923, 584 homes burned and there have been smaller fires every decade since. 

Architect Peter Scott stood on the roof of his Oakland hills home and saw 37 houses burn in the fire of 1970. 

When the fire of 1991 hit, he and his wife were out of town. His 85-year-old mother, Frances, was at home. 

Disabled by arthritis, she had around-the-clock help, but the day person had left to attend church. When she tried to return, she was stopped by police She and family members begged for help, but officials wrongly believed Scott’s mother already had been evacuated, Scott said. 

Ten years later, his voice still trembles with frustration and rage as he talks about his mother’s death. 

The fire turned Scott into an activist. He designed a new fire station for free and got involved with emergency-response training. He is vigilant about neighborhood disaster planning. 

“The reason my mother died is our neighbors didn’t know each other,” he said bleakly. 

Scott and his wife considered moving away from the hills “for about five minutes.” Instead, they rebuilt, moving back nine months to the day after the fire. 

They were pulled by their love of the area, pushed by their desire to restore equilibrium for their children, driven by the need to “shake our fists at the city and say you can’t destroy us.” 

They buried the Scott’s mother’s ashes beneath a magnolia tree in the backyard. 

——— 

On the Net: 

City of Oakland: http://www.oaklandnet.com/government/government39j.html 


Electronic tracking devices helping to find patients suffering from Alzheimer’s, Down’s syndrome

By Gretchen Ehlke, The Associated Press
Saturday October 20, 2001

MILWAUKEE — Tharan Elkins grew more concerned about her husband as the hours passed. Billy Elkins had never been gone quite so long during his daily walk around the neighborhood in search of aluminum cans. 

Elkins, 67, diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease, was gone more than six hours when his wife started phoning family members. 

Relatives searched unsuccessfully in the Suffolk, Va., area, then contacted Project Lifesaver, a program operated by the 43rd Virginia Volunteer Search and Rescue Company in nearby Chesapeake. 

Searchers used an electronic receiver and antenna to find Elkins, who was wearing a transmitting device about the size of a wristwatch. 

“He was 20 miles away from his home lying in a soybean field a mile off the road,” said Gene Saunders of Project Lifesaver. Had Elkins not been found when he was, doctors said he would have died from dehydration. 

Tharan Elkins had enrolled her husband in the program because of his disease. 

“The device on his arm is what saved him,” Mrs. Elkins said. “They tracked it right to him.” 

Saunders said electronic tracking of patients suffering from Alzheimer’s, dementia, Down’s syndrome and even children with autism has helped law enforcement agencies drastically cut manpower and time in their search for a missing person. 

“We’re doing it with two or three people as opposed to 100 people involved in a search for a day,” he said. 

Besides Virginia, Project Lifesaver was established in Georgia, New Hampshire, New Jersey, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Vermont and the Canadian province of New Brunswick. Alabama, Delaware, Florida, Louisiana, Maryland, Montana, South Carolina and Wisconsin are in various stages of setting up the program, Saunders said. 

The 43rd Virginia team developed the search strategy for the project, started two years ago, and has trained at least 17 other agencies to use the tracking device, which has helped locate at least 158 people, Saunders said. 

For about $25 a month, the local agency operating Project Lifesaver rents a transmitter, the size of a man’s watch, to the caregiver. The waterproof bracelet can be attached to a wrist or ankle, and in some cases a belt, and can be removed only if it is cut off. The receiver and antenna are monitored by an agency, typically law enforcement, which tracks an inaudible chirping noise emitted by the transmitter. 

The Alzheimer’s Association Riverland chapter in La Crosse, Wis., bought a $2,150 receiver and four transmitters at $230 each. A representative of the organization and personnel from the La Crosse County Sheriff’s Department trained with the Virginia search-and-rescue team on how to use the equipment by land and air. 

“We’ve got some awful extreme temperatures and when you’re talking frail older adults, I think it’s important that we have this going,” said Laura Moriarty of the Riverland Alzheimer’s chapter. 

The agency was raising money to purchase another receiver and four more transmitters before launching the project, dubbed Rapid Recovery. 

The La Crosse County Sheriff’s Department has discouraged caregivers from buying a transmitter and receiver on their own because the signals can interfere with law enforcement’s tracking efforts. 

The device used by Project Lifesaver is manufactured by Care Trak, Inc., of Carbondale, Ill., which makes a similar product to track elk, wolves and other wild animals, said Richard Blanchard, chief operating officer. 

“The technology has been around awhile, but the application is new,” Blanchard said, adding that the transmitter is also used to find people with traumatic brain injuries. 

Michael and Karen Chesanek, who live in a remote area of Acworth, N.H., attached a monitoring bracelet to their 9-year-old son, Joey, who has severe autism. 

“It’s woods, dirt roads, the middle of nowhere and Joey wanders,” Mrs. Chesanek said. “Trying to keep these kids at home with the family is a challenge, especially kids like my Joey who has no fear and just takes off.” 

Sixty percent of Alzheimer’s patients will wander at some point, according to the national Alzheimer’s Association, which estimated the survival rate for wandering patients at 47 percent if they are not found within 24 hours. 

The organization operates a program called Safe Return, which registers Alzheimer’s patients and provides them with a locking identification bracelet, which has a toll-free number engraved on the band. 

——— 

On the Net: 

Project Lifesaver, 43rd Virginia Search and Rescue: http://www.projectlifesaver.net 

Alzheimer’s Association: http://www.alz.org 

Care Trak, Inc.-Resource Center: http://www.caretrak.com/resource.htm 

End advance for Thursday, Aug. 23, and thereafter 


Tribune Co. records $139 million third quarter loss

By Dave Carpenter, The Associated Press
Saturday October 20, 2001

CHICAGO — Tribune Co. reported a net loss Thursday of $139 million for the third quarter, citing an advertising falloff, an expensive restructuring and costs of news coverage in the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks. 

The publisher of the Chicago Tribune and the Los Angeles Times also warned that fourth-quarter earnings will fall short of current estimates as the result of ad cancellations and higher costs for newsgathering, production and distribution. Other media companies also have taken big financial hits in the wake of the terrorist attacks and continuing ad slump. 

The net loss amounted to 49 cents a share. 

A year earlier, Tribune had net profits of $79.2 million or 22 cents a share. 

Excluding a $131 million charge covering staff reductions, a $144 million write-down on investments and other non-operating items, earnings from operations were $148.7 million, down 37 percent from $236.7 million a year earlier. 

Per-share earnings without the special items were 10 cents a share, down from 22 cents in the third quarter of 2000 but a penny better than Wall Street expected. Tribune shares rose 23 cents to $31.59 in afternoon trading on the New York Stock Exchange. 

Revenues fell 7 percent to $1.28 billion from $1.37 billion. 

The Chicago-based company, which owns 11 newspapers, 22 television stations and more than 50 Web sites, already this year has cut about 1,700 jobs, or 6 percent to 7 percent of its work force, because of the advertising slump, executives said on a conference call.  

About 600 to 700 of those came through voluntary retirement, spokesman Gary Weitman said. 

The attacks increased spending in the form of extra newspaper editions, extended coverage by its TV and radio stations, and increased capacity by its Web sites. 

John Madigan, Tribune’s chairman and chief executive officer, said the first priority has been to readers, viewers and listeners with comprehensive news coverage of the war on terrorism. 

“The financial impact of this commitment to serving the public is significant,” he said. “And at the same time, advertisers began rethinking their buying strategies.” 

The staff reductions, he said, will save the company $58 million annually. 

Tribune television stations lost about $12 million from the events of Sept. 11, the company said. 

TV revenues fell 6 percent to $274 million for the quarter, revenue from publishing — largely newspapers — declined 8 percent to $907 million, and retail advertising was off 7 percent. 

For the first nine months, the company had a net loss of $15.7 million, or 5 cents a share, compared with year-earlier earnings of $168 million, or 65 cents a share. Revenues rose 14 percent to $3.93 billion from $3.43 billion. 

——— 

On the Net: 

http://www.tribune.com 


By Paul Queary The Associated Press

Staff
Saturday October 20, 2001

They claim it burdens, not benefits, employees 

 

OLYMPIA, Wash. — A coalition of business groups and other employers sued the state over sweeping new ergonomic rules designed to protect workers from injury. 

The lawsuit, filed Wednesday in Thurston County Superior Court by Washington Employers Concerned about Regulating Ergonomics, claims the rules written by the Department of Labor and Industries place a staggering burden on employers for dubious benefits to workers. 

“This is clearly a case of a state agency abusing its power and pushing through a rule based on political agendas,” said Tom McCabe, president of the Building Industry Association of Washington. 

State officials contend the regulations — enthusiastically backed by labor unions — are long overdue and could prevent thousands of injuries a year. The labor and industries department has no plans to rescind or revise the regulations, director Gary Moore said. 

“We’re very confident that the ergonomics rules will reduce workplace injuries and reduce employer costs,” Moore said. 

The department receives 50,000 claims a year from injured workers, costing employers more than $400 million. “That’s a huge toll of pain and suffering and lost productivity,” Moore said. 

The rules, to be phased in over six years beginning next July, require employers to identify tasks that are likely to cause back strain, repetitive stress and other injuries to muscles and joints. 

Businesses — starting with sawmills, construction and other industries that report the highest number of injuries — must take steps to lower the risks by buying new equipment, repositioning existing equipment or providing training on how to avoid injury. 

Major employer groups say the rules will cost them $725 million a year. The lawsuit also challenges the effectiveness of the ergonomic techniques spelled out in the rules. 

Proposals to delay implementation of the rules died in the closely divided Legislature this year. 

Nationally, ergonomic regulations were formulated during the Clinton administration. But Congress repealed them this spring, and Eugene Scalia, nominated by the Bush administration as the Labor Department’s top lawyer, has called them “quackery” and “junk science.” 

——— 

On the Net: 

Department of Labor and Industries: http://www.lni.wa.gov/ 


Providian stock loses half its value amid investor worries

By Michael Liedtke The Associated Press
Saturday October 20, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO — Providian Financial Corp.’s stock lost more than half its value Friday amid worries that the once thriving credit card company has fallen into an insurmountable hole. 

The selloff followed a shakeup Providian outlined after the market closed Thursday. Longtime Providian CEO Shailesh Mehta announced his resignation and the company disclosed plans to curtail its business of giving credit cards to high-risk, or “subprime,” consumers. 

The company also slashed its earnings estimates for the fourth quarter and warned that the worsening losses in its $32.2 billion credit card loan portfolio made it too difficult to predict its results in 2002. 

The news left Wall Street wondering how far the company might fall from just last year, when Providian earned $651.8 million on nearly $6 billion in revenue, and its stock peaked at $66.72. 

In a move that will make it more expensive for Providian to raise money, Fitch Inc. on Friday downgraded Providian’s credit rating to junk status, citing “the rapid deterioration in the company’s franchise.” 

Shares of the San Francisco-based company plummeted $7.25, or 58 percent, to close at $5.15 Friday on the New York Stock Exchange. 

“This seems like total capitulation on the part of investors,” said industry analyst Michael Vinciquerra of Raymond James & Associates. “Every time we think things can’t get any worse, they do.” 

Some analysts predict Providian will be sold to a healthier rival interested in picking up the company’s 18.5 million accountholders at a discount.  

The question is how much the battered company is worth, given that not even its own management seems certain about how badly its loan portfolio might deteriorate. 

“People with sharp pencils are trying to figure out the breakup value of the company,” said industry analyst Charlotte Chamberlain of Jefferies & Co. 

After factoring in loan losses likely to surface in upcoming quarters, Vinciquerra estimated Providian’s book value at about $7.50 per share. He said industry giants Citigroup, Chase Manhattan and FleetBoston Financial are Providian’s most likely suitors. 

Providian’s management believes it can salvage its business by shifting its focus to the more stable mass market of consumers with solid credit ratings. In doing so, Providian will run into plenty of entrenched, healthier credit card companies, including Capital One Financial Corp., MBNA Corp. and Household International Inc. 

Analysts aren’t convinced Providian is savvy enough to compete in the mass market, particularly since a recent expansion into the premium, or “platinum,” credit card market didn’t generate the returns it expected. 

“It’s sort of like me thinking I could sing like Madonna just because I go out and buy a pointy bra and some fishnet stockings,” Chamberlain said. 

Providian also told analysts Thursday that it is prepared to slash expenses, raising the possibility of layoffs among the roughly 13,000 workers that the company employed as of Sept. 30. 

Providian emerged as the nation’s fifth-largest issuer of bank credit cards by developing a computer model that zeroed in on subprime consumers who were willing to pay higher rates and more fees for additional services.  

The formula turned Providian — once part of a Kentucky life insurer — into an investor favorite and won Mehta, the company’s CEO since 1988, industry acclaim. 

The company’s aggressive marketing tactics landed Providian in trouble with government regulators last year. Facing accusations it had gouged customers with unnecessary fees, Providian agreed to pay more than $400 million to settle with government agencies and consumers represented in class-action suits. 

At its peak, Providian had a market value of $19 billion. After Friday’s selloff, the company’s market value stood at $1.5 billion. 

——— 

On The Net: 

http://www.providian.com 


Group challenges district boundaries

By John Geluardi, Daily Planet staff
Friday October 19, 2001

 

 

A newly-formed political action group held a press conference on the steps of Old City Hall Thursday to announce a petition drive to overturn the recently-approved council district lines, which they said were gerrymandered. 

Citizens for Fair Representation, accompanied by moderates Mayor Shirley Dean and Councilmember Miriam Hawley, charged council progressives with fashioning the new boundary lines in a back room with the intention of weakening the political power of moderate Councilmember Polly Armstrong in District 8 and strengthening that of progressive Councilmember Kriss Worthington in District 7. 

“We’re a grassroots organization that has formed to put a referendum on the March 3 ballot that will overturn the approved district plan, which is little more than a power grab by the far left,” said David Tabb, chairman of the newly-formed CFR.  

Tabb is also Hawley’s appointee to the Planning Commission.  

Progressive Councilmember Dona Spring, who attended the press conference, said there is “absolutely no truth” to moderate charges. She said it appeared the press conference was just another opportunity for the same kind of moderate grandstanding that has attended recent council debates. 

“We had two public hearings on the new districts and they were debated again and again,” she said. “There was no ‘back room deal’ and the mayor knows it.” 

According to the city clerk, the CFR will have to collect 4,000 authentic signatures by Nov. 15 in order to have the referendum put on the March ballot. 

The controversial redistricting plan was drafted by Berkeley residents Michael O’Malley and David Blake, a former aide to progressive Councilmember Linda Maio. Progressives said they approved the plan, from a field of six others, because it best fit City Charter requirements. 

The charter requires district boundary lines to be redrawn every 10 years, according to population data in the decennial census. The charter also states that redrawn districts must deviate as little as possible from the original districts, which were approved in 1986. 

Making matters worse, the Federal Census Bureau blundered by not counting approximately 4,500 Berkeley residents, mostly students in districts 6, 7 and 8. 

Because the charter requires the district lines be drawn according to the census – whether it has a colossal error or not – the approved district lines resulted in a population imbalance in District 8.  

So, according to the census, each new district has close to 12,800 people. But according to the 1990 Census, there are 17,000 people in District 8 and close to 12,800 in each of the other eight districts. 

Moderates contend the estimated 4,500 uncounted students that are now in District 8 are more inclined to vote for progressive candidates, which they say would lessen the moderate Armstrong’s chances of re-election in that district next year. 

Census officials have so far refused to correct their error in the census count. 

Tabb said progressives violated the law by taking advantage of the census mistake to consolidate their power in the new districts.  

“This redistricting plan is illegal and unconstitutional,” he said.  

Worthington said the answer to the problem is getting the Census Bureau to correct the population count as soon as possible and put an adjusted district plan on the ballot.  

“We don’t want the (extra people) in District 8,” Worthington said. “But nobody could come up with a legally permissible way to shift the undercounted residents.” 

Blake defended the plan he co-drafted.  

“The plan speaks for itself,” he said. “It’s interesting that if the opponents of the new districts chose to hold a press conference instead of filing a law suit.” 

In addition, Dean said a progressive meeting that took place a day prior to the plan’s approval on Oct. 2 was a violation of the Brown Act – a state law that restricts attendance of non-public meetings by elected officials. 

“We are going to ask the Grand Jury to take a look at it,” she said. 

Dean added that a Berkeley resident was preparing a letter, which would be sent to the Alameda County Grand Jury early next week. 

Progressives argued they closely followed legal procedures during the meeting and that the moderates are simply getting an early start on what apparently will be a negative campaign for the mayor’s office next year. 

Dean has said the meeting in question was attended by Spring, Vice Mayor Maudelle Shirek, Councilmember Margaret Breland and Blake. She added that it constituted a Brown Act violation when Councilmember Kriss Worthington showed up after the meeting was underway. 

The Brown Act makes it illegal for more than four councilmembers to meet without noticing the public. But Worthington’s presence would have been a violation of the Brown Act, only if the redistricting plan were discussed. But those who attended the meeting insist they had finished discussing the issue when Worthington arrived, and if Blake was at the meeting representing Maio, which both Blake and Maio say is ridiculous. 

Worthington dismissed the mayor’s charges as politically motivated. 

“This is just another example of the extreme statements that the mayor has been making on recent controversial issues,” he said. “I’m sure these comments don’t benefit Berkeley, whether or not they benefit the mayor’s campaign remains to be seen.”


Out & About Calendar

– Compiled by Guy Poole
Friday October 19, 2001


Friday, Oct. 19

 

Cooperative Center Federal  

Credit Union 

Grand Opening Celebration 

4 - 7 p.m. 

2001 Ashby Ave. 

A family affair with food, entertainment and a special treat for the kids. Congresswoman Barbara Lee, honorary chairperson, is scheduled to attend. Faith Fancher is the Mistress of Ceremonies. 415-346-0199 

 

YAP’s FNL Teen Club: “Pop  

Ya Colla! Dance” 

7 -11 p.m. 

1730 Oregon St. 

Young Adult Project presents dance for 13 to 18 year olds only. Must have B.U.S.D. I.D. “No haters, no problems.” 644-6226 

 

Hills Emergency Forum 

10 - 11 a.m . 

Joaquin Miller Community Center 

3946 Sanbord Dr., Oakland 

Annual meeting to discuss progress made in reducing and managing risks associated with wildland fires in the Oakland/Berkeley Hills. 893-9888 

 


Saturday, Oct. 20

 

Private Elementary School  

Panel Discussion and Fair 

10 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. 

College Avenue Presbyterian Church 

5951 College Ave. 

Parents representing 12 selected schools will discuss issues parents encounter when searching for private elementary schools, including the admissions process. Sponsored by Neighborhood Parents Network. Open to the public. $5 - $10. 527-6667 www.parentsnet.org 

 

UC Berkeley Community  

Action Day 

9:30 a.m. - 4 p.m. 

People’s Park 

Haste and Hillegass avenues 

More than 300 students, faculty, staff, alumni, community members and student groups will participate in an all-day event, carrying out service projects throughout the city. 643-0306 kinyon@uclink4.berkeley.edu 

 

 

Earthquake Retrofitting 

10 a.m. - 5 p.m. 

Office of Emergency Services 

812 Page St.  

Free classes in Community Emergency Response Training (CERT). 981-5605 www.ci.berkeley.ca.us 

 

 

BART Job Fair 

9 a.m. - 3 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

BART will be recruiting to fill approximately 160 jobs that will be opening up next year. The jobs to be filled are in accounting, planing, engineering, insurance, purchasing, police, maintenance and electronics. 

 

Symposium on New Science  

of Aging 

10 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. 

Valley Life Sciences Building 

Room 2040 

UC Berkeley 

Lectures by prominent gerontologists and industry scientists will featured, plus leading biotechnology companies and research institutions will provide information about their research programs in aging and will discuss opportunities for collaboration and employment. 486-6096 http://crea.berkeley.edu/ 

 

Historical Society Walking  

Tour 

10 a.m. - 12 p.m. 

Berkeley Historical Society 

1931 Center St. 

Patrick Keilch will lead tour of the Berkeley Hills and relate his hands-on experiences and observations from the wildfire of 1991. 848-0181  

www.ci.berkeley.ca.us/histsoc/ 

 

 

Berkeley High School  

Workshop 

10 a.m. - 12 p.m. 

Berkeley Alternative High School 

1950 Derby St. 

Academic Workshop for parents on the graduation requirements for Berkeley High School. 644-8524 

 

 

Oakland Hills Fire  

Commemorative Walk and  

Pot Luck Dinner 

5 -9 p.m. 

5999 Grizzly Peak 

Walk led by Oakland Fire Department and CORE graduates. Participants should bring pot luck dishes to feed eight guests. 273-9111 www.nhphoenix.org 

 

Puppet Shows 

1:30 p.m. and 2:30 p.m. 

The Hall of Health 

2230 Shattuck Ave. 

The Kids on the Block perform two shows to promote acceptance and understanding of cultural and medical differences. 549-1564 

 

Discussion of Current Legal  

Issues 

9 a.m. - 11 p.m. 

Boalt Hall 

UC Berkeley 

Top litigators, legal scholars and media experts participate in several panels discussions concerning some of the nation’s most closely watched legal issues. 643-6673 

 

Sunday, Oct. 21 

UNtraining White Liberal  

Racism 

2 - 5 p.m. 

The UNtraining offers personal work in a supportive setting for white people to address our unconscious racial conditioning. $10. Private residence, call 235-6134 for address.  

 

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 

Halloween Magic 

1 - 2 p.m. 

Berkeley Richmond JCC Auditorium 

1414 Walnut St.  

Los Angeles Magician and Comedian “Hotei the Magic Guy.” For kids 2 through 12 and their parents. $7. 236-7469 www.thebuddyclub.com 

 


Correcting the record

Linda Maio
Friday October 19, 2001

Editor, 

Both the Associated Press and United Press International wire services issued wrong information about what the Berkeley City Council did regarding the bombing of Afghanistan. We did not condemn the bombing in Afghanistan, as both AP and UPI published. Here is the essence of the action five councilmembers took:  

We deplored the September 11th attack, honored the victims whose lives were lost so tragically, honored our firefighters and police and the many volunteers. We asked our representatives to “help break the cycle of violence, bringing the bombing to a conclusion as soon as possible, avoiding actions that would endanger the lives of innocent people in Afghanistan, and minimizing the risk to American military personnel.”  

Because the media needs juice every day, we became that juice. AP issued a corrected wire, but bad news had already been spread, and used, across the nation. Ours is a city with a deep history of speaking out on matters of importance. 

Our democracy is what makes it possible for all voices to be heard. It is part of our strength.  

And because we rely on the news media for our information, they need to get it right, especially at a time like this.  

 

Linda Maio 

Berkeley City Council, District 1


New anthology peeks into city’s non-traditional art

Sari Friedman, Special to the Daily Planet
Friday October 19, 2001

Experimental, street, and non-academic poetry for Berkeley’s New Millennium 

 

 

What is a poem?  

Must its words rhyme?  

What if you don’t have an expert to pontificate upon the subtle poetic flavors?  

Do they still exist?  

Does a poem have to be taught to students who scored high on the GREs in order to raise a pulse? Does art have to make sense?  

And what if nothing in your life makes sense, nothing whatsoever?  

Say you’ve spent a little too much time on the rough side of the street and it’s amazing you’re even alive.  

What, then, if you want to write, or your hand itches to draw, and the desire to manifest your artistic vision is so strong in you, so compelling, that, at times, you can hardly breathe. You can hardly think. The obsession fills your horizon and every inside space. 

What, then, do you do about that? 

The New Now Now New Millennium Turn On Anthology (no, that wasn’t a typo) might be your port in the storm. This provocative, edgy, sometimes gentle, sometimes bitter, kooky, luminous, and occasionally lightning-strike brilliant collection of mostly Berkeley artists and writers is one big ‘ol mother lode of non-academic, street and experimental artistic expression. 

Dedicated to the spirits of Gregory Corso, Alan Ginsberg and other local artists who died within the last few years (some of whom did make it well into “the academy”), the anthology’s editor, H. D. Moe, has gathered the work of about 250 contemporary poets, illustrators, reviewers, and short story writers.  

Many extraordinary poets and artists are represented in this anthology. I don’t have the space, in this review, to name all the names, and can’t do justice to many remarkable works….  

Please understand you might want to buy the anthology and see this work for yourself.  

It’s impossible to even find a representative voice or image in this plethora of sensibilities, some searching for esoteric wisdom, others expressing rage, a few just shifting burdens from arm to arm –  

But here are the first few lines from one voice: 

Heavy Drinking 

By Robert Lavett Smith 

 

In my teens, prevented by cerebral palsy 

From driving—the usual rite of passage— 

And unacquainted still with the mysteries of sex, 

I viewed those first clandestine beers on sticky 

Summer nights as an invitation to adulthood: 

Proof I was part of a world I had barely begun to understand 

 

And here are the closing few lines from a poem by another voice: 

 

From Me To She 

By Leonard Irving 

 

But she lies beneath 

The yum-yum tree 

Of memory 

And there will stay 

As I lie here 

In Peoples Park 

Bereft and sad 

In Berkeley. 

 

Or you might want to consider these words if you’ve, perhaps, given up on defining what poetry is, and instead want to wonder what it does…. 

 

From Whole Poetry 

By Kelly Arbor 

 

Sing, daughter, sing. 

Your wideness is wonder. 

Your whole is not half. 

Find your voice inside 

the hole of poetry. 


Arts & Entertainment Calendar

Staff
Friday October 19, 2001

 

924 Gilman St. Oct. 19: W.H.N.?, Jellyroll Rockheads, Ex-Claim, Crucial Attack, Sharp Knife; Oct. 21: 5 p.m. Throwdown, Martyr A.D., Bleeding Through, Everytime I Die, Fate 13; Oct. 26: Influents, Plus Ones, Divit, Summerjack, Robot Adrenaline, Claredon Hills; Oct. 27: (Halloween show, $1 off if you’re in a (non-punk) costume!) Babyland, Tsunami Bomb, Scissor Hands, Dexter Danger; All shows start a 8 p.m. unless noted; Most are $5; 924 Gilman St. 525-9926 

Ashkenaz Oct 19: Swing Session 1317 San Pablo Ave. 525-5054 www.ashkenaz.com 

 

Blake’s Oct. 19: King Harvest, Sfunk, $5; Oct. 20: Psychokinetics, $5; Oct. 22: The Steve Gannon Band and Mz. Dee, $4; Oct. 23: Felice, $3; Oct. 24: Erotic City, DJ Maestro, $2; Oct. 25: Psychotica, $5; Oct. 26: Planting Seeds, $6; Oct. 27: Felonious, $6; Oct. 29: The Steve Gannon Band and Mz. Dee, $4; Oct. 31: Erotic City, DJ Maestro, $2; All shows 9:30 p.m. 2367 Telegraph Ave. 848-0886 

 

Cal Performances Oct. 19: 8 p.m. Karnak, $18 - $30; Nov 8: 8 p.m. Gypsy Caravan 2: A Celebration of Roma Music and Dance, $18 - $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; Oct. 19: Little Jonny and the Giants; Doors open at 8 p.m. unless noted. 3629 Martin Luther King Jr. Way, Oakland. 655-6661 

 

Shafqat Ali Khan Oct. 20: 8 p.m. Concert of classical Ragaa, Sufi, Urdu, Persian Ghazel, and other popular musical styles from India. $20 general admission, $15 students. Julia Morgan Center for the Arts, 2640 College Ave. 845-8542 www.juliamorgan.org 

 

“Prometeh in Evin” Oct. 28: 8 p.m., A drama about political prisoners in Iran, performed by the brave and innovative Parsian Group. Julia Morgan Center for the Arts. $25, Children, $15 2640 College Ave 845.8542 www.juliamorgan.org. 

 

“Swanwhite” Through Oct. 21: Thur. - Sat., 8 p.m., Sun. 7 p.m. A new translation of the Swedish Play that asks the question what good is romantic love, directed by Tom Clyde. $20, Sundays are “Pay What You Can”. Transparent Theater, 1901 Ashby Ave. 883-0305, www.virtuous.com 

 

“Orestes” Through Oct. 21: Fri. - Sat., 8 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m. An adaptation of the classical play by Euripides that incorporates passages inspired or taken from various 20th century texts. Written by Charles Mee, Directed by Christopher Herold. $6-12. Zellerbach Playhouse on the UC Berkeley campus 642-8268 

 

“Approach” Through Oct. 27: Thur. - Sat., 8 p.m. An examination of the search for intimacy as our most precious form of survival. Written by Susan Wiegand, Directed by Katie Bales Frassinelli. $15 general admission, $10 students and seniors. Eighth Street Studio Theatre, 2525 8th St. 655-0813 www.shotgunplayers.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 

 

“me/you...us/them” Nov. 8 though Nov. 10: Thur - Sat 8 p.m., matinee on Sat. 2:30 p.m. Three one-acts that look at interpersonal, as well as societal relationships from the perspective of the disabled. $10 - $25. Julia Morgan Center for the Arts, 2640 College Ave. 925-798-1300 

 

“Nocturne” Through Nov. 11: Tues./Thurs./Sat. 8 p.m., Weds. & Sun. 7 p.m, matinee on Thurs./Sat./Sun. 2 p.m. Mark Brokaw directs Anthony Rapp in One-Man Show. Written by Adam Rapp. $38 - $54. Berkeley Repertory’s Thrust Stage, 2025 Addison St. 647-2949 www.berkeleyrep.org 

 

“Travesties” Through Nov. 17: Fri. - Sat., 8 p.m., and Thurs., Nov. 15, 8 p.m. A witty fantasy about James Joyce meeting Lenin in Zurich during World War I. Written by Tom Stoppard, Directed by Mikel Clifford. $10. Live Oak Theatre, 1301 Shattuck. 528-5620 

 

“Macbeth” Nov. 9 though Nov. 18: Fri. - Sat., 8 p.m., Sun. 5 p.m. Presented by the Albany High School Theater Ensemble. $7 adults, $5 students and seniors. Albany High School Little Theater, 603 Key Route Blvd. 559-6550 x4125 theaterensemble@hotmail.com 

 

“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 

 

 

Films 

 

“Lisa Picard is Famous” Through Oct. 19: Mocumentary chronicles New York actress who hopes to get more than a fleeting taste of fame when a racy cereal commercial brings her unexpected national notoriety. Shattuck Cinemas, 2230 Shattuck Ave. 843-3456 

 

“Loaded Visions” Oct. 17: 8 p.m. Experimental short films by Antero Alli (Eight Videopoems and “Lilly in Limbo,” plus live music from Sylvi Alli). $5 - $10 sliding scale. La Pena Cultural Center, 3105 Shattuck Ave. 464-4640 www.verticalpool.com 

 

Pacific Film Archive Theater Oct. 15: 7 p.m., Genesis; Oct. 16: 7:30 p.m., La Région centrale; Oct. 17: 7:30 p.m., Video in the Villages and Amazonian Trilogy; Oct. 19: 7:30 p.m., Jungle Secrets, Yãkwa; Oct. 20: 3:30 p.m., Berkeley High/Bay Area Film Festival; 7 p.m., The Testament of Dr. Mabuse; 9:20 p.m., The Thousand Eyes of Dr. Mabuse; Oct. 21: 3:30 p.m., Kiss and Film, 5:30 p.m., Harakiri; Oct. 22: 7 p.m., The Closed Doors; Oct. 23: 7:30 p.m., Super-8mm Films by Theresa Cha; Oct. 24: 7:30 p.m., The Rainy Season and Wai’a Rini; Oct. 26: 7:30 p.m., The Passion of Joan of Arc, 9:15 p.m., Vivre sa Vie; Oct 27: 7 p.m., New Music for Silent Films by UCB Composers; Oct. 28: 5:30 p.m., Vampyr; Oct. 29: 7 p.m., A Time for Drunken Horses; Oct. 30: 7:30 p.m., An Evening with Leslie Thornton; Oct. 31: 7:30 p.m., 9:20 p.m., Saudade do Futuro. 

2575 Bancroft Way, 642-1124 www.bampfa.berkeley.edu 

 

“Ralph Bunche: An American Odyssey” Oct. 20: 1 p.m. The documentary chronicles Bunche, who rose to become Under-Secretary General of the United Nations, where he helped to bring about the Armistice in the 1948 Arab-Israeli War for which he was later awarded the Nobel Prize for Peace. $8. Oakland Museum, 1000 Oak Street Oakland, 652-3192 

 

Exhibits 

 

 

“First Annual Art Show” UC Berkeley Life Drawing Group Reception, Oct. 20: 3 p.m.; Oct. 21- 26: 7 - 10 p.m. Figure studies from the workshops at UC Berkeley. 1014 60th St., Emeryville. 923-0689 

 

“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  

 

“Cut Plates and Bowls” Annabeth Rosen, “Just Jars” Sandy Simon Through Nov. 3; Saturdays 10 - 5 or by appointment. Trax Ceramic Gallery, 1306 3rd St. 526-0279. cone5@aol.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. Mon. - Fri. 8 a.m. - 6 p.m. U.C. Berkeley, Graduate School of Journalism, North Gate Hall, Hearst and Euclid. Free. 642-3383 

 

“Jesus, This is Your Life - Stories and Pictures by Kids” Through Nov. 16: California children, ages four through twelve, from diverse backgrounds present original artwork, accompanied by a story written by the artist. “Cleve Gray, Holocaust Drawings” Oct. 15 through Jan. 25: 21 works on paper inviting the viewer to consider the atrocity of the Holocaust in ways unattainable through words or text. Mon. - Thur. 8:30 a.m. -10 p.m., Fri. 8:30 a.m. - 6 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m. - 6 p.m., Sun. 12 p.m. - 7 p.m. Flora Lamson Hewlett Library, 2400 Ridge Rd. 649-2541. 

 

“Changing the World, Building New Lives: 1970s photographs of Lesbians, Feminists, Union Women, Disability Activists and their Supporters” 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. 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 

 

“2001 James D. Phelan Art Awards in Printmaking” Honorees: Bridget Henry, David Kelso, and Margaret Van Patten. Oct. 19 - Nov. 30 Tues. - Fri. noon - 5 p.m., other times by appointment. Kala Art Institue, 1060 Heinz Ave. 549-2977 www.kala.org 

 

“The Whole World’s Watching: Peace and Social Justice Movements of the 1960s and 1970s” Through Dec. 16: A documentary photo exhibition which examines the rich history of the social movements of the 1960s and 1970s. 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 Oct. 18: Patricia Nell Warren reads from her novel “The Wild Man”, Oct. 22: J.M. Redmann reads from “Death By the Riverside”; 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 Oct 18: Tamora Pierce talks about “Protector of the Small”; 1730 Fourth St. 559-9500 

 

Cody’s on Telegraph Ave. Oct. 10: Timothy Liu & Sam Will read their poetry; Oct. 14: Laurie Duesing & Mary Julia Klimenko read their poetry; Oct. 15: Amir Aczel poses The Riddle of the Compass: The Invention That Changed the World; Oct. 16: Kip Fulbeck talks about “Paper Bullets”; Oct. 17: Valerie Berry, Terry Ehret & Grace Grafton read their poetry; Oct. 18: Suzanne Antoneta & Micah Perks talk about “Body Toxic: An Environmental Memoir” and “Pagan Time: An American Childhood; Oct. 26 Sage Cohen & Mari L’esperance read their poetry; All shows at 7:30 p.m.; 2454 Telegraph Ave. 845-7852 

 

Coffee Mill Poetry Series Oct. 16: 7 - 9 p.m. Steve Arntsen and Kathleen Dunbar followed by open mike reading. 3363 Grand Ave., Oakland 465-3935 ksdgk@earthlink.net 

 

Eastwind Books of Berkeley Oct. 20: Miriam Ching Louie reads from “Sweatshop Warriors: Immigrant Women Workers Take on the Global Factory”; Nov. 10: 4 p.m. Ruthanne Lum McCunn reads from her novel “Moon Pearl”; Nov. 18: 4 p.m. Noel Alumit, M.G. Sorongon, and Marianne Villanueva read from their contributions to the anthology “Tilting the Continent: Southeast Asian American Literature”; 2066 University Ave. 548-2350 

 

Ecology Center Oct. 22: 7 - 9 p.m. Toby Hemenway presents a slideshow and reads from “Gaia’s Garden: A guide to Home Scale Permaculture”; 2530 San Pablo Ave. 548-220 x233 

 

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 Sun., 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Rides: Sun., 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; Oct. 21: United Nations Day; Oct. 25: A Storytelling Pajama Party, 6 - 7 p.m.; Oct. 27: 4th Annual Habitot Halloween; Oct. 28: Family Arts Day; Oct. 31: Sugar-Art Halloween Frosting; Nov. 3: Tales from the Enchanted Forest, 11 a.m. - 12:15 p.m.; Nov. 9: Living with the Earth; Nov. 17: Recycle that Stuff; $4 adults; $6 children age 7 and under; $3 for each additional child age 7 and under. Mon. and Wed., 9:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.; Tues. and Fri., 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Thur., 9:30 a.m. to 7 p.m.; Sat., 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sun., 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. 2065 Kittredge St. 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. Mon. through Fri., 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sat. and Sun., 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.  

 

University of California Berkeley Art Museum Pacific Film Archive has reopened after its summerlong 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. 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  

 

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


’Jackets lose focus but still dominate Richmond

By Jared Green, Daily Planet Staff
Friday October 19, 2001

Facing an opponent with no real chance to beat his team, Berkeley girls’ volleyball coach Justin Caraway had two goals for Thursday’s match against Richmond: stay focused and try some new lineups. He went one-for-two. 

Caraway got to use just about everyone on his bench in different positions against the overmatched Oilers, but his team clearly didn’t have the fire he wanted to see. Although the ’Jackets (17-4 overall, 8-0 ACCAL) dominated the first and third games, giving up just three points combined, they let down big-time in the second game, allowing the Oilers to hang around and tie the game at 7-7 before pulling away to win 15-7. 

“It’s tough to keep your mental focus when you’re playing a team like (Richmond), especially when our team has bad focus in the first place,” Caraway said after putting his team through some windsprints after the match. “Games like this that provide no real competition actually hurt us more than they help.” 

The ’Jackets simply overpowered the visiting Oilers with their hard-hitting front row. Vanessa Williams, who Caraway recently moved from the middle to the outside, responded with seven kills and four digs, while star middle blocker Desiree Guilliard-Young had four kills and two blocks. Outside hitter Amalia Jarvis dominated the final game of the match, making four kills to lead the ’Jackets to a 15-0 win. Setter Danielle Larue had 21 assists and two aces, and served for the first eight points of the final game. 

Jarvis is one of three candidates for the outside hitter spot in Caraway’s new lineup, with Guilliard-Young and Williams the mainstays up front. By using three players as defensive specialists, Caraway has opened up a spot for Emily Friedman, his backup setter and one of the best passers on the team. 

“Being able to use Emily in that role will be key,” he said. “We can use more ball control with her on the court. We need that for our rematch with Encinal, and it will be very important in the playoffs.”


Businesses within city boycotted

By Hank Sims, Daily Planet staff
Friday October 19, 2001

Outsiders react to council’s anti- war resolution 

 

Berkeley business owners are condemning a council resolution, which, they say, has caused outside businesses to refuse to purchase goods and services from them. The resolution, passed Tuesday by a divided City Council, calls on elected officials to end the bombing of Afghanistan. 

Mayor Shirley Dean said Thursday that she and other members of the City Council have received a flood of e-mail opposing the resolution and stating that they will refuse to work with companies located within the city. 

Berkeley firms have already reported a loss in business, leaving the members of the council’s progressive faction, who supported the resolution, and the moderates, who opposed it, blaming each other for potentially huge economic losses. 

Many city officials fear a more organized national boycott of city businesses is imminent. 

Tsunami Visual Technologies, a Fremont-based video game component manufacturer, said it had canceled a $12,000 contract with Berkeley’s ID8 Media, a vendor of 3-D computer technology. Tsunami said because of the council’s action, it would award the contract to a San Francisco company. 

In addition, the Tsunami employee who wrote the letter said he would no longer patronize Berkeley restaurants. 

Fireside Thrift Co., a Pleasanton-based savings-and-loan company with over 40 offices, wrote to the mayor’s office asking for a clarification of certain aspects of the resolution. The company had been planning to hold its annual convention in Berkeley, but was reconsidering in light of the resolution. 

Ashby Lumber reported that one of its biggest customers canceled a contract for $60,000-worth of goods, and would not do business with the company again.  

Mike Fuller, Ashby Lumber’s operations manager, said the contractor who canceled the contract asked that his name not be released to the press. Fuller did say, though, that it was one of the larger and better-known Bay Area construction companies, and that it is currently contacting other contractors in order to organize a boycott. 

“When someone who’s been working with us for 10 or 15 years says that he’s not coming in anymore, that hurts,” said Fuller. 

“This guy loves our service. He told us, ‘It’s not a reflection on you, it’s about the city.’” 

Fuller said management at Ashby Lumber asked if the contractor would consider switching to working with their branch in Pleasant Hill. 

“He told us ‘no,’ because the business was still based in Berkeley,” said Fuller. 

According to Dean, these are just a few examples from the hundreds of e-mail messages her office has received. A man left a voice mail on her office telephone saying he canceled escrow on a home he was buying in town. A Midwestern CEO wrote he would be convening a meeting with other business leaders to discuss a city boycott. Individuals from around the Bay Area and the country said they would not buy anything in Berkeley.  

On Thursday, Councilmember Dona Spring, the author of the resolution, came out swinging against Dean and Rachel Rupert, CEO of the Berkeley Chamber of Commerce, who she said should “bear the responsibility for the negative spin on this story.” 

Spring said in a television interview, Rupert said she was certain a boycott would follow passage of the resolution, and listed the forms such a boycott might take. 

“The president of the Chamber is the one publicizing the idea of boycotting Berkeley,” she said. “Rachel Rupert is trying to use the resolution to help Mayor Dean politically and hurt her rivals on the council.” 

“The important question businesses in the Chamber need to ask themselves is whether their president, Rachel Rupert, is working for them, or for the mayor.” 

A person answering the phones at the Berkeley Chamber of Commerce said Rupert was in meetings all day and could not be reached for comment. 

Spring accused Dean of repeating in a press release, a statement Spring gave to a reporter that Spring said was a misquotation. Spring also stated that the mayor had characterized the resolution as a “condemnation” of the bombing, which Spring said was a mischaracterization. 

“The mayor knows better than that,” said Spring. “In her using this issue, and publicizing it, she hurt Berkeley in order to advance her own political career.”  

“This is an organized campaign to help the mayor’s re-election campaign, and unfortunately it’s coming at the expense of Berkeley businesses.” 

Mayor Dean said the charges were “absolutely the silliest statements I have ever heard.” 

“(Spring) should quit blaming people for her own blunders,” she said. “She needs to go into her office and read her e-mails. She needs to recognize the seriousness of her actions.” 

“I’m getting death threats for what (the progressives) do. She has put me, my family, my office staff and their families at risk, and she has the effrontery to say that it’s my fault. I reject that.” 

“I have never described this resolution as a condemnation,” Dean added. “I have never used those words. Ms. Spring knows that, and I don’t know what she’s talking about.”  

Dean bristled at charges that she maliciously repeated the quotation from the “Daily Californian,” which Spring said was incorrect. 

“My press release, in which I did repeat her statement in the Daily Cal, was days ago,” she said. “The Daily Cal stood by their story, but I took that press release off my web site, and it hasn’t been on there for days.” 

Dean also strongly denied that she was using the fallout from the resolution for political gain. 

“I went on the national news and tried to smooth this thing over,” she said. “I went onto the Fox News Channel and called the people behind this (resolution) ‘patriots.’ I tried to defend them.” 

Councilmember Spring said she had not yet heard from any local companies that report business losses because of the resolution, but regretted any that did occur. 

“It was never our intent to harm Berkeley businesses,” she said. “We are sorry about the inflammatory way that this was spun by the media, but the mayor and Rachel Rupert should bear the responsibility for that.” 

Spring said she also received many e-mails from people thanking her and promising to shop in Berkeley. 


Support Bush or quit

Joyce Marlene Carroll
Friday October 19, 2001

Editor: 

Shock vibrated through my heart while reading the Berkeley Planet article: “Council Condemns terrorists, mourns loss in resolution.” Added to this shock wave was the news report on the same issue. 

How dangerous six government representatives can be. The Berkeley City Council members are elected government officials. I see it as their duty to support the decision of President Bush.  

If you cannot support your president while serving as a government official, no matter what level you serve, whether in a local, state or federal capacity it is your duty to relinquish your position. Have the professionalism to step down. 

I request that councilmembers Linda Maio, Maudelle Shirek, Dona Spring, and Kriss Worthington give up their seats on the Berkeley City Council.  

Have the courage of your convictions and step down as government representatives of the people and speak your peace as a citizen. 

What you have done is self-serving. I cannot believe the majority of Berkeley’s citizens would vote in favor of such a resolution.  

I will encourage a boycott of Berkeley until this resolution is overturned. May the Berkeley City Council become a true governing body for the people.  

Please support our President and those who serve ready to die for your safety. 

God Bless America. 

Your decision has brought me great sorrow. I will never look upon local government again as truly for the people. It is time to reconsider the amount power we allow our city councilmembers to wield. 

 

Joyce Marlene Carroll 

Rio Vista


PFA readies for finale of Land retrospective

By Peter Crimmins, Special to the Daily Planet
Friday October 19, 2001

For the past four months the Pacific Film Archive has been showcasing the work of film director Fritz Lang, a giant of cinema whose career spans from silent films in 1920s Germany to Hollywood studio product of the ‘40s, and even an homage in Jean-Luc Godard’s Nouvelle Vague classic, “Contempt.” 

This massive retrospective of Lang’s oeuvre is soon coming to a close – just two more weekends remaining – and the enthusiastic filmgoers who have been flocking to the PFA will be given a chance to reflect on the man and his work.  

On Saturday, Oct. 23 at 3 p.m. in the PFA theater, there will be a free open discussion about Lang with guest speaker, UC Berkeley professor Anton Kaes, fielding audience questions about the man. 

Following the discussion will be a screening of “Die Nibelungen,” Lang’s 1924 film based on the medieval legend of Seigfried – a hero who learns to make himself invulnerable to harm by bathing in the blood of a dragon. The Teutonic myth is a mainstay of German culture (Richard Wagner wrote an opera about it) and appealed to the Vienna-born Lang as a means to assimilate himself in his adopted country. 

“Die Nibelungen” can be seen as part of a triad of film projects, which became the cornerstones of German film culture. Completing the package are “Metropolis” – a science fiction spectacle of a technological future society tainted with black magic – and his “Dr. Mabuse” – a genius super-criminal masterminding a complex contemporary underworld. 

Fritz Lang is among the rare luminaries whose name has become a description. His name can easily be transformed into an adjective. (You’ll never hear anyone speak the word “Murnau-ian,” as in the director of “Nosferatu” and one of Lang’s professional rivals in Germany, F.W. Murnau.)  

“Langian,” a slippery term, can refer to the enormous scale of his modernist productions – both epic and architectural – or the maniacal tyranny he exercised while making his films. His behavior and his signature eyepiece earned him the tagline: “The monster with a monocle.” 

In Saturday’s discussion with Kaes, filmgoers who have been watching Lang’s wide spectrum of work will have a chance to clarify his contribution to world cinema and coax out the man behind the films. But professor Tom Gunning, who gave a lecture on Lang at the PFA on Sept. 21, said looking for an artist in the art is a tricky business, particularly with Lang. 

“Although there are many reasons to question the link between a person and a work, I think pure self-expression is an impoverished idea,” said Gunning the day after his lecture.  

He added that the tendency to search the films for the psychological underpinnings of the artist is perhaps not the most rewarding mode of analysis. 

Lang made films under a variety of conditions. In the early German film industry he enjoyed nearly unbounded creative freedom until Nazism drove him to Hollywood. There, the powerful studio system forced him to button-up his omnipotent tendencies. (Much of his professional maneuverings were means to exploit the industry.) 

“One thing about Lang is that he’s not just some Romantic artist who has this terrible time adjusting to this industrial, commercial process,” said Gunning, “rather his artistry consists of the way he interacts with it. He usually interacts with it as conflict.” 

Because cinema is such a collaborative art form, searching for the delicate signal of an artist’s own personality might be futile. 

“I think that’s a prejudice we have toward the novel and psychology and interiority,” said Gunning. “I think there’s a good argument that cinema is better dealing with things like exteriority, action, space. And in all those areas Lang is a master.… I think this exteriority is a profound modern vision.” 

Lang often lied about his own life. His carefully-wrought biography neatly wrapped up such shady periods as the death of his first wife and his “escape” from Nazi Germany. Some truths we may never know for certain, but his claim of being trained as an architect is at least partially true. Much of the energy in his films comes from characters’ reactions to their environments. This weekend’s screening of “Die Nibelungen,” the glaring artificiality in its fantasy sets, will showcase Lang’s artistry of space and design. 

“In Lang’s forest for “Die Nibelungen” there are these concrete trees, they are monumental and you never get a sense there is a leaf stirring,” said Gunning. “Lang is diagrammatic, an architectural quality. The environment is something he controls, and that’s what you see on the screen.”


Cal’s Medina becomes player-coach despite obstacles

By Dean Caparaz Daily Planet Correspondent
Friday October 19, 2001

Jennifer Medina starts her day with a cup of coffee. Sitting in a local Starbuck’s, the diminutive 23-year-old appears to be just another Cal student trying to stay awake as another semester rolls by.  

Medina, “Pooh” to her friends, is much more than that. Every day around 6 a.m., she wakes up, walks to the nearby coffeehouse and plans her hectic schedule. As a member of the Golden Bears women’s soccer team, Medina is part of a nationally-ranked squad that’s aiming for postseason success. When the American studies major is not going to class, doing homework or playing, she coaches. Medina assists the Cal coaching staff, runs her own soccer camps and coaches the under-13 Berkeley Mavericks girls team.  

“I love coaching,” she said. “It’s fun to hear when the kids are having fun playing. It means more to me than anything, than any A on a paper or anything to me.”  

Medina, who had been coaching the U-12 Mavericks, began coaching the U-13 team last August. The club’s preseason was held during Cal’s preseason, but Cal coach Kevin Boyd was OK with her job, as long as there were no conflicts. 

Boyd has seen her coaching first-hand. Medina, an intelligent player who is now in her fifth year at Cal, works with Golden Bear teammates as a player-coach.  

“We’ve used her in ways such as working technically with players on an individual basis or working tactically with a player on a part of their game, whether in 1-v-1 defending or playing cover defense,” Boyd said. “She does a great job of that. She’s worked with Cami [Boswell] with her defense and Kassie [Doubrava] with her defense. Other than that, we’ve just used her as a sounding board, heard her thoughts and ideas. She has a great understanding of the game.”  

Medina had a promising playing career as a youth, but injuries and illness has limited her playing time in college. In 1994, her Sunnyvale Roadrunners team won the under-17 national club championship. Her club featured some future stars – U.S. World Cup and Olympic veteran Lorrie Fair, WUSA defender Ronnie Fair and former Cal teammate Regina Holan. All went on to greater playing fame than Medina, but it was Medina who earned MVP honors at the national championship.  

Two years later, she was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. Doctors don’t know why she developed MS. It could have been due to a spinal cord injury she suffered while playing in high school, the stress surrounding her mother’s death in 1995, the stress of her senior year of high school or other reasons.  

Medina takes a weekly intramuscular injection of Avonex to help control the symptoms, which include muscular weakness, visual difficulties and numbness in various parts of her body, but she says that injuries are harder to deal with than MS. During her freshman season, she suffered two concussions, one during a game and one when she was hit by a car. At the end of her freshman season, the Cal senior suffered a hip flexor/quad muscle injury that caused her to redshirt her sophomore season. During spring training of her junior year, Medina tore the MCL of one knee and played sparingly – just three games – in the fall of 2000. She has played just once in 13 games this season.  

“The thing with all these injuries, the MS makes it harder to heal,” she said. “It’s more about the injuries and waiting for them to heal. Random things would happen to me in my four years. It’s just ridiculous.”  

Medina created First Touch Soccer Camps and Clinics when she was 17 in 1996. She comes from coaching stock – her father, Frank, coached her Roadrunners to their national title.  

In 1997, she asked Holan and the Fairs to join her venture.  

“I told them, ‘I’ll run it and you guys will just act like you’re coaching,’” said Medina, who splits her proceeds evenly with her fellow coaches.  

What started out as a one-week training camp for one club team has grown to a camp for several teams ranging in ages from 9-18. It’s big enough that First Touch sessions are held in three places in the Bay Area: San Carlos, the Mountain View/Sunnyvale area, and Berkeley. First Touch even has a Web site – www.firsttouchsoccer.com. 

Medina has a more difficult time planning her First Touch schedule with her friends and colleagues living outside the Bay Area. Both Fairs play in the WUSA, with Lorrie in Philadelphia and Ronnie in New York. Holan lives in Prague in the Czech Republic.  

Coaching could take a back seat after Medina graduates in May; she wants to play professional soccer in England. The United States is the only country with a true professional women’s soccer league, but the English soccer federation says it will start its own women’s pro league by 2003, and Medina has already played in the semi-pro league there.  

Ultimately, both Medina and Boyd see her joining the coaching profession full time.  

“Coaching is going to be her career, and should be,” Boyd said. “She’s patient and explains things very well. She has an ability to explain things in multiple ways. She can demonstrate things, too. She will be an outstanding coach, and is already an outstanding coach.”


Early literacy program issued glowing report

By Jeffrey Obser, Daily Planet staff
Friday October 19, 2001

The Board of Education heard a glowing third-anniversary report on the district’s home-grown Early Literacy Plan at its regular meeting Wednesday. 

“We have made significant progress,” said Donna Van Noord, who coordinates the program district-wide. 

Chris Lim, the associate superintendent for instruction, created the elementary school reading remediation program three years ago partly to tackle the “achievement gap” before it happens.  

Regular diagnostic testing, intensive tutoring, and innovative teaching by literacy specialists have been put in place to help shrink the number of students who normally underperform in later years – 20 to 30 percent, mostly from economically disadvantaged or minority backgrounds. 

With teachers and administrators from four elementary schools at her side, Van Noord reported that 11 of 12 eligible schools had implemented the core kindergarten-to-third grade reading remediation curriculum last year. The lowest-scoring 20 percent of students, as identified by diagnostic testing, are given intensive tutoring from Reading Recovery teachers. 

All the schools, she added, were now tracking students’ progress up to fifth grade through diagnostic testing and record-keeping. 

Van Noord said 69 percent of the students helped by ELP were reading by grade level at the end of last year – compared to 71 percent of the students districtwide, in all grade levels. Overall, 377 students had been served, she said. 

School board director Joaquin Rivera made one of the few criticisms of the evening when he pointed out that the percentage of third graders reading below grade level on the diagnostic tests, and thus eligible for ELP, had remained consistent in the last three years at about 26 percent. 

Van Noord said those numbers were partly the result of the greatly expanded number of schools and students participating since the first year. “We in no way think we’ve arrived,” she said. “We look at this as a great start.” 

School Board Director Ted Schulz said after seven years on the school board: “Of all the things I’ve seen, this plan or program is one of the best, if not the best, I’ve seen put into place.” 

The other educators took turns explaining the reasons for the program’s effectiveness. Lorna Skantzen-Niel, principal of Berkeley Arts Magnet School, said the individual student binders given to all K-5 teachers last year were helping them keep track of students’ progress in writing accuracy, reading fluency, text comprehension, and other literacy skills. 

“Every teacher has a complete binder of assessments with timeline and benchmarks,” she said. “Where do my students need to be at the end of fourth, fifth grade? All can see.” 

Amy Norris, a second-grade teacher at Malcolm X Elementary, said the diagnostic testing had enabled her to give individualized instruction to all 27 of her students and “start teaching on day one.” 

“What this has done for me as a classroom teacher is almost indescribable,” she said. 

Tom Prince, coordinator of the ELP and Reading Recovery at Emerson Elementary, said the “safety net” for under-achieving kids was being widened with a “booster group” for brief immersion of second- and third- graders and special attention to the bottom five performers at the end of each kindergarten class. 

Because of the program, Prince said, the Emerson students in the lowest-achieving 20 percent at the beginning of the year are now attaining grade-level literacy by the end of the year at the same rate as the rest of the students. 

One big change in the program last year was moving from fictional narratives to nonfiction material, which Skantzen-Niel said represented an early start on SAT-9 preparedness and gave teachers a “better idea” of student skills. 

“This is not easy stuff, but it’s now the expectation in the BUSD,” she said.  

Even kindergartners are now learning to read a simple text of a few lines before moving up, Prince said. 

In addition to helping students, the presenters said, ELP is helping teachers develop their skills in dealing with literacy by having them meet regularly to compare notes and critique one another. 

Board Vice President Shirley Issel praised the “atmosphere of professionalism at each school” and suggested the assessment binders follow students all the way through high school. But she expressed concern of the estimated cost of $4,000 per student to pay for the literacy tutors’ services.  

“That’s a lot of money,” she said. 

However, one of the presenters also pointed out that the program could spare remedial costs in the long run. Superintendent Michele Lawrence added that the benefits of staff and teacher development will be felt for years to come. 

“It’s really quite an effective model,” she said. 

Lawrence said she welcomed the group’s report after a long week of budget and personnel drama.  

“It made my day because I really wanted to look at something that was working,” she said to appreciative laughter from the board. 

Van Noord thanked the board for its support, and Chris Lim for her guidance. She also took care to single out an audience member for thanks. Susan Lewis, who compiles most of the program’s data as a volunteer, also works full-time for PG&E. 

“I could not do my job without her,” Van Noord said.


Become peace

Americ Azevedo
Friday October 19, 2001

 

Editor:  

Spiritual consciousness looks inward to the “self” for the causes of problems. It offers no solutions to social problems, but the radical root of a sound foundation for good religious and political action. 

Religious consciousness works with inter-personal relationships as the causes and resolutions of problems. Religious consciousness without a strong link to the spirit easily takes over behaviors of groups – so that we have the “letter but not the spirit of the law.” 

Political consciousness is “world” centered. Politics is just a step beyond religious consciousness. The same feelings that are religious interchange with religious patterns of behavior and thinking. Religious groups often try to take control of politics; or, politics tries to control religion. The founders of the American Constitution insisted on the separation of church and state for these reasons. 

Some years ago, a friend of mine took me to task on my political activism, pointing out that “first we must change ourselves, before we can change the world.” Eventually, I understood his wisdom. 

I admit it – I want a peaceful world, where people live in harmony. Not a very exciting vision. Peace is a precondition for happiness. To get there, I need to stay with the first step – which is to learn to be peaceful myself. Than learn to share that state with others around me.  

In other words: be the peace that I want to see in the world. 

Americ Azevedo 

Berkeley


Schott added to list of Hermann candidates

Staff
Friday October 19, 2001

 

California All-American Laura Schott was added to the Hermann Trophy ballot for the 2001 season. The Hermann Trophy is one of two national player of the year awards in college soccer.  

“I didn’t expect to be nominated, but I thought it would be cool if I did,” said Schott. “It’s unbelievable. It’s one of the best if not the best honor I’ve received.” 

“The addition of Laura to the Hermann Trophy candidates is well deserved,” said Cal coach Kevin Boyd. “Laura has 12 goals in 13 games, and she draws the attention of every team we play. She has made great contributions to our program and has helped elevate Cal to national prominence.”  

A panel of Division I college coaches added two men and two women to the lists of 13 men’s and women’s candidates that were announced prior to the 2001 season. Virginia’s Lori Lindsey was the other female athlete added. At the beginning of the season, two places were left open for players who might otherwise have been left off the original ballot. This was done to ensure that any deserving player was eligible to win the award.  

Schott, a junior forward from Wilsonville, Ore., leads the Pac-10 Conference with 27 points and 12 goals. She ranks 10th nationally with 0.92 goals/game.  

The winners of the 2001 Hermann Trophy will be announced at the College Cups, the women on Dec. 8 in Dallas, Texas, and the men on Dec. 15 in Columbus, Ohio.


Sit down and shut up

By Judith Scherr, Daily Planet editor
Friday October 19, 2001

If the debut of the 21st century doesn’t become known as WWIII – and I pray that it doesn’t – I fear pundits will call it the age of “sit down and shut up.”  

Here at the Planet we’ve been hearing an awful lot of that lately. 

Take the case of the ill-fated Common Ground field trip. In case you missed it, Common Ground’s a small school inside Berkeley High that teaches about the environment. 

In its wisdom, the mini-school took some 330 kids to Yosemite with about 25 chaperones. According to the folks in charge of the concession at Yosemite and teachers and parents, the teens disrupted the campground, smoked marijuana, threw rocks and, the concession folk say, got kicked out. (Others contend they left early voluntarily.) 

Worse yet, according to a number of angry letters we got here at the Planet, was that we reported it. We were ruining Common Ground’s reputation and the future of small schools at BHS, we were told. 

Don’t write, don’t tell.  

Sit down. Shut up.  

Write about the flowers that push up through the cracks in the sidewalk and forget about the cracks that trip people up. 

But, I’ll credit the Daily Planet and reporter Jeffrey Obser with a role in spurring the adults to hold a meeting to discuss what happened on the Yosemite trip and how to avoid the pitfalls the future. Kudos to us all. And the First Amendment. 

*** 

Another thing about school’s is scaring me – that the art of critical thinking’s getting lost in a nationwide stress on testing. Shouldn’t our kids think? Shouldn’t they question? 

Even the school board seems to think asking hard question’s not a very good thing to do. 

Board members and a few of their apologists were very unhappy when we wrote about the board’s executive session meeting at the new superintendent’s house, where the public could not comment and which was inaccessible to those who use wheelchairs. 

No one said our accusation of violation of open meeting laws was inaccurate. No one asked for a correction. They just say we shouldn’t have talked about it; we need to support the new superintendent, they said. 

SIT DOWN AND SHUT UP. Fill in circles. Mark the Xs. And don’t think. And don’t question. 

*** 

Talk about secrets. It seems the school board’s known since August that ex-Principal Frank Lynch was job hunting. Well they all knew it, so you’d imagine they talked about it among themselves. If they did, they violated open meeting laws. It was never on any agenda I’ve seen. 

Because it was never discussed in public, the high school community is in shock at Lynch’s abrupt departure.  

Kids are already reeling from the instability that’s entered all our lives in the era of post Sept. 11. They’re in a high school with accreditation problems, a high school that has never been able to figure out how to meet the needs of its most needy students – and now they’ve got no one at the helm. 

You’d think that when the newspaper – not the Planet, by the way, but the award-winning student newspaper the Jacket - broke the story of Lynch’s plans to get out, the school board would have met in emergency session and quickly reassured parents and kids that the post would be filled. 

If the gang of five are talking about how to replace Lynch, none of us know. And we’re going to keep asking the question until we get some answers. 

*** 

Then there’s the progressive majority City Council that got a really bad case of “sit down and shut up” when it passed a redistricting plan without a document explaining exactly what the new boundaries would be. 

I don’t know if there was a formal Brown Act violation – some say three “progressive” councilmembers had discussed the plan; some believe the plan was also communicated to a fourth (four councilmembers knowing the plan would not constitute a formal Brown Act violation) and some say a fifth councilmember knew the specifics of it as well, which would constitute a violation. 

But the biggest violation is the spirit of a truly open meeting, where the council votes only on things it thoroughly understands and where the public has a chance to look at what the council is considering. 

Should we all just sit down and shut up? 

*** 

And what about these difficult times of war? 

Much of the mail I’ve got (most from out-of-towers with no phone number for verification), say that the councilmembers who call for a stop to the bombing are traitors. Some of the mail councilmembers have got is very hostile, even threatening.  

(I should underscore that at the Planet we have also received thoughtful letters on both sides of the war debate as well.) 

Sit down and shut up, the e-mails say – less politely. Love it or leave it. The war is not debatable.  

But they’re wrong.  

The rule must be: speak out, even if you are as alone as Barbara Lee was when she voted against giving the president the power of war. Speak out, even if you are a Republican in Democratic Berkeley. Councilmembers must continue to speak their minds – on all sides – even in the face of angry e-mail campaigns. 

Stand your ground. The right to dissent is among the most prized rights we have in our country.  

We at the Planet will continue to report the facts as we see them. We won’t sit down. 

Or shut up. 

 

 


Killing’s no answer

John M. Hartenstein
Friday October 19, 2001

 

The Daily Planet received a copy of this letter to Sen. Dianne Feinstein 

Thank you for your letter responding to my concerns. I agree the United States should “respond appropriately”. However, as a nation of laws, seeking to represent freedom and justice in the world, we must approach this problem in a way that upholds those values not only to the world, but also for our own citizens and residents within the U.S. borders. 

We must stop the bombing and killing of innocents RIGHT NOW. We have yet to hear any credible evidence that Osama bin Laden, the Taliban, or the Afghani people had anything to do with the tragedies of September 11. 

Indeed, it is reported in Time magazine that on Sept. 11 before any information was known or evidence had been gathered, President Bush had already telephoned Pakistan’s presiding general to demand assistance in capturing or killing bin Laden. The administration shows no signs of interest in truth or justice, and has shown an incredible refusal to consider any course other than war. “Wanted: dead or alive” is vigilantism; it is not lawful justice. 

You express outrage over loss of innocent American lives; nevertheless, we are taking actions certain to (and which already have) resulted in loss of innocent lives of those in Afghanistan, and which have caused riots around the world which are resulting in more innocent lives being lost. How can these deaths be excused? If the loss of innocent American lives (5,000 claimed; so far only about 500 deaths have been verified) is so great a crime as to demand a response in kind, then certainly the deaths of innocent civilians outside our borders is also not to be tolerated, by Afghans or by Americans. The people of Afghanistan have not declared war on the United States, nor has any government that we deem to be the legitimate government of Afghanistan. Under all rules of our own nation, as well as international law, our war actions in Asia are reprehensible, illegal, and can be seen by ordinary muslims and others around the world only as terrorist actions. You say you are acting to ensure that “the response is deliberate, and carefully targeted so that innocent civilians are protected to the greatest extent possible.” Is it more responsible or compassionate to deliberately push millions to die of starvation, cold, and disease than it is to bomb their homes directly?  

To consider the acts in New York and Washington to be “an act of war against the United States,” you seem to disregard that the United States has been at war with Muslims for decades, particularly in Palestine, but also in Iraq, Iran, Syria, Lebanon, etc. The U.S. outrage that the war we have been waging for decades has finally come home is misplaced, ignorant, and arrogant. Yes, the United States and its government and people should be outraged; but our outrage must be humane enough to extend to the outrages against innocent people all over the world, whom our directly and indirectly funded terrorism has been killing. While ordinary citizens may be expected to cry out for blood to avenge American deaths wiser heads must call for peaceful means, for upholding laws. This is your duty. 

John M. Hartenstein 

San Francisco


Kirk named to Soccer America Team of the Week

Staff
Friday October 19, 2001

California junior midfielder Brittany Kirk was named to the Soccer America Team of the Week for her play during the week of Oct. 8-14.  

Kirk helped lead No. 15 Cal (10-2-1, 2-0 Pac-10) to two road shutouts over Oregon and Oregon State to kick off Pac-10 play. The Claremont native tallied her first two goals of the season, both game-winners.  

Kirk also added an assist on Cal’s final goal against Oregon. She has 10 points on the year and is tied for the team lead with six assists.  

The Golden Bears host No. 18 Washington Friday, Oct. 19, at 3 p.m., in their Pac-10 home opener.


Peace activists learn their rights

By Kimberlee Bortfeld, Special to the Daily Planet
Friday October 19, 2001

FBI agents beware. Leeza Vinogradov knows she doesn’t have to talk to you, and she plans to inform others. Mum is the word.  

Vinogradov, a self-described peace activist, was one of nearly 200 people who gathered at St. Joseph the Worker Church on Wednesday night to learn about what to do if the FBI or Immigration and Naturalization Service comes knocking at the door.  

Vinogradov said her ex-husband, who is Muslim and originally from India, feels vulnerable.  

“He keeps saying to me: ‘My name is Ali. My name is Ali. It’s a common Islamic name,’” Vinogradov said. “Actually, it’s ironic. When he first came to the U.S., it was during the Iran hostage crisis, and he wasn’t frightened at all. Back then, he was young and looked a lot like the people on the front pages of the newspapers. But nowadays, he’s beside himself with worry and concern.”  

He has good reason.  

Nancy Hormachea, one of the speakers at the event and an immigration attorney who represents Iranian, Afghan and South Asian clients, said since Sept. 11, many of her clients have been accosted by government agencies.  

“The FBI is calling people at home or just showing up at their doors,” Hormachea said. “They say: ‘I just have a few questions to ask you.’ And people are really intimidated by them and let them in.”  

But Hormachea said people can and should refuse to let them into their homes.  

“They need an arrest warrant to detain you,” she said. “And they need a search warrant to enter your home or office. If they have the warrant, ask for it, read it, then follow them and monitor the search. The search must be specific and limited only to the items listed in the warrant.”  

Hormachea also urged citizens and non-citizens to stay quiet until lawyers arrive.  

“Start exercising the right to remain silent,” she said. “Any information you give them can be used against you. And if you lie to an agent, the penalties are severe. So don’t talk. Just say: ‘I don’t have anything to say. What is your name? I’ll have my attorney call you.’”  

Elizabeth Fink, a New York criminal lawyer, agreed.  

“Never talk to government without a lawyer,” said Fink. “It is always a mistake. It’s more dangerous to talk to the FBI than it is to give testimony in a courtroom. In a courtroom, a court reporter takes down what is said. But with the FBI, it’s your word against his. You don’t want to be in the steelyard with this enormous bully.”  

While most in the diverse audience could only picture such confrontations with law enforcement, many speakers had wells of personal experience to draw from. Sponsors of the event included the American Arab Anti Discrimination Committee, Middle East Children's Alliance, National Lawyers Guild, San Francisco Women in Black and the School of Unity and Liberation. 

Yuri Kochiyama, a spirited octogenarian, was 20 years old when the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor, and she was one of 120,000 Japanese Americans taken from their homes and interned during World War II. 

“Within three months of the bombing, the headlines of the papers were ‘Japs get out,’” she said. “Even Chinese and Koreans, because they couldn’t tell us Asians apart, were being attacked. They started wearing buttons that read: ‘We’re not Japs.’”  

“The wartime years were rough because racism, hysteria and mistrust,” said Kochiyama. “These same things are happening today when we look at Muslim and Arab-Americans. I hope social awareness today is higher than in yesteryears. The world cannot be controlled by one country. It belongs to the people.”  

Nancy Delaney, who was introduced to Arab culture about 20 years through a UC Berkeley class on Palestine, said she is also worried about the possible backlash on Arab-Americans.  

“The American public, like me 20 years ago, have no idea or understanding of Arab people,” she said. “They have targeted a whole race of people and demonized them. We need to learn how to treat each other as equals. If you don’t know how to relate to others as individuals, peace isn’t going to happen.”  

But for Michel Shehadeh and other Arab-American activists, the level of social awareness and understanding of Arab culture is not high enough.  

Shehadeh, the western regional director of the American Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee and a member of the LA8 – a group of seven Palestinian-Americans and one Kenyan American who were detained in 1987 and threatened with deportation by the Immigration and Naturalization Services for their political activism – said he struggles to get his message heard.  

“After Sept. 11, people were searching for reasons why they hate us,” Shehadeh said. “But they don’t hate us. They hate our foreign policy. We need to start to discuss deeply the reasons why our foreign policy perpetuates pain in the Middle East. But every time Arab-Americans try to advocate a debate about foreign policy, we are either ignored, accused of justifying or condoning terrorism or silenced. The U.S. does not exist in a vacuum. We live in an environment, and if that environment is diseased or sick we have to deal with it.”  

Shehadeh and others believe part of the problem lies in the absolutism of the Bush administration.  

“Nothing justifies polarizing the world into two camps: One that is absolute good and one that is absolute evil,” he said. “There’s no difference between Bush saying: ‘You’re either with us or you’re against us,’ and Bin Laden saying: ‘You’re either a believer or an infidel.’” 

Osama Qasem, president of the American Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, San Francisco Bay Area Chapter, said the only way to uproot terrorism is to have a fair and equitable foreign policy.  

“The Bush administration has been claiming that this is not a war against Islam, but at the same time it is creating a dichotomy and making Muslims and Arab feel like the ‘others,’” he said. “The government is exploiting fear and uncertainty to infringe on civil liberties and to embroil us in a military action campaign that does not have defined goals and will inevitably cause civilians casualties in Afghanistan and elsewhere.”  

During the two-and-a-half-hour event, anti-war sentiment ran high. Many speakers expressed, criticism and frustration with the government. All warned audience members to be outright mistrustful.  

Kate Raphael of the San Francisco Women of Black, a co-sponsor of the event, said she was called by the FBI last month and asked who she might know in the Middle East.  

“Since I know no one who would fly planes into buildings, I know no one whose name I’ll turn over,” she said, explaining her decision to keep quiet. “Now is the time to guard freedom and democracy. We cannot be silent, except to the FBI”.  

Donations collected at the event will go to the National Lawyers Guild, a conglomeration of law students, lawyers and legal workers committed to promoting civil rights.  

For more information or to report government harassment or seek legal advice, call the guild’s 24-hour legal hotline at 415-285-1055.


State: Disturbed youth not getting needed psychiatric counseling

The Associated Press
Friday October 19, 2001

SACRAMENTO — California’s disturbed youth are not receiving necessary and available psychiatric services, causing overcrowding in juvenile jails and mental hospitals, a state watchdog reported. 

More than one million children statewide will experience an emotional or behavioral disorder this year, but more than 600,000 will not receive adequate treatment, concluded the Little Hoover Commission, a bipartisan agency that issues studies to the governor and Legislature. 

Children “endure a system that turns them away until their needs are severe,” Little Hoover Chairman Michael E. Alpert said Wednesday. 

“Because there are no standards, children often do not receive the right care at the right time in the right way. Because we do not measure outcomes, there is no pressure on the system to improve,” he said. 

A California Department of Health and Human Services spokeswoman declined to discuss the report specifically, saying officials were still reviewing it. But she defended the department’s efforts to treat all of the state’s mentally ill. 

“There is a commitment to provide the best care possible to mentally ill children and adults,” said Bertha Gorman. 

According to the commission, more than 50,000 children in foster care who may need mental health services do not get them, and many children in the juvenile justice system statewide, including victims of abuse and neglect, do not receive treatment. 

The report suggested that lack of funding is not the problem, noting that more than $56 billion will be spent next year for child and family services. The problem, the report indicated, is that no coherent, coordinated approach is taken in addressing mental health needs. 

No single state agency is accountable for coordinating care, the panel said. Various eligibility requirements often mean parents, children and even siblings receive different services from different providers. 

“For some of these children their symptoms will go unnoticed; their needs will not be understood,” the Little Hoover report said. “For others, the symptoms will be obvious to parents, teachers and doctors, but they will not receive attention because of how California organizes, funds and delivers mental health and other services.” 

Among other things, the panel recommends ensuring that all families are covered by public or private mental health insurance, addressing the problems of duplications and gaps in services, creating a cabinet-level secretary for children services, and addressing the shortage of qualified mental health specialists. 

According to the report, nearly a third of Los Angeles County’s public psychiatrist jobs are unfilled. Nearly a quarter of the county’s mental health directors have retired in the last five years and another quarter are expected to retire in the next five years. 


UC students demonstrate religious tolerance with sit-in on campus

By Hadas Ragolsky, Special to the Daily Planet
Friday October 19, 2001

More than 250 students, Jews and non-Jews, gathered Thursday at Sproul Plaza on the UC Berkeley campus for a sit-in to stand up against hate and anti-Semitism.  

Wearing blue shirts, yarmulkes and prayer shawls, the students sat down, holding signs, saying: “Sit down to stand up for tolerance,” and “Stop the hate.” 

The rally was called in response to last week’s physical assault against Aaron J. Schwartz, a 23-year-old Jewish student from San Francisco. The incident occurred after a religious celebration at the Hillel Student Jewish Center on Bancroft Way. 

As they do every year, Jewish students finished their service celebrating the day that the Torah was said to be given to the Jewish people, by marching out of the center dancing and singing in the streets. 

On the corner of Bancroft Way and Telegraph Avenue, Schwartz said he saw a man giving a Nazi “Sieg Heil” salute as he goose-stepped in place.  

“I left the group to speak with him,” Schwartz said at Tuesday’s sit-in. “He immediately (narrowed) the distance between us. I didn’t move. I was then grabbed from behind by one of his friends. They punched me in my face, I fell down and they left.” 

At the sit-in, students took turns repeating Schwartz’s story and encouraged the audience to join the demonstrators.  

“An attack on anyone is an attack on all of us,” they chanted in unison. “Please join us in saying ‘no’ to hatred against all persons based on religion, nationality, or ethnic origin,” they said. 

“This isn’t the first time it happened,” said Adam Weisberg, executive director of Berkeley Hillel, who called for the sit-in. “It is the first time that there was a physical attack but there were multiple incidents over the last three months in which students have been verbally attacked and intimidated by anti-Semitic statements.” 

“Over the past year we had a few complaints of harassment or heckling of Jewish students,” said Capt. Bill Cooper from the UC Berkeley police department. “In terms of frequency, it seems rare but they don’t always report to us on those incidents. (The) Berkeley campus and, specifically, the police department are concerned about those kinds of incidents.” 

On Saturday night, more than 30 students met at Hillel and discussed how to respond to the assault. Some wanted to have a large rally with speakers. Others thought it was not the right time and preferred to write letters to the campus newspaper.  

In the end, they came up with the quiet sit-in idea “to educate people about the specific incident and make them aware of the racial crimes against racial minorities, religious minorities and ethnic minorities,” said Jackie Bliss, a second-year student who participated in the meeting.  

Bliss, a pro-Israeli activist, said several times in the last year, callers have left threatening messages on her answering machine. 

Weinberger said that he feels strongly that the hate messages come from the association with Israel.  

“People on this campus who are identified as Jews are hated because people associate them with Israel,” he said. “Jewish students on the campus hesitate to exhibit their Judaism because of that.” 

Other students from different organizations on campus, such as Stop the war coalition, Students for Justice in Palestine and the Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action and Integration and Fight For Equality By Any Means Necessary joined the Jewish students. 

“We are here in solidarity speaking out against all form of racism,” said Mary Boktor, a member of SJP who is originally from Egypt. “I think what happened (last week) is horrible.” 

City Councilmember Kriss Worthington joined the crowd wearing a star of David pin, which read: “Stand against hate” pin.  

“When we say we want Berkeley to be hate free zone, we means stopping all hate, against all groups,” he said.


Audie Bock to try again

By Ofelia Madrid, Special to the Daily Planet
Friday October 19, 2001

Audie Bock is running again. Her target this time is Oakland Congresswoman Barbara Lee. 

Bock, a political chameleon who upset former Oakland Mayor Elihu Harris in a state Assembly race (only to lose the seat in a landslide less than two years later), announced Thursday her bid for Lee’s Democratic seat.  

She said her sole reason for candidacy was Lee’s vote against a bill granting President Bush war powers.  

“There’s an oath of office that a congressperson takes to protect and defend the U.S. Constitution against all enemies foreign and domestic. She did not do this,” Bock told reporters as she filed preliminary papers to be placed on the ballot for the March 5 Democratic primary election. 

Bock said Lee’s vote represented a personal agenda, which does not serve the interest of the district adequately. She characterized the vote as a personal statement about Bush.  

“That is inappropriate at this time,” Bock said. 

She told reporters she initially supported Lee’s vote because the congresswoman had described it as opposing Bush’s grant of a blank check for military action. Bock said she changed her mind after reading the resolution. 

“This was totally different because it was an attack on U.S. soil,” the Piedmont resident said. “There is a pattern of ignoring feelings of the people of this country.” 

Lee was not available for comment. 

Bock originally ran as a Green Party candidate for state assembly in 1999 and defeated Harris. Ten weeks later, she switched her affiliation to independent. After running for re-election as an independent in 2000, Bock received only 22 percent of the vote against Wilma Chan.  

Bock said her current campaign is being run by a Republican political consultant, Sal Russo, who also handled her unsuccessful re-election campaign last year. 

“The problem that Audie Bock has is that she got herself elected as a candidate with a great deal of courage and conviction and then proceeded to jettison that strength by switching political parties to save her own skin. Now she’s just a typical politician,” said Darry Sragow, chief campaign strategist for the assembly Democratic Caucus. “In this race, Barbara Lee is the person of conviction.”  

Gale Kaufman, Lee’s re-election campaign manager said: “The Sept. 11 tragedy is really not an issue that should be politicized in this fashion.” 

Kaufman added she was confused about Bock’s campaign because Bock was one of the first people to congratulate the congresswoman on her strength of character. 

“She has changed her political party several times,” Kaufman said. “For all I know she might be a Republican.” 

Although the state Democratic Party traditionally does not get involved in primary races, spokesman Bob Mulholland left little doubt about how party regulars might view Bock’s candidacy. 

“Who are we kidding? Don’t take the Bock campaign too seriously,” he said. 

Bock’s campaign launched a web site on Wednesday, which initially featured a picture of a smiling Lee in the middle of the burning Twin Towers.  

The picture has since been removed.  

Bock said the picture of the congresswoman was not meant to demonize her, but to make the public aware of that “she turned her back on that suffering.”  

Bock’s Web site also has a link to DumpBarbaraLee.com, which is paid for by Audie Bock for Congress.  

Since the launching of the site, Bock said a lot of the responses are coming from people in New York who are offering their help. 

“I do think there will be support from all over the nation because this is a national cause,” she said. 

Harris said Bock’s campaign is very unfortunate, and called her Web site “despicable.” 

“The link to hateful information is a sad reflection on Audie,” he said. 

Bock criticized Lee for neglecting her district and spending too much time on foreign affairs. 

“She has focused on a program on getting money for AIDS treatment in South Africa. This is not a bad thing to do,” Bock said. “The epidemic is severe, but in Alameda County we have the highest incidents of AIDS in African-American men. I would like to see that addressed before we take on problems of people outside the United States.” 

Bock insisted her campaign was not negative but one of unity. 

“This is a campaign that is for unity with the rest of the nation, that’s for supporting and mourning with the people who have suffered,” she said.


Agents raid alleged Ecstasy drug lab hidden in office

By Ben Fox, The Associated Press
Friday October 19, 2001

SAN DIEGO — A large and sophisticated laboratory for the club-drug Ecstasy was shuttered after a raid Thursday, authorities said. 

The lab was hidden behind a bookcase in an office in an industrial park in Escondido, 30 miles north of San Diego, authorities said. 

Five people were arrested at the lab late Wednesday, and 21 others were picked up in related sweeps in and around San Diego and Los Angeles. More arrests were expected. 

Arraignments for the suspects were scheduled for Friday. 

The raid capped a yearlong investigation into an organization capable of making between 1 million and 1.5 million tabs of Ecstasy a month, said Errol Chavez, Drug Enforcement Administration special agent in charge. 

Investigators found plastic bags filled with several thousand Ecstasy pills and enough chemicals to make a million more, said Todd Robinson, assistant U.S. attorney. 

Among those arrested was Dennis L. Alba, 52, whom authorities identified as the ringleader. A phone number for his Oceanside address was unlisted, and he could not be reached. 

The DEA had custody of Alba late Thursday, and whether he had an attorney could not be determined. The U.S. Marshals Service said it would have more information when he was turned over to the Bureau of Prisons. 

Typically, Ecstasy is made overseas, primarily in Europe. More than 80 percent of the pills distributed in the United States are believed imported, Chavez said. 

“This case represents a major attempt to establish a foothold in the United States,” he said. 


N.J. postal worker contracts anthrax; authorities fear co-worker may also be infected

By John P. McAlpin The Associated Press
Friday October 19, 2001

TRENTON, N.J. — A postal worker who may have handled anthrax-contaminated letters sent to NBC and the Senate majority leader has the skin form of the disease, authorities said Thursday. 

The infected worker is a female letter carrier. Two other Trenton postal workers are being tested, including a maintenance worker Postal Inspector Tony Esposito said officials are “almost certain” has anthrax. Test results were pending. 

The employees were being treated and taking antibiotics, Acting Gov. Donald DiFrancesco said. The letter carrier has been released from an undisclosed hospital. 

The letter carrier works at a local post office that sends mail to the regional facility outside Trenton where the contaminated letters were postmarked. The maintenance employee works at the regional facility. 

At the local post office in West Trenton, Postmaster Joseph Sautello said there are no immediate plans to shut down the facility. 

The state’s chief medical officer, George DiFerdinando Jr., said customers who visited the regional post office in the past three weeks should see a doctor if they have any symptoms of illness or a rash. 

The third employee is a a Levittown, Pa., man who works at an undisclosed post office serving Trenton. He has developed a rash and was being tested to see if he had been exposed to anthrax, Bucks County, Pa., health officials said. County Health Commissioner Dr. Louis Polk said test results on the 35-year-old man were expected Friday. 

Officials with the federal Centers for Disease Control were en route to New Jersey to decide if additional tests were warranted for other postal employees. 

The female postal employee is one of six people infected with anthrax. One, a 63-year-old Florida man, died Oct. 5. The others are recovering. 

New Jersey authorities wouldn’t disclose personal details about the mail carrier and maintenance worker. They have said both were working on days when the tainted mail would have been processed. 

The postal facility collects mail from 46 postal offices throughout central New Jersey. 

A letter contaminated with anthrax that was postmarked in Trenton last month was mailed to NBC anchor Tom Brokaw at NBC headquarters in New York. The other letter, postmarked from Trenton earlier this month, was mailed to Sen. Tom Daschle’s office in Washington. 

An aide to Brokaw has the skin form of anthrax. More than 30 workers in Daschle’s Senate office were exposed to the bacterium and are being treated with antibiotics. 

Meanwhile, federal officials have questioned at least two New Jersey pharmacists about anyone buying large amounts of the antibiotic Cipro prior to Sept. 18, when the Brokaw letter was mailed. 

Pharmacist John Berkenkopf, who owns Episcopo’s Pharmacy in Trenton, said two officials with the Food and Drug Administration questioned him Wednesday about anyone who bought between 60 and 120 tablets of the antibiotic. 

Cipro is usually prescribed for a week to 14 days, which is about 10 or 20 pills, Berkenkopf said. 

“Any more than that would ring all kinds of bells,” he said. He said he had not gotten any requests for large amounts of Cipro. 

FBI spokeswoman Sandra Carroll declined to comment on the investigation but said it “would stand to reason” that authorities would be suspicious of anyone seeking large amounts of Cipro. 

The state is also receiving attention from federal investigators looking into the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. At least six of the jetliner hijackers are believed to have lived in Paterson.


Two kidney patients dead after using dialysis machines with Baxter filter

By Herbert G. McCann The Associated Press
Friday October 19, 2001

CHICAGO — Baxter International Inc. says two kidney patients in Texas who underwent treatment on dialysis machines using Baxter filters have died and two others were hospitalized with complications. 

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration, which oversees the manufacture and distribution of medical products, is investigating the cause of the deaths. 

“We are in the process of looking into it,” spokeswoman Sharon Snider said Thursday. 

Baxter on Wednesday announced a worldwide recall of its Series A and Series AF dialyzers which are manufactured in Sweden by Althin Medical AB, acquired by Baxter last year. The devices filter waste substances from the blood before it is returned to patients with kidney failure. 

The A series of dialyzers were used in Croatia, where authorities blame the dialyzers for the deaths of 23 kidney patients earlier this month, and in Spain, where 15 patients reportedly died in August at health centers while undergoing kidney dialysis. 

The filters used in connection with the Texas deaths were of the AF series. Both series use a similar fiber. 

Baxter said it is not clear what role the filters played in any of the deaths. 

“There is no information linking these deaths to the dialyzer made by Baxter,” spokeswoman Tanya Tyska said. “We’ve instituted the recall as a precaution until an investigation into all aspects of their treatment is completed.” 

“It’s unusual. We haven’t seen this with dialysis membranes before causing widespread death like this,” said Dr. Paul Scheel, dialysis director at Johns Hopkins Medical Center. “The dialyzers are a relatively new brand for Baxter and that certainly raises some uncertainty about what the potential interaction between the blood” and the dialyzers could be. 

Baxter has sent investigators to Texas, Spain and Croatia. The company has not released the names of the Texas patients, nor the hospital in which they were treated. 

Tyska said one of the two hospitalized kidney patients has been treated and released. 

Dialyzers are hollow filtering tubes that are attached to dialysis machines, which clean impurities from blood of patients with kidney failure.  

Blood is drawn from the patient’s vein and pumped through the dialyzer, where impurities are filtered into a special fluid called dialysate, which mixes with water to flush the impurities away. The patient’s blood is then pumped back into the body. 

Tyska said potential causes of adverse reactions could occur at any point in the process because of inadequate water treatment and quality, contaminated dialysate concentrate, machine malfunction, clogged blood lines and needles, and the medication administered before and during the process. 

“The investigators might look at all these possible causes of adverse events,” Tyska said. 

In Zabreb, Croatian Health Minister Ana Stavljenic-Rukavina said the filters are suspected in the deaths because all the victims were treated using them and deaths dropped to normal levels when hospitals replaced the filters with other brands. A panel of experts is investigating. 

In Spain, an investigation by a European quality standards firm found no link between the deaths and filters, although the Spanish government is still running tests. 

The Texas Department of Health hasn’t received any complaint that would prompt an investigation. 

“We haven’t received any complaint or any question from any hospital or facility,” said department spokeswoman Emily Palmer. 

Baxter is a global medical products and services company that provides therapies for people with life-threatening conditions. 


McVeigh’s last day: friendly, no remorse

The Associated Press
Friday October 19, 2001

LOS ANGELES — To his dying day, Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh impressed his jailers as well behaved, funny, pleasant to be around — and completely without remorse — according to documents reviewed by the Los Angeles Times. 

“Mr. McVeigh remains stable emotionally. He does not suffer from a major mental health disorder or defect,” according to a May 18 psychiatric evaluation of McVeigh, who would be executed in less than a month, on June 11. 

“He spends his time watching TV, reading his correspondence and writing letters,” the evaluation said of McVeigh, who was put to death for the April 19, 1995, bombing that killed 168 people at the Oklahoma City Federal Building. 

The 33-year-old Gulf War Army veteran spent more than six years in maximum security prisons. Throughout that time, according to 2,000 pages of documents obtained by the Times, he was almost always good-natured and rarely caused trouble, the newspaper reported on its Web site Wednesday. 

“He has just returned after hearing the verdict of a death sentence yesterday,” the records noted at one point. “He is taking the verdict and sentence remarkably well and is not depressed.” 

After his sentencing, he was sent to “Supermax” in Florence, Colo., the nation’s most secure prison. 

During his two years there he committed only one infraction, refusing to stand up during a head count. 

“He just looked at us and laughed,” a prison official wrote. 

Run-ins he had with prison officials elsewhere also were minor. He was written up for trying to mail various harmless items to friends, including a “Star Wars” action figure. He once griped about not getting immediate care for a chipped tooth and another time for not getting enough sunlight. And he made it clear he didn’t like being disturbed when he was watching a war movie on television. 

He always kept his cell tidy and his bed well made, authorities said, and earned a certificate for completing a video study course called “Earth Revealed.” 

He never apologized. 

“The inmate still displays no remorse for his actions, nor does he spontaneously discuss the matter,” it was reported in February 1998. 

“He remains in good spirits with a keen sense of humor,” according to a report filed in April, just weeks before his execution in the Terre Haute, Ind., death house. 

Upon learning that schools in Terre Haute would be closed on the day of his execution, he said he expected to hear from schoolchildren thanking him. 

When execution day finally arrived, he “cooperated entirely,” according to Warden Harley G. Lappin. 


Davis indicates willingness to renegotiate power

The Associated Press
Friday October 19, 2001

LOS ANGELES — Despite concerns from one administration official that the state has secured enough resources to deal with the energy crisis, Gov. Gray Davis is considering renegotiating dozens of long-term power contracts, it was reported Thursday. 

The governor’s energy advisors announced they would hold a press conference Friday about the administration’s strategy for reworking the agreements, the Los Angeles Times reported. 

The Davis camp has defended the 53 long-term power contracts signed earlier this year that allow the state to buy electricity at set prices.  

Energy wholesalers have previously said they are willing to consider renegotiating the pacts but want the state to take the lead. 

Critics believe the prices agreed upon are too high and the contracts will provide more power than needed. 

In an internal memo, state Department of Water Resources Director Thomas Hannigan echoed those concerns and criticized S. David Freeman, chairman of California’s new power authority, for continuing to seek additional energy contracts. 

“The state already has excess power resources,” particularly in Southern California, Hannigan wrote in the Oct. 4 memo. Additional contracts would “exceed the state’s ability to absorb that power.” 

Freeman defends his actions, noting the state needs more power to ensure future shortages don’t occur. His agency has been talking with solar and wind energy companies as well as examining the purchase of additional electricity from peaker plants, which are used only during times of great need. 

The power authority needs the Department of Water Resources’ endorsement before it enters into contracts because the agency supplies the money to purchase energy. 

The state is currently purchasing power to meet some of the needs of 24 million people served by two of the state’s troubled utilities, Pacific Gas & Electric and Southern California Edison. While the contracts have stabilized energy prices, the state has been forced to buy electricity in recent months and then sell some of it at a loss because there was not enough demand. 


Four bin Laden followers receive life terms without parole for 1998 embassy bombings

By Tom Hays, The Associated Press
Friday October 19, 2001

NEW YORK — In a courthouse ringed by shotgun-toting marshals a few blocks from the smoking ruins of the World Trade Center, four disciples of Osama bin Laden were sentenced to life without parole Thursday for the deadly 1998 bombings of two U.S. embassies in Africa. 

The men were the first to be convicted by a U.S. jury of carrying out bin Laden’s 1998 religious edict to kill Americans wherever they are found. 

They got the maximum sentence as expected after U.S. District Judge Leonard B. Sand called terrorism “one of the most serious threats to our society ... to the society of any civilized nation.” 

He also ordered each of the defendants to pay $33 million in restitution, perhaps out of terrorist assets frozen by the U.S. government in recent weeks. 

The near-simultaneous Aug 7, 1998, bombings in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, and Nairobi, Kenya, killed 231 people, including 12 Americans. Nearly two dozen people have been indicted in the case, including bin Laden, who is believed to be hiding out in Afghanistan and is also wanted for the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. 

Prosecutors during the six-month trial accused bin Laden and his organization of directing the bombings, using a satellite telephone from Afghanistan and messengers to communicate the orders. 

“Al-Qaida stands charged, tried, convicted and sentenced for terrorism,” Attorney General John Ashcroft said in Washington. “Today’s sentence sends a message: The United States will hunt terrorists down and make them pay a price for their evil acts of terrorism.” 

Sand handed down identical sentences for Wadih El-Hage, 41, Khalfan Khamis Mohamed, 28, Mohamed Al-’Owhali, 24, and Mohamed Sadeek Odeh, 36. 

The jury had considered and rejected the death penalty for Mohamed and Al-’Owhali, in part to keep them from being viewed as martyrs. 

During the sentencing, El-Hage, rose to condemn last month’s attacks in New York and Washington that left thousands dead. 

“The killing of innocent people is radical, extreme and cannot be tolerated by any religion, principles or values,” said El-Hage, a Lebanese-born naturalized American. He maintained his innocence during the 30-minute speech in federal court. 

The government branded him a traitor and a liar, saying he raised money for bin Laden’s al-Qaida organization as he led the life of a family man in Arlington, Texas. 

El-Hage “claims to be a citizen, but he’s not an American,” prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald said. “He betrayed his country, he betrayed his religion, he betrayed humanity.” 

Odeh, whose lawyer acknowledged that he “was a soldier in the military wing of al-Qaida,” showed no remorse at sentencing, and asserted that terrorism was the result of U.S. policies in the Middle East. 

“I can only say to Allah we belong, and to him we’ll return,” he said. “God help me in my calamity, and replace it with goodness.” 

Mohamed, convicted of helping to grind TNT and load the bomb that struck the Tanzanian embassy, declined to address the court. He said through his attorney that he “wishes to express gratitude to a jury that spared his life.” 

Al-’Owhali, who rode the bomb vehicle up to the Nairobi embassy and tossed stun grenades at guards before fleeing, also said nothing. 

Each was ordered to pay $7 million to victims’ families and $26 million to the U.S. government. Sand has said the defendants are indigent, but suggested that assets might be acquired from Bush administration attempts to freeze the funding of al-Qaida and other terror groups. 

The courthouse, the scene of five major terrorism trials in the past nine years, is surrounded by steel barricades to stop speeding bomb-laden trucks like those that exploded at the embassies. Its halls occasionally fill with the acrid smell of the smoldering rubble at the Trade Center. 

Relative of the bombing victims said the defendants deserved no mercy. 

“Let them die conscious of the fact that their souls will be condemned forever,” said Howard Kavaler, whose wife died in the Kenya attack. 

Two of the anonymous jurors attended the sentencing and spoke afterward with reporters. One said she was determined to show up after the Trade Center disaster “to be a presence in the courtroom and let them know we weren’t afraid of them.” 


Two arrested, accused of trying to hijack Greyhound bus in Utah

By Catherine S. Blake, Associated Press Writer
Friday October 19, 2001

SALT LAKE CITY — Passengers aboard a Greyhound bus left their seats and overpowered a man who allegedly tried to take control and flip the vehicle after ranting about hijackings, authorities said Thursday. 

No one was injured in Wednesday night’s incident and the driver was able to pull safely to the side of Interstate 80. There were 44 passengers aboard the bus bound from Portland, Ore., to Nashville, Tenn. 

The man and a female accomplice ran off the bus, flagged down a car and later fled to the truck stop where they were arrested several hours later, Highway Patrol spokesman Doug McCleve said. 

Troy Matzek, 34, and Becky Hyde, 25, of Wichita, Kan., were charged Thursday in federal court with carjacking and aiding and abetting. They face a possible maximum sentence of 15 years in prison. They were scheduled to appear Friday before U.S. Magistrate Samuel Alba. 

Authorities said they believed the couple was not acting as part of a terrorist plot. 

“This is probably a person who is mentally unstable,” McCleve said. 

Rose Matzek said her son thought someone was after him. After talking to him by phone after his arrest, she said he had been affected by the terrorist attacks and might have had an emotional breakdown on the bus. 

“He called a couple of days ago. He wanted to come home,” she said. “He was very fearful. He was a little paranoid about what has happened.” 

Bus driver Gene Savage told KUTV television that Matzek grabbed the steering wheel and said he was going to flip the bus. He had been ranting about hijackings. 

The driver kicked Matzek away and several passengers wrestled with the man as Savage stopped the bus about 15 miles east of Salt Lake City, McCleve said. 

“People aren’t as tolerant about this kind of thing anymore,” said Paul Warner, the U.S. Attorney for Utah. 

After flagging down the passing car, the couple told the car’s driver that people on the bus were trying to kill them, McCleve said. 

The driver took the couple to a gas station and gave them money. The couple then jumped into a tractor-trailer which drove them to Salt Lake City. The driver called 911 while the couple were outside the cab. 

It was not clear if Matzek had a weapon, though some of the passengers said he had threatened them with a bomb, McCleve said. A check of the bus turned up no explosives. 

Earlier this month, a Croatian man slashed the neck of a Greyhound bus driver in Tennessee, causing a crash that killed seven passengers. 


The latest on storage

By James and Morris Carey The Associated Press
Friday October 19, 2001

Shelving storage is the one thing in most American homes that — as the song says — “there’s just too little of.” Not enough closet space, not enough shelf space. Simply nowhere to put anything. 

There are companies that are making millions selling storage systems in every size, shape and form that can help you make the most out of every inch of available space. We often have mentioned closet systems in our articles and how they can substantially increase the amount of “usable” storage space at your place. But we haven’t spent enough time in the garage or garden. These locations also are very important. 

Every time we’ve moved into a new home, we’ve followed the same setup routine. The first order of business always has been to organize the garage for maximum storage — installing shelving and a workbench. Once the garage has been organized, moving into the rest of the house is a breeze. 

In the past we built our shelves and workbench ourselves. We fired up the pickup and made a trip to the local lumberyard where we got the needed plywood, 2x4’s, brackets, braces and screws. At this point we were able to begin personalizing every available inch of our new garage. Unfortunately, we have recently discovered that built-in plywood shelving isn’t always the most practical alternative. Yes, it is inexpensive and sturdy and it can be fabricated to exactly fit our personal needs, but once it’s in, it’s kind of permanent, and changing the configuration can get complicated. 

Metal shelving always has been available, but was expensive and required hours of assembly. Times have changed. We’ve discovered that you can now buy prefabricated steel shelving that’s improved over what it used to be. It is lightweight, easy to assemble, strong and, best of all, you don’t need a truck to get it home. Even with all the advancements, we still want to offer an idea or two and a few precautions about installing prefab shelving of any kind. 

First, we want to tell you about the shelving itself, and why it interests us. By volume, steel is heavier than wood. But when it comes to sheer strength a tiny piece of steel will hold more than a gigantic piece of wood. Therefore, a lightweight steel frame can hold as much as — or more than — a heavy set of wood shelves. So, with steel, “lightweight” doesn’t mean weak. 

Older-style metal shelf systems were heavy and the ends of the assembly parts were sharp. One could easily be cut. This is no longer a problem. We have found the components to be smooth. And, best of all, at least for the systems we looked at, you won’t need nuts, bolts or washers to connect everything. Just stand four uprights on end and intersect them with interlocking shelves. You might need a rubber mallet, or a hammer and a block of wood, to firmly seat the shelves into the uprights. Even better, shelves can be added, removed or adjusted to satisfy changing storage needs. 

Take certain precautions regardless of what your shelving is made of — wood, steel or plastic. If it’s freestanding it can get top-heavy and topple over. And top-heavy or not, your shelving should be anchored to the wall for safety’s sake, especially if you live in earthquake country.  

Using approved connectors and heavy screws will hold everything safely against the wall no matter what the condition. Later, if you want to relocate a shelf all you’ll have to do is loosen a couple of screws. 

This type of shelving is usually about a foot deep and 6-feet to 7-feet tall. In the past we have connected two sets of shallow shelving to create one set of 2-foot-deep shelves.  

Just place one set of shelves immediately in front of the other, and clamp the two together with two or three self-taping sheet-metal screws. Takes about 10 seconds and holds like a welded joint. And disassembly is even quicker. 

Back to workbenches. Today’s workbenches range from a piece of plywood and a pair of sawhorses to fancy cabinetry topped with countertops made of everything from particleboard to steel. You also can purchase kits that allow you to assemble a modest-sized bench that contains locking cabinets, a small storage closet with a pegboard backing and shelving above. For more tips and information, check our Web site at www.onthehouse.com. 

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Readers can mail questions to: On the House, APNewsFeatures, 50 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, NY 10020, or e-mail Careybro(at)onthehouse.com. To receive a copy of On the House booklets on plumbing, painting, heating/cooling or decks/patios, send a check or money order payable to The Associated Press for $6.95 per booklet and mail to: On the House, PO Box 1562, New York, NY 10016-1562, or through these online sites: www.onthehouse.com or apbookstore.com. 


The Gardener’s Guide: Spitz is an apple with history and flavor

By Lee Rich The Associated Press
Friday October 19, 2001

Esopus Spitzenberg — what a name for an apple! Nonetheless, this is a variety of apple you might just want to plant. 

This apple originated in Esopus, N.Y., and was grown in New York and surrounding states even before 1800. Spitz is little known today, so you have to grow it to eat it. It has left its legacy in some offspring: the Jonathan apple, and Jonathan’s increasingly popular offspring, Jonagold. 

More than 100 years ago, Spitz was an apple held in high esteem. One of the first things Thomas Jefferson did after returning from France was to order a dozen trees of Spitz, his favorite apple, for Monticello. Andrew Jackson Downing (in “The Fruit and Fruit Trees of North America,” 1845) considered Spitz to be “unsurpassed as a dessert fruit.” Besides its excellent flavor, this variety shipped and stored well. 

But Spitz does have its shortcomings. This variety is very susceptible to apple scab disease, which defaces the fruit and makes it inedible. The tree also does not bear particularly heavy crops, and requires a moderately moist, moderately fertile soil. 

The tree fell out of favor as a commercial variety not only for the above reasons, but also because of its appearance. Through the 20th century, the trend was to market apples that were pure red (and more recently, pure green or pure yellow). Spitz’s skin is yellow, splashed liberally with bright red and occasional streaks of dark red. Ironically, 19th-century writers considered this apple to be particularly beautiful. 

Backyard fruits that get less pest control sprays than commercial fruits are apt to be less handsome than they could be. A backyard Spitz might have a few dark splotches of sooty mold, clusters of small black dots from fly speck disease, and occasional lesions of apple scab.  

This cosmetic damage seems acceptable when you realize that less than a half-dozen sprays are needed to produce perfectly edible apples in the backyard.  

Commercial apple growers, in contrast, must spray their apples every two weeks throughout the growing season, beginning before the apples come into blossom. 

You can scrub off sooty mold and fly speck, both of which are only superficial blemishes, to let the beautiful skin of Spitz come into full view. Beneath the skin is the exquisite flesh, which is yellowish, firm, and just a little juicy. The flavor is rich and brisk — delicious, with a bit of history in each bite. 


Home: Flea Market Savings

The Associated Press
Friday October 19, 2001

Here’s a comparison of what decorators Jane Bell Cammarata and Linda Clay estimate it would cost to buy items at a flea market to furnish a child’s room, and what the same items might cost new or at an antiques store (their purchases were hypothetical): 

- The 7- by 9-foot needlepoint rug would cost $50 at the sale; on the market, expect to spend $300 or more. 

- Slant-top desk would be a bargain at $75; a new one would probably cost about $600. 

- Yellow cabinet with glass doors would cost the decorators $125; market price for a similar item would be about $700. 

- A small lamp would go for $15 at the sale; new, it would run about $100. 

- Three pictures at the sale have an estimated cost of $20; if new, $100. 

- Two window treatments could be conjured up by the decorators from a $10 price for drapery remnants; similar new ones would be about $550. 

- The rush-seat stool would go for $7; new, it would be $45. 

- A $1 basket at the sale would cost about $10 in a store. 

- The child’s rocker picked up for $25 would cost $125 retail. 

- Bed linens, which the women say they could get for $20, would run around $200 new. 

- And the bird cage, priced at $30 for the sale, would cost around $90. 

Estimated flea market costs: $378 

Estimated retail costs: $2,820 

Estimated savings: $2,442 


With evidence of dreaded aquatic herb in lakes, Maine seeks to avoid misfortune of other states

By Ann S. Kim The Associated Press
Friday October 19, 2001

CASCO, Maine — Sebago Lake, which provides drinking water to Maine’s largest city as well as recreation to boaters and swimmers, is on the front lines of the state’s war against an aquatic invader. 

One type of milfoil already has a foothold and it’s feared a more aggressive variety, Eurasian milfoil, could take root. 

Environmental officials have plenty of cause for worry because fast-growing milfoil can easily overwhelm lakes and ponds. Some fear the unsightly plants can reduce shorefront property values and hurt Maine’s $8 billion tourism industry. 

Maine, Wyoming and Montana are the only places in the continental United States that have avoided infestation of the dreaded Eurasian milfoil so far. 

But with credible evidence of variable milfoil in 10 bodies of water in central and southern Maine and a boat on Crystal Lake found with Eurasian milfoil fragments hanging from its exhaust cover, the threat of infestation is all too real. 

“We have every reason to expect it is coming,” said Martha Kirkpatrick, commissioner of the Maine Department of Environmental Protection. 

Variable milfoil and Eurasian milfoil take root on the lake’s floor and grow upward, forming mats on the surface that can be dense enough for birds to walk on water. 

Prevention appears to be the best defense since both varieties can be resistant to efforts to control them. 

Toward that end, the state has launched a public information campaign: Toll collectors warn motorists entering the state with boats. Warning signs are posted at border crossings. TV ads remind boaters to be vigilant. 

Gov. Angus King signed a law requiring stickers on all motor boats using inland waters. The fees — $10 for Maine boats and $20 for out-of-state registrations — will help pay for the fight against invasive plants. The sticker program begins Jan. 1. 

This summer, the Portland Water District, several state agencies and the Volunteer Lakes Monitoring Program tackled variable milfoil with PVC-coated screens. 

The so-called benthic barriers, which block sunlight to variable milfoil, were to be installed around the state park boat launch to create a 100-foot milfoil-free passageway to the main channel. But a diver discovered that the infestation was more extensive that first thought, and now other options are being considered, said Roberta Hill, education coordinator for the water district. 

Some options include creating a longer weed-free channel with benthic barriers, employing an inspector to check for plant fragments left on boats and equipment, and moving the boat launch if the area is too infested to manage. 

The worst-case scenario Hill hopes to avoid is mechanical harvesting, a labor intensive and costly solution used in some states with the worst infestations. Barges outfitted with a cutter similar to those used to harvest hay may clear areas for boating and swimming, but ultimately can make the infestation worse by spreading plant fragments, Hill said. 

New Hampshire abandoned mechanical harvesting in the 1970s. 

“During the ’60s we used harvesting but found it was like getting a haircut: it would come back up again,” said Jody Connor, a biologist with the New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services. 

Much of New Hampshire’s funds now goes to chemical herbicides, a method shunned on Sebago because it is the source of drinking water for 170,000 people, or about 15 percent of the Vermont population. 

In Wisconsin, the Lake Pewaukee Sanitary District, west of Milwaukee, gave up on chemical treatments because they killed native species along with milfoil. Instead, the district regularly harvests milfoil on about 300 of the lake’s nearly 2,500 acres during the summer months. 

“We’re harvesting every day, 40 hours a week at a minimum,” said Charlie Shong, the district’s superintendent. Last year, the district harvested about 102 dump truck loads of milfoil, Shong said. 

Other techniques used to manage milfoil include introducing fish or aquatic insects that can curb the plant’s growth. 

Weevils, aquatic insects whose larvae eat the leaf tissue and burrow into stems, are used in Michigan, Vermont, Wisconsin, Illinois and New York. Minnesota has had some success but the insects are sometimes devoured by fish before they can do their job, state biologist Wendy Crowell said. 

The prospect of such serious infestations in Maine feeds the fear in officials and sports fishermen alike. 

David Garcia, owner of Naples Bait and Tackle, has fished through thick milfoil in New York’s Catskills. He had to create openings in the milfoil with a long-handled rake to get his line into the water. 

“It would be like trying to get a comb through your hair if you had bubble gum in it,” he said. 

The Eurasian milfoil was found in July when a boat with plant fragments was launched into Crystal Lake in Gray. It will be a year or two before biologists can determine whether the plant has established itself. 

——— 

On the Net: 

Maine Volunteer Lake Monitoring Program: http://www.mainevolunteerlakemonitors.org 

Maine Department Environmental Protection’s invasive plants: http://www.state.me.us/dep/blwq/topic/invasive.htm 

End Adv for Sunday, Oct. 14, and thereafter 


Which individual hues speak to you?

By Carol McGarvey The Associated Press
Friday October 19, 2001

What colors make you happy? Which ones help you relax after a busy day? The colors you choose to decorate with really do influence your emotions. 

To stimulate conversation when guests visit, for example, choose active colors such as red, yellow and orange, which inspire camaraderie and an upbeat attitude. 

Colors play off your mood in three basic ways — active, passive and neutral. These are important factors when choosing colors for various rooms and how you plan to use those rooms in your home. 

Accents of red can greet guests in an entry or add a cozy touch to a den. Yellows, good for home offices and kitchens, can inspire creativity. 

Need a room to rejuvenate your soul? Passive colors, such as blue, green and purple, help pacify and restore. They work well in bedrooms or restful sitting rooms. If, however, your home is in a cold climate, the cool colors might be too “chilly,” so you might want to add some visual warmth with sunny accents to spark your spirit. 

Neutral colors, such as beige, gray, white and taupe, help bridge other colors and rooms. Dark neutrals tone down other colors, while crisp white intensifies them. 

What power do various colors have in home decorating? Their strength might surprise you. Some clues: 

 

—Pink: soothes; promotes affability and affection. 

—Yellow: expands the space, cheers your spirit; increases energy. 

—Black: disciplines, authorizes, strengthens what’s around it; encourages independence. 

—White: purifies, energizes, unifies; in combination, makes all other colors stronger. 

—Orange: cheers, commands; stimulates appetites and conversation. 

—Red: empowers, stimulates, dramatizes; symbolizes passion. 

—Green: balances, normalizes, refreshes; encourages emotional growth. 

—Purple: comforts, spiritualizes; creates mystery and draws out intuition. 

—Blue: relaxes, refreshes, cools; produces tranquil feelings and peaceful moods. 

Don’t be shy about playing with color. Choosing compatible colors is as easy as taking a look at the color wheel. It’s a cinch when you choose similar or analogous colors, those located side-by-side on the color wheel. Simply choose a favorite color as your main one, then look on either side of it for accent colors. 

For choosing high-energy schemes, consider complementary colors, hues opposite each other on the color wheel. Red and green, blue and orange, and yellow and purple are examples. In these schemes, warm and cool hues play off each other for interesting results. 

 

——— 

 

“Better Homes and Gardens New Decorating Book” (Meredith Books, $34.95).


State officials to start renegotiating long-term power deals

By Jennifer Coleman Associated Press Writer
Friday October 19, 2001

SACRAMENTO – State power officials plan to begin renegotiating billions of dollars worth of long-term energy contracts, which an administration official says commit the state to buying more power than it needs. 

Critics say the contracts, arranged during the height of the energy crisis, are overpriced and contain questionable clauses, including one that prevents the state from seeking federal price reviews. 

The 53 contracts, worth at least $43 billion, vary in length from a few months to 10 years and in one case, for 20 years. Gov. Gray Davis pursued the contracts to secure the state’s energy supplies and avoid more blackouts like those that plagued California six days this year. 

Davis says the contracts drove down the wholesale cost of power and saved the state money, since it didn’t have to buy expensive energy on the spot market. 

But the contracts, signed at the peak of the power crisis, locked California into overly high prices, critics say. Those prices will then be passed to customers of San Diego Gas & Electric, Southern California Edison and Pacific Gas and Electric Co. 

The state has bought power for the three utilities since January, when they were unable to buy power on their own after months of record-high wholesale electricity prices wrecked their credit ratings. 

Administration officials said Thursday they would discuss their renegotiating strategy Friday. 

The move to renegotiating comes after the Department of Water Resources chief warned the state’s new power authority not to seek any more long-term deals. 

DWR Director Thomas Hannigan told Power Authority chairman S. David Freeman in an Oct. 4 memo that “contracting for substantial additional supplies may lead to unnecessary costs for Californians.” 

The state has excess power lined up, especially in Southern California, Hannigan said. The authority should line up any new supplies for Northern California and closely coordinate that with DWR. 

So far, the authority has signed letters of intent to buy electricity from a dozen wind generators, but Hannigan said those arrangements could exceed the state’s ability to absorb the power and be incompatible with other resources. 

Power Authority spokeswoman Amber Pasricha said the two agencies are working together and that a DWR representative highlighted the memo’s points during the Oct. 5 Power Authority board meeting. 

A recent private study found that at least eight of the contracts cost too much and should be immediately renegotiated, because they will saddle customers with 10 years of high prices and require buying too much energy for too much money. The study was sponsored by the Center for Energy Efficiency and Renewable Technologies. 

Because out-of-state power wholesalers “are desperate to cut deal,” said consumer advocate Harvey Rosenfield, the state has an “excellent” chance to renegotiate. 

Wholesalers, Rosenfield said, “could renegotiate these contracts and still walk out with billions in profits.” 

Rosenfield’s group, the Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights, has long criticized the contracts and the secrecy surrounding them. The contracts’ details were released only after lawsuits by Republican lawmakers and several news organizations, including the Associated Press. 

Rosenfield criticized a clause in some contracts that bars the state from seeking price reviews by federal regulators who are charged with overseeing wholesale energy costs. 

One wholesaler, Houston-based Dynegy Inc., hasn’t been asked to renegotiate the contracts with the state but is willing to talk about it, spokesman Steve Stengel said. 

“We would be willing to discuss renegotiating the contracts, if it was mutually beneficial to each party,” he said.


Sagging California economy not expected to shake rest of nation

By Gary Gentile, AP Business Writer
Friday October 19, 2001

LOS ANGELES – For much of the 1990s, California’s economy was the envy of the nation. High-tech gold was being mined in the north while tourists flocked to the beaches and resorts in the south. 

California provided the nation with a bounty of agricultural products and fed the culture with movies and television shows. 

Now the state is reeling from major blows to its tech, power and tourism sectors – any one of which might have been enough to send most states and even many countries into a recessionary tailspin. 

But unlike past downturns, California’s problems are not expected to shake the rest of the nation. Instead, economists say its troubles are mostly reflections of existing national trends. 

“Historically, what happened to California would happen to the rest of the country in three, six or nine months,” said Fariborz Ghadar, director of the Center for Global Business Studies at Smeal College of Business at Penn State University. 

That’s not the case this time, he said. 

California’s power woes are fairly unique, the result of failed deregulation. The tech downturn hit many other parts of the country at the same time as California, and the slump in tourism has also been felt strongly in Florida, Washington and New York. 

“At this point, we’re in the same national boat,” said Steven Sheffrin of the University of California Davis Center for State and Local Taxation. “I don’t see (the rest of the country) looking at California and worrying about what is going on.” 

The state’s problems have been brewing for several years. 

The technology meltdown that started in 1999 devastated northern California, home to Silicon Valley. Earlier this year, a power crisis gripped the state, plunging historic San Francisco and posh Beverly Hills into darkness for hours at a time and sending one of the nation’s oldest public utilities into bankruptcy. 

And on Sept. 11, terrorist attacks in New York and Washington sent a ripple across the country that overnight pulled the rug from under California’s tourism industry and threatens to saddle the state with billions of dollars in unanticipated security and other costs. 

“California has been hit disproportionally hard with a one-two-three punch,” said Tappan Monroe, senior vice president and chief economist at Applied Development Economics, a consulting firm in Berkeley. 

Most economists agree the state, like the rest of the country, is in a mild recession that could last well into next year. 

But despite continuing national uncertainty, California could recover relatively quickly if consumers regain confidence and start spending. Lower interest rates and the economic stimulus package being debated in Congress could also aid the recovery. 

Meanwhile, demand for housing remains strong while supply is tight, leading state real estate agents to predict record home prices next year. 

Another factor aiding California is its diversified economy – the fifth largest in the world if measured alone – which essentially is split between the northern and southern halves of the state. 

A decade ago, high-tech companies dominated the San Francisco Bay Area, while defense and aerospace companies fueled the powerful economic engine in Southern California, especially in the Los Angeles area. California-based industry provided jobs and exercised influence across the nation. 

The end of the Cold War and the 1991 economic recession devastated Southern California, which lost more than 400,000 defense-related jobs. And while the rest of the country began its recovery after about a year, Southern California struggled along for more than three years. 

“Northern California got the brunt of the tech upturn in the late 1990s and bore the brunt of the tech downturn,” said Michael Bazdarich, director of the Forecasting Center at the A. Gary Anderson Graduate School of Management at the University of California Riverside. 

Signs of strength are emerging in other parts of the state. 

Tulare County, nestled in the center of the state, is home to some of the richest farmland in the nation, producing more milk than any other area in the country. 

It also produces jobs at a rate good enough to make it No. 1 in job growth in the country, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. 

Tulare County still has an unemployment rate of 12 percent compared to the state’s 5.4 percent. But officials there are hopeful. 

“There seems to be a sense of optimism,” said Paul Saldana, president of the Tulare County Economic Development Corp.


BHS students hold rally

By Jeffrey Obser Daily Planet staff
Thursday October 18, 2001

A group of Berkeley High School students held a sparsely attended, but spirited anti-war rally Wednesday in the fading afternoon light of Civic Center Park. They had been denied permission two weeks earlier to hold such an event inside the high school grounds, across the street. 

As part of the demonstration, sophomore Mollie Dutton Starbuck read a letter addressed to “Resident Bush.” 

“The terrorists want holy war, and that is what you want to give them,” she said. “Holy war, an oxymoron from the oxiest of morons: You.”  

Members of Students Halt Revenge and War Under Bush, or SHRUB – a play on one of the President’s nicknames – read poems and played electric guitars and local elected officials spoke. Students took turns reading famous quotes from Ghandi, Martin Luther King, Khalil Gibran and other thinkers and peace advocates. 

Clutching a written statement, junior Jessica Malachowski chided those who think they can’t make a difference. 

“I’ll tell you what you can do,” she said. “You can raise your voice against this war. Your silence means the death of innocent people. How would you like to be the one who pulled the trigger on those homeless children and oppressed women?” 

She lowered her notes to her side. “Do you still think your voice can’t do anything?” she said. “Want to know who said this? I did.” 

Alfonso Alamar, a junior, read Rep. Barbara Lee’s., D–Oakland, speech to the House of Representatives defending her vote against giving the administration broad war powers, and Diane Douglas, the lead organizer of the rally, read a scathing open letter to Bush from TV and film director Michael Moore. 

“Don’t sink to these mass murders’ levels,” the letter said, among other, less polite instructions. 

Three leaders of SHRUB – Douglas, Sarah Price, and Mollie Dutton Starbuck – are also members of a rock band, “Corrupting the Masses.” Taking up their purple instruments, drums and amps, they played anti-war songs written by Douglas: “Feed the Fire” and “Dollar Bill.” 

Non-students also addressed the small gathering. Steve Philandrinos from Global Exchange, the San Francisco-based human rights and cultural exchange organization, called on Americans to “be consistent in their values” by mourning for “hundreds of thousands of dead in Palestine, Iraq, Afghanistan, and Sudan,” the blame for which he placed at the doorstep of the U.S. government. 

“They must also demand justice for victims of U.S. crimes,” Philandrinos said. “Can we train military governments in terrorism and then ask why we are victims of terrorism?” 

Holding a large national flag on a pole, School Board President Terry Doran urged students to “take back this flag from false patriots who drive around in their cars and SUVs and claim it represents lockstep adherence” to the administration’s war agenda. He encouraged them to “make this flag a symbol of our right to be here today,” rather than one of war, and to say the Pledge of Allegiance with different wording if that better reflected their own patriotism. 

City Councilmember Kriss Worthington spoke briefly about the resolution the council passed Tuesday night, which called for a halt to the bombing of Afghanistan. He thanked the students for “getting an early start on being outstanding citizens of Berkeley.” 

In spite of warm, breezy sunshine, the crowd was thin. Only about 20 people, mostly adults, sat on the grass within 50 feet of the stage, which was at the edge of the central fountain plaza. Further back, scattered clumps of students played hack-sack or stood together talking. Not everyone agreed with the rally’s message. 

“I’m a radical liberal and I’m for the war,” said Nicholas Easterday, also a junior. “No one is giving a constructive solution to what we should do. Until they do that, I still support what we do. I think it’s kind of a reactionary liberal response to spew rhetoric and not offer a solution.” 

“I think it’s sad they didn’t get a bigger student turnout,” said Andrew Gruen, a junior. “It’s sad how apathetic students are.” 

“I think there were less people in the park than normal today,” said junior James Foley. 

“We usually go to the UC (demonstrations), said Gruen. “This is kind of new to see, organized by a couple of girls that go to the school.” 

Tim Condit, 63, a self-described lifelong Berkeley resident, Marine Corps veteran and witness to Vietnam-era protests, said today’s educational and media climate discouraged debate and involvement. 

“People were more used to discussing politics back then,” he said. “It makes it harder for these people to organize because their peers don’t want to talk about anything. They’re thinking: ‘Will we be tested on this?’” 

The rally ended after an hour with Douglas playing “Imagine” by John Lennon on her electric guitar. Behind her, on the stone edge of the fountain, Alamar, who read Barbara Lee’s statement, and Jaana Humlie, a senior who read an original poem, swayed together and looked off at the waning sun.


Cal’s Boller to miss UCLA game with back injury

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Thursday October 18, 2001

No time is ever a good time for a football team to lose its starting quarterback. But when Cal’s head coach, Tom Holmoe, announced that his starter, junior Kyle Boller, would miss the Bears’ game this Saturday, it was a huge blow for both team and player. 

The Bears head down to Pasadena on Saturday to face UCLA, possibly their toughest test of the season. The fourth-ranked Bruins have the top defense in the Pac-10 Conference. Now Cal, which hasn’t exactly lit up the scoreboard while getting off to a 0-5 start, will play without Boller. 

Boller aggravated a back injury suffered during training camp against Oregon on last Saturday, waking up with pain and numbness in his legs. The injury has been diagnosed as a disc injury, with Boller scheduled to have an MRI on Wednesday for further evaluation. 

Holmoe said Boller has taken two epidurals (an injection of fluid into the spine, most often used on pregnant women to lessen pain during childbirth) for the injury this season, including one during training camp and one during the team’s bye week after a loss to BYU. 

“Kyle is not playing in the game. He’s injured and he’s had a bad back for most of the season,” Holmoe said. “He was sore after the game, but he woke up the next day and was really sore.” 

Boller will not practice at all this week and will be re-evaluated next week. 

Boller’s injury hands the offensive reins to backup quarterback, Eric Holtfreter.  

Holtfreter has appeared in several games this season in relief of Boller, completing 52.1 percent (25-of-48) of his passes for 313 yards but throwing four interceptions and just one touchdown. The junior-college transfer is in his second and final year with the Bears, and has gotten an unusually high percentage of snaps in practice for a backup this year. 

“(Holtfreter) has had a lot more reps this year in practice than he did in the past,” Holmoe said. “Al (Borges, Cal’s offensive coordinator) tries to get the second quarterback a considerable amount of reps, it’s not a 50-50 proposition, but Eric is prepared.” 

Holtfreter’s backup will be redshirt freshman Reggie Robertson, who has yet to appear in a game for Cal. Holmoe said the third quarterback spot is up in the air, but one option that won’t be used is true freshman Richard Schwartz. 

“We will not pull someone out of a redshirt year,” Holmoe said. “Maybe (backup defensive back) Adam Sugarman will be the backup. He was a high school quarterback and he’s got a great head on his shoulders. If anyone can do it and not panic, he can.”


Guy Poole
Thursday October 18, 2001


Thursday, Oct. 18

 

 

Simplicity Forum 

7 - 8:30 p.m. 

Claremont Branch Library 

2940 Benvenue Ave. 

Cecile Andrews, author of Circles of Simplicity, Return to the Good Life, speaks on “Rekindling Conversation.” 549-3509 www.seedsofsimplicity.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 

 

Albany YMCA’s Kids’ Club Walk to Raise Money For YMCA New York Relief Fund 

3 p.m. 

Y-Kids Walk is an annual fundraising event for the Albany YMCA Kids Club. This year half of the proceeds will be sent to the YMCA of New York. Once the kids arrive at Live Oak Park, they will participate in a Halloween Carnival complete with games and prizes. 549-4524 

 

 


Friday, Oct. 19

 

 

Cooperative Center Federal  

Credit Union 

Grand Opening Celebration 

4 - 7 p.m. 

2001 Ashby Ave. 

A family affair with food, entertainment and a special treat for the kids. Congresswoman Barbara Lee, honorary chairperson, is scheduled to attend. Faith Fancher is the Mistress of Ceremonies. 415-346-0199 

 

YAP’s FNL Teen Club: “Pop  

Ya Colla! Dance” 

7 -11 p.m. 

1730 Oregon St. 

Young Adult Project presents dance for 13 to 18 year olds only. Must have B.U.S.D. I.D. “No haters, no problems.” 644-6226 

 

Hills Emergency Forum 

10 - 11 a.m . 

Joaquin Miller Community Center 

3946 Sanbord Dr., Oakland 

Annual meeting to discuss progress made in reducing and managing risks associated with wildland fires in the Oakland/Berkeley Hills. 893-9888 

 


Saturday, Oct. 20

 

 

Private Elementary School Panel Discussion and Fair 

10 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. 

College Avenue Presbyterian Church 

5951 College Ave. 

Parents representing 12 selected schools will discuss issues parents encounter when searching for private elementary schools, including the admissions process. Sponsored by Neighborhood Parents Network. Open to the public. $5 - $10. 527-6667 www.parentsnet.org 

 

UC Berkeley Community Action Day 

9:30 a.m. - 4 p.m. 

People’s Park 

Haste and Hillegass avenues 

Over 300 students, faculty, staff, alumni, community members, and student groups will participate in an all day event, carrying out service projects throughout the city. 643-0306 kinyon@uclink4.berkeley.edu 

 

Earthquake Retrofitting 

10 a.m. - 5 p.m. 

Office of Emergency Services 

812 Page St.  

Free classes in Community Emergency Response Training (CERT). 981-5605 www.ci.berkeley.ca.us 

 

BART Job Fair 

9 a.m. - 3 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

BART will be recruiting to fill approximately 160 jobs that week be opening up next year. The jobs to be filled are in accounting, planing, engineering, insurance, purchasing, police, maintenance and electronics. 

 

Symposium on New Science of Aging 

10 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. 

Valley Life Sciences Building 

Room 2040 

UC Berkeley 

Lectures by prominent gerontologists and industry scientists will featured, plus leading biotechnology companies and research institutions will provide information about their research programs in aging and will discuss opportunities for collaboration and employment. 486-6096 http://crea.berkeley.edu/ 

 

Historical Society Walking Tour 

10 a.m. - 12 p.m. 

Berkeley Historical Society 

1931 Center St. 

Patrick Keilch will lead tour of the Berkeley Hills and relate his hands-on experiences and observations from the wildfire of 1991. 848-0181 www.ci.berkeley.ca.us/histsoc/ 

 

Berkeley High School 

10 a.m. - 12 p.m. 

Berkeley Alternative High School 

1950 Derby St. 

Academic Workshop for parents on the graduation requirements for Berkeley High School. 644-8524 

 

 

Oakland Hills Fire Commemorative Walk and Pot Luck Dinner 

5 -9 p.m. 

5999 Grizzly Peak 

Walk led by Oakland Fire Department and CORE graduates. Participants should bring pot luck dishes to feed eight guests. 273-9111 www.nhphoenix.org 

 

 

Puppet Shows 

1:30 p.m. and 2:30 p.m. 

The Hall of Health 

2230 Shattuck Ave. 

The Kids on the Block perform two shows to promote acceptance and understanding of cultural and medical differences. 549-1564 

 

 

Discussion of Current Legal Issues 

9 a.m. - 11 p.m. 

Boalt Hall 

UC Berkeley 

Top litigators, legal scholars and media experts participate in several panels discussions concerning some of the nation’s most closely watched legal issues. 643-6673 

 

 


Sunday, Oct. 21

 

 

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 

 

Halloween Magic 

1 - 2 p.m. 

Berkeley Richmond JCC Auditorium 

1414 Walnut St.  

Los Angeles Magician and Comedian “Hotei the Magic Guy.” For kids 2 through 12 and their parents. $7. 236-7469 www.thebuddyclub.com 

 

Berkeley Architectural Heritage Fall House Tour 

1 - 5 p.m. 

St. Clement’s Episcopal Church 

Claremont Blvd. & Russell St.  

This year’s tour “Around the Claremont Hotel” features ten houses in the historic neighborhood of residences and gardens that surround the landscaped park of the hotel. There will be a reception at one of the houses. $30. 845-8507 

 

Third Annual Sisters of Fire Awards 

3 - 6 p.m. 

First Unitarian Church of Oakland 

14th and Castro St. 

The Women of Color Resource Center will honor Congresswoman Barbara Lee with an award for Courage and Conscience. This year’s program, “Forward from Durban: Raising Women’s Voices Against War and Racism,” will also feature reports from women who traveled to the United Nations World Conference Against Racism in Durban, South Africa. $15 - $50 sliding scale. 848-9272 www.coloredgirls.org 

 

Run for Peace 

9 a.m. - 12 p.m. 

Berkeley Marina 

Participants can choose 10 K run, 5 K run or 5K walk. $18 per participant. For registration form call 849-1742 or e-mail unarunforpeace@yahoo.com 

 


Monday, Oct 22

 

 

Franciscanism, Understanding the Vision 

1 - 2 p.m. 

Franciscan School of Theology 

1712 Euclid Ave. 

Graduate Theological Union presents seminar exploring the lives, times and writings of and about Francis and Clare of Assisi. 848-5232 

 

Interfaith Couples Look at Love and Choices 

7:30 - 9 p.m. 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St.  

Two films to stimulate discussion about interfaith families, love and identity. $25 per couple. 548-0237 

 


Tuesday, Oct. 23

 

 

Berkeley Farmers’ Market 

2-7 p.m. 

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

548-3333 

 

Berkeley Camera Club 

7:30 p.m. 

Northbrae Community Church, 941 The Alameda 

Share your slides and prints with other photographers. Critiques by qualified judges. Monthly field trips. 

531-8664 

 

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 

 

Similarities between Jewish and Deadhead Spirituality 

7:30 - 9 p.m. 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St.  

It’s been observed that a disproportionate number of deadheads are Jews. Dr. Leora Lawton, researcher of deadhead culture, explores the fascinating parallels between Jewish and deadhead rituals. $25 public, $15 members. 548-0237 

 


Resolution irrelevant to running city

Steven Donaldson Berkeley
Thursday October 18, 2001

Editor: 

Passing this resolution once again puts Berkeley in the national spot light. Again it creates a focus on the ideology of the council members who voted for it – how ever irrelevant it is to the immediate needs of running this city.  

The main issue here is that it’s not city’s business, and passing these dramatic declarations creates a general opinion of the city and it’s residents that may not be accurate and is really a reflection of the personal political and ideological perspectives of the council members. 

This is pure and simple opinionated arrogance and rather pointless jargonistic nonsense. It’s one thing to pass a resolution that simply shows compassion and support for people affected by these tragic events but many of the items outlined are about making policy that the council has little clarity, knowledge or historical perspective on and can have virtually no affect on changing. 

Why can’t the council put their energies into making Berkeley a cleaner, better, safer place to live for all its residents and get off the national political and ideological band wagon that is self serving and not really focused on making my life and kids lives function better on a day to day basis. 

Hey, I’m a child of the 60s, been in Berkeley my whole life, I was at People’s Park in 1969. I’ve seen all sides, all opinions. I’m inclusive - you got to be to live in Berkeley.  

Let’s keep open minds here! and I mean the minds of the council members who think they always know best on every issue.  

Passing national policy declarations like this show how we can tell everyone else “that Berkeley knows better” - when we don’t really know anything. 

 

Steven Donaldson 

Berkeley 


Staff
Thursday October 18, 2001

MUSIC 

 

924 Gilman St. Oct. 19: W.H.N.?, Jellyroll Rockheads, Ex-Claim, Crucial Attack, Sharp Knife; Oct. 21: 5 p.m. Throwdown, Martyr A.D., Bleeding Through, Everytime I Die, Fate 13; Oct. 26: Influents, Plus Ones, Divit, Summerjack, Robot Adrenaline, Claredon Hills; Oct. 27: (Halloween show, $1 off if you’re in a (non-punk) costume!) Babyland, Tsunami Bomb, Scissor Hands, Dexter Danger; All shows start a 8 p.m. unless noted; Most are $5; 924 Gilman St. 525-9926 

 

Ashkenaz Cajun Cayotesl Oct 18: Greatful Dean DJ Night; Oct 19: Swing Session 1317 San Pablo Ave. 525-5054 www.ashkenaz.com 

 

Blake’s Oct. 18: Ascension, $5; Oct. 19: King Harvest, Sfunk, $5; Oct. 20: Psychokinetics, $5; Oct. 22: The Steve Gannon Band and Mz. Dee, $4; Oct. 23: Felice, $3; Oct. 24: Erotic City, DJ Maestro, $2; Oct. 25: Psychotica, $5; Oct. 26: Planting Seeds, $6; Oct. 27: Felonious, $6; Oct. 29: The Steve Gannon Band and Mz. Dee, $4; Oct. 31: Erotic City, DJ Maestro, $2; All shows 9:30 p.m. 2367 Telegraph Ave. 848-0886 

 

Cal Performances Oct. 18: 8 p.m. Cesaria Evora, $24 - $36; Oct. 19: 8 p.m. Karnak, $18 - $30; Nov 8: 8 p.m. Gypsy Caravan 2: A Celebration of Roma Music and Dance, $18 - $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; Oct. 19: Little Jonny and the Giants; Doors open at 8 p.m. unless noted. 3629 Martin Luther King Jr. Way, Oakland. 655-6661 

 

Shafqat Ali Khan Oct. 20: 8 p.m. Concert of classical Ragaa, Sufi, Urdu, Persian Ghazel, and other popular musical styles from India. $20 general admission, $15 students. Julia Morgan Center for the Arts, 2640 College Ave. 845-8542 www.juliamorgan.org 

 

 

THEATER 

“Prometeh in Evin” Oct. 28: 8 p.m., A drama about political prisoners in Iran, performed by the brave and innovative Parsian Group. Julia Morgan Center for the Arts. $25, Children, $15 2640 College Ave 845.8542 www.juliamorgan.org. 

 

“Swanwhite” Through Oct. 21: Thur. - Sat., 8 p.m., Sun. 7 p.m. A new translation of the Swedish Play that asks the question what good is romantic love, directed by Tom Clyde. $20, Sundays are “Pay What You Can”. Transparent Theater, 1901 Ashby Ave. 883-0305, www.virtuous.com 

 

“Orestes” Through Oct. 21: Fri. - Sat., 8 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m. An adaptation of the classical play by Euripides that incorporates passages inspired or taken from various 20th century texts. Written by Charles Mee, Directed by Christopher Herold. $6-12. Zellerbach Playhouse on the UC Berkeley campus 642-8268 

 

“Approach” Through Oct. 27: Thur. - Sat., 8 p.m. An examination of the search for intimacy as our most precious form of survival. Written by Susan Wiegand, Directed by Katie Bales Frassinelli. $15 general admission, $10 students and seniors. Eighth Street Studio Theatre, 2525 8th St. 655-0813 www.shotgunplayers.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 

 

“me/you...us/them” Nov. 8 though Nov. 10: Thur - Sat 8 p.m., matinee on Sat. 2:30 p.m. Three one-acts that look at interpersonal, as well as societal relationships from the perspective of the disabled. $10 - $25. Julia Morgan Center for the Arts, 2640 College Ave. 925-798-1300 

 

“Nocturne” Through Nov. 11: Tues./Thurs./Sat. 8 p.m., Weds. & Sun. 7 p.m, matinee on Thurs./Sat./Sun. 2 p.m. Mark Brokaw directs Anthony Rapp in One-Man Show. Written by Adam Rapp. $38 - $54. Berkeley Repertory’s Thrust Stage, 2025 Addison St. 647-2949 www.berkeleyrep.org 

 

“Travesties” Through Nov. 17: Fri. - Sat., 8 p.m., and Thurs., Nov. 15, 8 p.m. A witty fantasy about James Joyce meeting Lenin in Zurich during World War I. Written by Tom Stoppard, Directed by Mikel Clifford. $10. Live Oak Theatre, 1301 Shattuck. 528-5620 

 

“Macbeth” Nov. 9 though Nov. 18: Fri. - Sat., 8 p.m., Sun. 5 p.m. Presented by the Albany High School Theater Ensemble. $7 adults, $5 students and seniors. Albany High School Little Theater, 603 Key Route Blvd. 559-6550 x4125 theaterensemble@hotmail .com 

 

“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 

 

FILMS 

“Lisa Picard is Famous” Through Oct. 19: Mocumentary chronicles New York actress who hopes to get more than a fleeting taste of fame when a racy cereal commercial brings her unexpected national notoriety. Shattuck Cinemas, 2230 Shattuck Ave. 843-3456 

 

Pacific Film Archive Theater Oct. 19: 7:30 p.m., Jungle Secrets, Yãkwa; Oct. 20: 3:30 p.m., Berkeley High/Bay Area Film Festival; 7 p.m., The Testament of Dr. Mabuse; 9:20 p.m., The Thousand Eyes of Dr. Mabuse; Oct. 21: 3:30 p.m., Kiss and Film, 5:30 p.m., Harakiri; Oct. 22: 7 p.m., The Closed Doors; Oct. 23: 7:30 p.m., Super-8mm Films by Theresa Cha; Oct. 24: 7:30 p.m., The Rainy Season and Wai’a Rini; Oct. 26: 7:30 p.m., The Passion of Joan of Arc, 9:15 p.m., Vivre sa Vie; Oct 27: 7 p.m., New Music for Silent Films by UCB Composers; Oct. 28: 5:30 p.m., Vampyr; Oct. 29: 7 p.m., A Time for Drunken Horses; Oct. 30: 7:30 p.m., An Evening with Leslie Thornton; Oct. 31: 7:30 p.m., 9:20 p.m., Saudade do Futuro. 

2575 Bancroft Way, 642-1124 www.bampfa.berkeley.edu 

 

“Ralph Bunche: An American Odyssey” Oct. 20: 1 p.m. The documentary chronicles Bunche, who rose to become Under-Secretary General of the United Nations, where he helped to bring about the Armistice in the 1948 Arab-Israeli War for which he was later awarded the Nobel Prize for Peace. $8. Oakland Museum, 1000 Oak Street Oakland, 652-3192 

 

EXHIBITS 

“First Annual Art Show” UC Berkeley Life Drawing Group Reception, Oct. 20: 3 p.m.; Oct. 21- 26: 7 - 10 p.m. Figure studies from the workshops at UC Berkeley. 1014 60th St., Emeryville. 923-0689 

 

“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  

 

“Cut Plates and Bowls” Annabeth Rosen, “Just Jars” Sandy Simon Through Nov. 3; Saturdays 10 - 5 or by appointment. Trax Ceramic Gallery, 1306 3rd St. 526-0279. cone5@aol.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. Mon. - Fri. 8 a.m. - 6 p.m. U.C. Berkeley, Graduate School of Journalism, North Gate Hall, Hearst and Euclid. Free. 642-3383 

 

“Jesus, This is Your Life - Stories and Pictures by Kids” Through Nov. 16: California children, ages four through twelve, from diverse backgrounds present original artwork, accompanied by a story written by the artist. “Cleve Gray, Holocaust Drawings” Oct. 15 through Jan. 25: 21 works on paper inviting the viewer to consider the atrocity of the Holocaust in ways unattainable through words or text. Mon. - Thur. 8:30 a.m. -10 p.m., Fri. 8:30 a.m. - 6 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m. - 6 p.m., Sun. 12 p.m. - 7 p.m. Flora Lamson Hewlett Library, 2400 Ridge Rd. 649-2541. 

 

“Changing the World, Building New Lives: 1970s photographs of Lesbians, Feminists, Union Women, Disability Activists and their Supporters” 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. 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 

 

“2001 James D. Phelan Art Awards in Printmaking” Honorees: Bridget Henry, David Kelso, and Margaret Van Patten. Oct. 19 - Nov. 30 Tues. - Fri. noon - 5 p.m., other times by appointment. Kala Art Institue, 1060 Heinz Ave. 549-2977 www.kala.org 

“The Whole World’s Watching: Peace and Social Justice Movements of the 1960s and 1970s” Through Dec. 16: A documentary photo exhibition which examines the rich history of the social movements of the 1960s and 1970s. 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 Oct. 18: Patricia Nell Warren reads from her novel “The Wild Man”, Oct. 22: J.M. Redmann reads from “Death By the Riverside”; 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 Oct 18: Tamora Pierce talks about “Protector of the Small”; 1730 Fourth St. 559-9500 

 

Cody’s on Telegraph Ave. Oct. 18: Suzanne Antoneta & Micah Perks talk about “Body Toxic: An Environmental Memoir” and “Pagan Time: An American Childhood; Oct. 26 Sage Cohen & Mari L’esperance read their poetry; All shows at 7:30 p.m.; 2454 Telegraph Ave. 845-7852 

 

Eastwind Books of Berkeley Oct. 20: Miriam Ching Louie reads from “Sweatshop Warriors: Immigrant Women Workers Take on the Global Factory”; Nov. 10: 4 p.m. Ruthanne Lum McCunn reads from her novel “Moon Pearl”; Nov. 18: 4 p.m. Noel Alumit, M.G. Sorongon, and Marianne Villanueva read from their contributions to the anthology “Tilting the Continent: Southeast Asian American Literature” 2066 University Ave. 548-2350 

 

Ecology Center Oct. 22: 7 - 9 p.m. Toby Hemenway presents a slideshow and reads from “Gaia’s Garden: A guide to Home Scale Permaculture”; 2530 San Pablo Ave. 548-220 x233 

 

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 Sun., 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Rides: Sun., 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; Oct. 21: United Nations Day; Oct. 25: A Storytelling Pajama Party, 6 - 7 p.m.; Oct. 27: 4th Annual Habitot Halloween; Oct. 28: Family Arts Day; Oct. 31: Sugar-Art Halloween Frosting; Nov. 3: Tales from the Enchanted Forest, 11 a.m. - 12:15 p.m.; Nov. 9: Living with the Earth; Nov. 17: Recycle that Stuff; $4 adults; $6 children age 7 and under; $3 for each additional child age 7 and under. Mon. and Wed., 9:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.; Tues. and Fri., 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Thur., 9:30 a.m. to 7 p.m.; Sat., 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sun., 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. 2065 Kittredge St. 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. Mon. through Fri., 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sat. and Sun., 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.  

 

University of California Berkeley Art Museum Pacific Film Archive has reopened after its summerlong 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. 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  

 

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


Student populace may return to political picture

By John Geluardi Daily Planet staff
Thursday October 18, 2001

After a bitter process, the City Council finalized the revised council districts Tuesday, then immediately put them in jeopardy by approving a plan that could alter the city’s political landscape by creating a district where students are in control. 

After finalizing the new district boundaries, the council resurrected the idea of a student-led district, a plan the council was unable – because of City Charter constraints – to consider when it voted on the new boundaries.  

Tuesday, the council adopted a plan where students and community would work together to write a charter amendment to create a student-dominated district. The amendment would go before the voters in November 2002. 

A divided council approved the proposed plan by a 5-2-2 vote with councilmembers Miriam Hawley and Betty Olds voting in opposition and Mayor Shirley Dean and Councilmember Polly Armstrong abstaining. The proposed charter amendment plan will come back to council on Oct. 30 for further discussion and possible approval. 

The conceptual plan approved Tuesday, submitted by Councilmember Kriss Worthington, calls for the formation of a council subcommittee to work with student representatives, property owners, neighborhood groups and local businesses to formulate a student district plan, which will be presented to voters as a charter amendment. 

A charter amendment is necessary to create the student district because districts 7 and 8 will have to be significantly reconfigured, and the charter allows only minimum changes to existing district boundary lines.  

For that reason, a redistricting proposal, submitted by the Associated Students of the University of California in August, was not considered by the council during the recently-completed redistricting process. 

Dean said she was surprised by the Worthington recommendation because she had been led to believe from a telephone conversation with the ASUC Vice President of External Affairs Josh Fryday that the existing plan would be presented to the council to be put on the March ballot. 

After the council approved the plan, Dean confronted Fryday outside the Council Chambers. “Everybody thought you wanted to put the ASUC plan on the ballot,” Dean said. “We’re trying to work with you and then we get punched in the head.” 

Armstrong, who failed to carry a substitute motion, which would have put the existing student plan on the March ballot, said if students wait until November to put the revised proposal on the ballot, the earliest a student would be able to run for election would be 2004. 

Fryday said he didn’t think it was prudent to put the existing student plan on the March ballot and that the plan would stand a better chance of approval if it contained community input. He said changing the charter is the critical thing. 

“Students are always going to be here,” he said. “I want a student district as soon as possible and having a better plan is the best way to do that.” 

Dean said Wednesday that the students were “manipulated” by the council’s progressive faction. She said the progressives have two goals: Protecting Worthington in District 7 and not alienating the student vote. 

“This plan precludes a student running against Councilmember Worthington in District 7 in November,” she said. “And I can’t believe that the students are so gullible that they decided to roll over and play dead for their own cause.” 

Worthington dismissed Dean’s statements as more of her “incessant political attacks.” He added that if the students did put their plan on the March ballot, as the moderates suggested, it would likely fail because of the traditional low-voter turnout for primary elections. 

He said even if the student plan “defied logic” and did win in March, it could be rendered obsolete by ongoing efforts to correct a census blunder that resulted in an undercount of approximately 4,000 Berkeley residents, mostly students. The City Charter requires districts to be redrawn with the most recent census numbers. 

Worthington added that he has consistently supported students by appointing them to commissions and boards, which are considered a training ground for potential councilmembers.  

“Dean didn’t appoint any students during her first 17 years in office and in the last couple of years she generally has one student, one Asian and one Latino,” he said. “I call that institutionalized tokenism.” 

If the student plan is approved as a charter amendment, students will face the difficult task of demonstrating to Berkeley residents why students, largely transitory residents who don’t own property, should be involved in city politics. 

“That’s the main reason why we want to take our time,” Fryday said, “we want to put forward a plan that everybody will be comfortable with.” 

 


Bears blow leads, fall to SJSU

Daily Planet Wire Services
Thursday October 18, 2001

SAN JOSE – The University of California women’s volleyball team lost a disappointing match to host San Jose State, 3-0 (30-21, 30-28, 30-27), Tuesday night at The Event Center on San Jose State’s campus.  

The Bears, who had substantial leads during the contest, were led by freshman Mia Jerkov’s 15 kills, while junior outside hitter Leah Young added 11 kills and junior Reena Pardiwala had a team-high 13 digs.  

San Jose State’s top hitter was Liz Hudson with 18 kills and the Spartans out hit Cal, .271 to .181.  

The Bears (5-10) let the first game slip away. Cal had a 10-8 lead on a Jerkov kill, but had a let down after that and fell behind 21-14 and could never rebound, losing 30-21. Jerkov led the Bears with five kills and Pardiwala had five digs in game one.  

Game two was even a worse case of Cal falling apart. The Bears held a 22-12 lead, only to see the Spartans go on a 9-0 run to get within 22-21. From there the two teams were tied six times, before San Jose State’s Brianna Blair’s service ace gave the Spartans (16-3) a 28-27 lead. A Cal hitting error gave SJS a 29-27 lead, followed by a Gabrielle Abernathy kill to get the Bears within 29-28, only to see Young’s kill attempt go long to lose the game, 30-28. Jerkov led Cal with six kills in game two.  

The Bears did not let a big lead slip away in game three, but still fell 30-27. Cal was down 15-12, but was able to eventually tie the contest, 16-16 on a kill by Abernathy. There were eight more ties before the Bears were able to muster a 26-25 advantage on another kill by Abernathy. San Jose State was able to tie the game at 26-26 when Cal again fell apart, losing points on a missed block attempt and a bad set.  

The Spartans had a net call on a block to get the Bears within 28-27, but a bad pass and finally a kill by San Jose State’s Stephanie Pascucci ended the game and the match.  

Cal will next return to Pac-10 play, hosting Washington State, Friday, Oct. 19 and Washington, Saturday, Oct. 20. Both matches will begin at 7 p.m. at Haas Pavilion. The Bears will try to avenge earlier loses this season to the Cougars and Huskies, as Cal fell to the two teams, 3-0, Sept. 20 and 21 in Seattle and Pullman.


Council elected to run the city, not the country

Claudia Kawczynska Berkeley
Thursday October 18, 2001

Editor 

There are many of us living in Berkeley who are shocked and disappointed that some of our city officials have clearly stepped outside of their elected mandate and have taken it upon themselves to speak for us in matters concerning foreign policy. I have NOT given my vote to any member of this city council to represent my beliefs in matters that are outside of their purview. Foreign policy is definitely something that, as an elected city official, they have no right, whatsoever, to speak for me. I do not recall that any of these council members presented their constituents with a platform that addressed foreign policy. Are we to assume when we voted for them that their responsibilities and expertise would extend so far beyond their duties and jurisdiction? In these matters they are free as private citizens to express their opinions but when they trespass on matters beyond their scope, I believe they abrogate my right as a citizen. It shames me to admit that I live in a city where the local officials have so little concern for the rights of their citizenry. 

 

Claudia Kawczynska  

Berkeley 


Local firefighter recalls personal NYC effort

By Darren Bobrosky
Thursday October 18, 2001

Apparatus Operator Darren Bobrosky, of Berkeley’s Fire Station 5, recently returned from a 10-day stint as a rescue worker in Lower Manhattan. Bobrosky and his partner, Dylan, a highly-trained search and rescue dog, are affiliated with Oakland’s Urban Search and Rescue team, one of the 28 FEMA-affiliated USAR teams nationwide. Following is the second part of Bobrosky’s story, edited by Daily Planet reporter Hank Sims. The first part ran on Wednesday. 

 

Initially, they didn’t want us there. They didn’t want outside help, and also I don’t think they knew how to use us. They’ve got 13,000 firemen, so they’re used to running their own program.  

I talked to people on some of the first teams that went, and they just got ignored. And that was in prime time – they were there the second day. If there’s going to be anybody alive, you’re going to find them in the first five or six days. But they weren’t being utilized hardly at all. They just sat and waited and hoped they could get some work, while everyone frantically dug through the pile. They didn’t realize that the dogs were such a valuable tool, and we came with equipment and training that would be valuable to the rescue operation. 

Once they figured that out, once some teams got in and got to work, the New York guys found out we weren’t there to take over. We weren’t there to steal any of their authority. By the time I got there, everything was cool. They’d grab us and say: “Hey, we need you guys to look over here. Come with us.” 

These were their brothers. We’re all one big brotherhood, but this was closer to them. A lot of family members of guys who were out there digging are still buried under there. So they had a very personal attachment to getting those guys out. They finally figured out that we had the equipment there with us to help pinpoint better locations to dig. 

New York fire and the police department were handling all the bodies. They were very discreet about it. They’d pull the bodies out, put them in a basket or on a stretcher, cover them up and carry them out. They didn’t make a big deal about it. It was done very low-key, very professionally and it wasn’t observable to anyone, unless you were right there when they found them.  

We didn’t get into any of the body-removal areas. We searched on the perimeter for bits and pieces that they were finding. The dogs were hitting on small body parts and things that had just been destroyed.  

You didn’t see them. The pieces were either so small or so buried that we weren’t supposed to dig anything up, just to mark what we found. 

If we sent one dog into an area and the dog alerted on something, we made a map of the area but we didn’t mark it. We’d send a second dog in, and if that second dog alerted us to the same spot, then we’d mark it. If two dogs hit same spot, it’s confirmed. There’s something there.  

A dog can have a bad day just like we can have a bad day. You’re not having a good day, you’re not performing as well as you should – dogs can do the same. It’s up to the handlers to know if our dogs are performing at the top of their game. You have to be able to read them.  

You need to be honest. You’re going to commit a lot of resources to an area if you say: “Yes, my dog has a scent here – dig here.” If 20 or 30 people come there and dig in that spot and find a salami sandwich, they’re going to be upset. They might force-feed it to you. So if your dog gives a weak alert at a spot and the second dog doesn’t even look at it, you have to figure that it’s nothing. 

Dylan was fine. I didn’t really work him enough to wear him out. When we went to search, he was all over it.  

We had marking tape with us. In the early going, when they were looking for live people, the dog handlers had people standing behind them with tools, ready to dig. With us, it was just the FBI standing there taking pictures of the area, making notes and making sure that the spot was sifted before it got bagged up and hauled away. 

They sent one FBI guy with us everywhere we went, to make sure things didn’t get disturbed, or if there was something that was obviously evidence it got marked. 

We asked him if we could take pictures. He said, “No, it’s a crime scene. That’s a felony.” We said, “OK, no problem.” 

We had a very small amount of free time. Since our mission deteriorated from rescue to recovery, and the immediate need for us was dwindling, they started giving us 24 hours off if they could – although the dogs didn’t really get it, because we needed to have two dogs available at all times, at Queens and Manhattan. 

We did get 12 hours off, and I was able to make it to Central Park. I let Dylan swim around, let him be a dog for a while.  

One night we were able to go by foot to the Empire State Building. It was closed to the public, but with our FEMA I.D.s we got in there, got to go up to the observation deck and look around. Six of us – we walked in, rode up, and there were 10 people on the top. We walked through Times Square, Rockefeller Center – hit all the highlights in the immediate area. We didn’t go out to dinner, because they fed us too well at the site.  

The people were impressed that we were from California, and came all the way across the country to help out. They asked the same questions everyone else asked – “Does your dog wear booties? Why aren’t the dogs wearing the booties we sent?” Everyone in the world wants to know why the dogs don’t wear booties.  

In the end, there were no live finds by the USAR teams. The success story was that some of our dogs found the bodies of the firefighters. That was the big thing, because back there especially, everything was fire-oriented.  

In addition, we found many, many civilians. But the fire department wanted to find their own, and that’s who we were working for. They were pleased that we found civilians, but even more so that we were locating their own. 

It was tough to come back. We still felt we had work to do there. We didn’t get to do much, and in the rescuers’ eyes, there was still a need for us. It was nice to come back because we were tired, physically, but mentally and emotionally we didn’t want to come back. It was bittersweet. It’s tough to leave a job unfinished.


Golden Bear basketball gets verbal commitment from another recruit

Staff
Thursday October 18, 2001

The Cal men’s basketball program received its third oral commitment this week, as Alabama prepster Kennedy Winston said he planned to choose the Bears. 

“They offered me a scholarship and I told them I want to come. As of right now, I’m pretty solid,” Winston said of his choice of Cal following a weekend campus visit. 

Winston, a 6-foot-7 wing player, averaged 25.4 points, 8.6 rebounds and 6.3 assists last season, leading Blount High of Pritchard, Ala., to the state’s 5-A title. He is rated as the nation’s No. 32 prospect by The Sporting News, and is considered to be the top prospect in Alabama. 

Winston joins Modesto Christian’s Richard Midgely and David Paris as oral commitments for the Bears. Recruits cannot officially commit until Nov. 14. 


King: ‘Silence is betrayal’

Bonnie Hughes Berkeley
Thursday October 18, 2001

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

Last night I felt a shudder from the spirit of Mario Savio as our mayor said on television that there are certain issues we must not discuss. And I began to imagine: wouldn’t it be great if instead she had said, “We must speak out – just as Councilmember Spring did last week – sometimes Dona’s not as eloquent as Martin Luther King, Jr. was when he said: 

“A time comes when silence is betrayal. Even when pressed by the demands of inner truth, men do not easily assume the task of opposing their government’s policy, especially in time of war. Nor does the human spirit move without great difficulty against all the apathy of conformist thought within one’s own bosom and in the surrounding world. Moreover, when the issues at hand seem as perplexing as they often do in the case of dreadful conflict, we are always on the verge of being mesmerized by uncertainty. But we must move on. 

“Some of us who have already begun to break the silence of the night have found that the calling to speak is often a vocation of agony, but we must speak. We must speak with all the humility that is appropriate to our limited vision, but we must speak. For we are deeply in need of a new way beyond the darkness that seems so close around us.” (From a speech delivered at Riverside Church, New York City, April 4, 1967.)  

Then I hear the mayor say, “We are in support of Dona’s proposal. We want to work together, take a long look at ourselves and have the courage to make Berkeley a beacon in the search for a just and peaceful world.” 

She could have said that.  

 

Bonnie Hughes 

Berkeley


Local medical marijuana club held up

By Hank Sims Daily Planet staff
Thursday October 18, 2001

One of Berkeley’s medical marijuana clubs was robbed by two gunmen last Friday, according to Berkeley police. 

Lt. Cynthia Harris, BPD spokesperson, said two men entered “The Old Brick House,” a medical marijuana club at 1672 University Ave., around 4:30 p.m. 

Holding the clerks at gunpoint, the two men demanded that they turn over the club’s supply of marijuana and all the cash in the store. The clerks complied. Afterward, the suspects fled in one of the victim’s vehicles. 

The suspects are described as African American males in their 20s. One of them was of heavy build, approximately 6 feet 2 inches tall, 240 pounds, with a shaved head and wearing black pants and a purple shirt. The other suspect was around the same height, of thin build, wearing a beige sweater, black pants and a mustache. 

Though reported robberies at California’s medical marijuana clubs are somewhat rare, they have occurred in the past. Jeff Jones of the Oakland Cannabis Buyers’ Co-operative said there have been a few such cases in San Francisco and Oakland in recent years. 

Jones said medical marijuana clubs generally run the same risks that other businesses do, and that some vigilance is called for. (The OCBC recently lost a case in the Supreme Court where it claimed that a medical necessity defense cannot be used to fight federal marijuana charges.) 

“I always tell these groups that there is a risk, and they should put some safeguards in place,” he said. “It’s not just for their own safety, though there is that – it’s also that they should be securing the medicine that their patients need. 

“A lot of the facilities that I’ve visited in San Francisco and the East Bay have safes, or other ways to secure their resources.” 

The people who run the “Old Brick House” club could not be reached for comment.  

The business is now closed, but signs outside say it will be open again next week. It is not known whether they had a security system, or any set procedures in place in case of such an emergency. 

In 1999, the San Francisco Patients’ Resource Center, another club, was held up shortly after it began operating. The thieves made off with $5,000 worth of marijuana and cash. Security personnel were stationed at the club soon after. 

The SFPRC, which is located near San Francisco’s Panhandle, later became a program of the city’s St. Martin de Tours Chapel. Sister Rosemarie, a nun who works at the club, said it was robbed again last March. 

She said in the wake of the recent hold-up, security at the club was tightened again. 

“We already had alarms, but we increased security by firming up entrance facilities,” she said. “We also had a staff training session, where we learned how to do perimeter checks before opening doors and to exercise ‘preventative scrutiny.’”  

Sister Rosemarie said the medicine’s physical availability is also limited to prevent losses, in case of another robbery. 

“We have secure lockdown procedures, including safes and off-site storage,” she said. 

When reached by telephone, a member of the Berkeley Cannabis Co-op, the most prominent of the Berkeley medical marijuana clubs, said that the group’s policy was not to speak to the press. 

Berkeley police were unable to say whether other marijuana clubs in the city have been robbed.


Cal’s Lawson to redshirt season

Staff
Thursday October 18, 2001

Michael Lawson, who left the Cal basketball program last season before ever playing a game, will redshirt the upcoming season before returning to the team for the 2002-03 season. 

Lawson, a guard from Martinez, enrolled as a full-time student at Diablo Valley Community College in Stockton after withdrawing from Cal before the start of the last school year. Since he did not receive an Associate of Arts, he is ineligible to play the upcoming season according to NCAA regulations. Lawson will rejoin the program as a walk-on.


Media needs to get facts straight

Joy A. Flaherty Berkeley
Thursday October 18, 2001

Editor: 

 

Bless these people in the Media who are trying to cover the news. Did anyone happen to think of the time it takes to get to the bottom of a problem (Anthrax for one).  

This causes fear. We are headed for being dissolved as a nation (imploded) if we don’t start watching out for our neighbors.  

Compel the news media to get their facts straight (possibly consult with each other as to what and when to report to the tender ears of our citizens).  

People who listen to a number of newspeople with many different concepts forget the basics given. This could cause snowballing of fear and corrupt thinking. 

There are not enough qualified psychiatrists in the world to project the thought that our best protection comes from within ourselves.  

It’s too bad nobody listened to the sole dissenter from this community (Barbara Lee), when we could have concentrated on discussion and protection of OUR OWN country.  

A few admissions of guilt by our leaders wouldn’t be a bad idea either. 

 

Joy A. Flaherty 

Berkeley


A celebration of life and the heroic effort of Wanda Anita Green

Submitted to the Daily Planet by Sandré R. Swanson
Thursday October 18, 2001

On Sept. 11 Wanda Anita Green and members of the crew and passengers aboard United Airlines Flight 93 gave their life to save the lives of hundreds, if not thousands of others. Wanda’s family deeply appreciates the expressions of love from the people of our nation and announce plans to celebrate Wanda’s life. Memorial services for Wanda Anita Green will be held Oct. 27 at Evergreen Baptist Church in Oakland at noon. The Rev. Frank Pinkard Jr. will be officiating.  

Wanda’s parents, Francis and Aserene Smith moved to Oakland from Oceanside within the year of her birth on Aug. 22, 1952. Wanda, her identical twin sister Sandra and brother Tommy Smith were raised in West and North Oakland. Wanda’s sister, Sandra Jamerson, now lives in Antioch. Wanda’s parents and brother still live in Oakland. 

Wanda was loved and will be sorely missed by her daughter Jennifer R. Green, 21, son Joe B. Green II, 18, of Linden, N.J. and many other family members and friends. 

For 28 years, Wanda was living her childhood dream of earning her wings and working as a senior flight attendant for United Airlines.  

In celebration of Wanda’s life the family has formed a foundation in her honor that will assist inner-city youth in reaching their dreams with scholarships to support their education and career goals.  

The public is respectfully invited to support this effort in Wanda’s honor: 

Wanda Anita Green Foundation 

c/o Bay Area Urban League 

303 Hegenberger Road, Ste. A. Oakland, CA 94621  

(A United Way Agency-Member) 

The family thanks the public in advance for their support of this celebration of Wanda’s life. 

Sandré R. Swanson, Wanda’s first cousin, is coordinating essential communication for the family and he can be reached at 847-1125 or SRS215@aol.com or by fax 814-0639.


Deaf women’s organization introduces safety device

By James Sandler Special to the Daily Planet
Thursday October 18, 2001

Bay Area deaf women victimized by domestic or sexual abuse have a new way of protecting themselves. 

Deaf Women Against Violence officially introduced a 24-hour teletypewriter, or TTY, crisis line for deaf victims of abuse last week at the Commission on Disability. 

Deaf victims of domestic or sexual abuse can type a message into their home TTY machine, which automatically transmits the message to the Deaf Women Against Violence Hayward offices. An automated message center then transmits the message to a victim response advocate who contacts the victim. 

“We provide anything that will allow (the victim) to live independently and without violence,” said Amber Hudson, a social worker working for Deaf Women Against Violence. 

The service also provides for free emergency hotel stays, deaf awareness education as well as free medical and legal support for victims throughout the Bay Area. Most of the organization’s money comes from Bay Area counties and the federal Violence Against Women Act. 

The number of deaf women in the Bay Area has not been counted, but advocates say there may be several thousand – 25 percent of whom are likely the victims domestic or sexual violence. 

“Because they are deaf, they are already isolated and batterers can capitalize on that and make it more difficult to leave the abusive situation,” said Hudson. “For example, taking away her TTY so she is not able to communicate, making fun of her deafness or language skills and increasing her low self-esteem saying: ‘You’re deaf, where can you go anyway?’” 

The Hayward-based nonprofit organization says its service is the only one operating in California and one of only 16 in the United States. 

Delia Todd, a member of the Commission on Disability, says domestic violence shelters are often not equipped to serve deaf women, which further discourages victims from leaving abusive environments. 

“The problem is if deaf women go to a shelter, they feel very isolated because the other people there don’t know sign language,” said Todd. 

Deaf Women Against Violence is currently working with area shelters to arrange for American Sign Language interpreters and deaf support groups at local shelters. 

The organization has been operating since last June and just recently received federal nonprofit designation. 

The group has helped more than 25 deaf victims and at least 50 children of those victims. 

The Deaf Women Against Violence TTY crisis line is 538-0152. For voice calls, a TTY relay system can be used by first dialing 888-877-5379.


California will let pharmacists give women morning-after drugs

By Jennifer Coleman The Associated Press
Thursday October 18, 2001

SACRAMENTO — When a new law signed by Gov. Gray Davis takes effect Jan. 1, California will be the nation’s second state to allow pharmacists to provide women with emergency contraceptives without a prescription. 

The morning-after pill is a heavy dose of ordinary birth control pills, which, if used within 72 hours of unprotected sex, can delay ovulation and prevent pregnancy. 

California will join Washington state in allowing women to get the drugs without a doctor’s prescription, a move that will have a “clear impact in California in preventing abortions,” said Jane Boggess, director of the Public Health Institute’s Pharmacy Access Partnership. 

“California is a bellwether state for many other parts of the country,” Boggess said. Eleven other states considered bills this year related to emergency contraception, but only California approved a law. 

Once proven successful here, other states will see the benefits of starting their own programs, she said. 

Planned Parenthood Affiliates of California, a co-sponsor of the bill, estimates that about half of all U.S. pregnancies are unintended, and about half of those will end in abortion. 

However, opponents say the law allows pharmacists to act beyond their training and could give access of the drugs to minors, who may need more counseling to decide to take the pills. 

Pharmacists will be able to “prescribe this morning-after pill to children without the parents’ knowledge or involvement,” said Christine Thomas, acting executive director of California Right to Life. 

The law has no age limit, so minors also able to get an abortion or birth control without parental consent in California could also get the morning-after pills. 

California Right to Life would have opposed the bill, even if excluded minors, because it believes the drug induces abortion, Thomas said. 

Morning-after pills, however, differ from the abortion pill RU-486, which expels the fetus, because they prevent a fertilized egg from implanting itself in the uterus and doesn’t end a pregnancy. 

About 90 percent of women who take the morning-after pill do not become pregnant, Boggess said. 

Thomas, however, said the morning-after pill can also prevent an egg from implanting, which they call tantamount to abortion. 

The bill was state Sen. Dede Alpert’s second attempt to pass this law. A previous measure by the Coronado Democrat was defeated two years ago. 

Jan Carroll, legislative analysts for the California Pro-Life council, said her group didn’t oppose the bill, but she was concerned it would allow pharmacists to dispense drugs without seeing a patient’s medical history. 

The law, Carroll said, is “a move in the wrong direction,” because it may open the door to pharmacists prescribing other drugs. 

Pharmacists will be trained in the available medications and will use guidelines established by doctors and a pharmacists’ association, Boggess said. 

The Berkeley-based Public Health Institute sponsored a trial program that started in January 2000 and now includes 70 clinics and pharmacies. It has provided pills to several thousand women, Boggess said. 

A grant from the Packard Foundation to the Public Health Institute, a private nonprofit organization, funded the program. 

The pilot program involved clinics with large number of women enrolled. They can go to a pharmacists for the pills immediately, instead of waiting for an appointment with the clinic. 

Timely access to the drugs is critical, which is why the California Medical Association supported the bill, said Shannon Smith-Crowley, its associate director of government relations. 

“This is so safe, and timeliness is so critical for the use of this drug, that we believe all women should have access to it,” she said. 

At least 11 states considered the issue of emergency contraceptives in the past year, said Leah Oliver, a researcher with the National Conference of State Legislatures, but only California has approved legislation. Washington used existing laws to implement its program. 

The states were Hawaii, Illinois, Kansas, Maryland, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Oregon and Virginia. Among the bills they considered were measures to require hospitals to provide the drugs to rape victims, establish studies or start education campaigns. 

——— 

On the Net: 

California Right to Life: http://www.calright2life.org 

Planned Parenthood of California: http://www.ppacca.org 

Read Senate Bill 1169 at http://www.senate.ca.gov 


Police Briefs

Staff
Thursday October 18, 2001

On Monday, a man was robbed by two men wielding a stun gun or taser, police say. 

According to Lt. Cynthia Harris, the victim was walking down the street around 10:15 p.m. When he reached the corner of Vine and Milvia Streets, he felt a sting on the back of his neck and heard zapping sounds. He turned around and was allegedly punched by one of the men behind him. One of the men demanded his wallet, Harris said. The victim gave it to them, and the suspects fled by foot. 

*** 

A shooting was reported Sunday afternoon at the corner of Haskell and Mabel streets. According to police, one or two people in a white Dodge or Ford van drove up to the corner at 3:15 p.m. One person got out of the van and fired shots at a young man, missing him. The suspect got back into the vehicle and drove away. No one was injured.


White powder found at Cal White powder found at Cal

Staff
Thursday October 18, 2001

A portion of the Haas School of Business was evacuated for a few hours after a mail clerk reported finding an “unknown white powder” Wednesday afternoon. 

It was determined that the substance was not anthrax and the evacuation order was lifted a few hours later. 

Kathleen Maclay of the UC Berkeley Public Affairs office said that campus police and the Berkeley Fire Department's hazardous materials team responded to the scene and cordoned off the area.  


UC regents to discuss additional changes to admissions process

By Michelle Locke The Associated Press
Thursday October 18, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO — University of California regents said Wednesday they need more information on a faculty proposal that admissions decisions be based on more than just academics. 

“Who are these people? What are their qualifications?” asked Regent John Davies at a meeting of the university system’s governing board. 

“How do we assure the public that students who go to high school, stay up nights to get good grades — that that really matters?” said Regent Ward Connerly. 

Regents discussed the proposal at their Wednesday meeting but did not vote on it. The proposal comes from a faculty committee. If approved by an Academic Senate of UC faculty, it would come back to regents for a vote in November. 

The new admissions approach follows the board’s decision in May to rescind a 1995 vote dropping UC’s old affirmative action program. 

The repeal was largely symbolic, since a state law passed in 1996 bans considering race or gender in public education. However, the May vote did call into question a requirement in the 1995 measure that at least 50 percent of students at each campus — up from the previous minimum of 40 percent — be chosen solely on the basis of academic criteria. 

The balance of students are selected on the basis of grades and test scores and supplemental factors such as talent, leadership and ability to overcome disadvantage. 

A faculty committee has endorsed changing that system to eliminate the 50 percent minimum and take the larger view of all applicants, a system known as “comprehensive review.” 

“The important thing is it is not just one or two academic criteria like high school GPA or the standardized test scores that determine the potential for success,” Chand Viswanathan, the faculty representative to the regents, said in an interview Monday. 

UC President Richard C. Atkinson supports the shift toward comprehensive review and the elimination of the two-tier system. 

The change wouldn’t affect who gets into the nine-campus system, but it could change which students get into top campuses such as Berkeley and UCLA. 

Students become eligible for UC by reaching minimum grade and test scores or by graduating in the top 4 percent of their high school class. 

UC has a policy of finding a place for all eligible students. However, being eligible doesn’t guarantee a spot at the campus of your choice.  

That’s where the academic criteria come into play.  

Each campus is now limited to taking half of the new freshman class on academics alone. 

The May repeal ordered that any changes take effect for students entering in fall 2002. 

The move toward comprehensive review is the latest in a series of changes in UC admissions policies. 

In 1999, regents guaranteed eligibility to students who finished in the top 4 percent of their high school, based on UC-required courses. This year, they approved expanding that guarantee to the top 12.5 percent, provided students who fell in the latter 8.5 percent went to community college for the first two years, although that proposal stalled last month for lack of state funds. 

Atkinson also has asked faculty members to consider dropping the SAT I achievement test as a requirement. 


Dust cloud above Martinez refinery prompts alarm

The Associated Press
Thursday October 18, 2001

MARTINEZ — A yellowish cloud of dust billowing from a local oil refinery forced residents to seek shelter for the second time in four days. 

Contra Costa County fire officials said the cloud began forming over Equilon Martinez Refining Co. around 8:50 a.m. Wednesday.  

They said the situation was under control an hour later. 

The county health department warned area residents to stay in their homes, with windows and doors closed and wet towels around all door and window openings. 

The cloud was a sandy silica dust, according to Equilon spokesman Mark Hughes. He said it was not toxic. 

Still, the cloud prompted the California Highway Patrol to shut down Highway 680 between the Benicia Bridge and Highway 4. 

Hughes said the company did not know what caused the release. 

It was the second accidental release in less than a week at the refinery. 

Sunday night, the same unit of the refinery released alumina silica for just over an hour, prompting officials to issue a “shelter in place” order. The cause of that accident is still under investigation. 

County health officials said those fluffy particles were not hazardous to touch and had no reports of anyone being injured. Equilon offered to pay to sweep city streets and school playgrounds, and said it would cover cleaning bills for cars, houses or other private property dirtied by Sunday’s black dust.


How much is too much?

By Martha Irvine The Associated Press
Thursday October 18, 2001

Before the terrorist attacks, 7-year-old Jacqueline Zobel wasn’t sure what it meant to be patriotic. 

Since then, she’s been wearing red, white and blue to school, learning to sing “God Bless America,” raising relief money at her lemonade stand — and starting to grasp the concept. 

“It means you’re a good person and you live in America,” says the second-grader from Plantation, Fla. She was among thousands of students nationwide who stood last Friday to say the Pledge of Allegiance simultaneously. 

Many Americans, including Jacqueline’s parents, are thrilled at schools’ heightened emphasis on national pride since the attacks. But others are worried that an unchecked wave of patriotism might quash some basic U.S. traditions — such as the right to question and separation of church and state. 

“Right now, it’s a lot of rote memorization,” says Cecilia O’Leary, an associate professor of history at California State University, Monterey Bay, and author of “To Die For: The Paradox of American Patriotism.” 

“If you leave it at that, we’re just marching lock step wherever the flag is taken — right or wrong.” 

There is little doubt that Americans, overall, have been feeling more patriotic lately. A University of Michigan survey taken after Sept. 11 found that 90 percent of those questioned felt proud to be an American. 

That sense has driven the push for a show of patriotism in schools. 

Earlier this month, the Nebraska state board of education voted unanimously to endorse a 1949 state law that requires schools to teach lyrics to patriotic songs, reverence for the flag and the dangers of communism. 

Officials at an elementary school in Rocklin, Calif., declined to remove a “God Bless America” sign after the American Civil Liberties Union complained that it violates the separation of church and state. 

Private organizations also have gotten involved. This week, the Family Research Council, a conservative, Washington-based lobbying group, began offering patriotic book covers on its Web site with the Pledge of Allegiance on one side and two verses of “The Star-Spangled Banner” on the other. 

“This is an important statement of American unity,” says Jennifer Marshall, who oversees the group’s work on education. “Students need to understand what we are at war to protect.” 

All the flag-waving has left some wondering if there’s much room for dissent. 

Jane Bluestein, a teacher and school consultant based in Albuquerque, N.M., says her research has found that even before Sept. 11, many students did not feel safe expressing their own opinions at school. 

“If that’s going to be the case, what’s going to happen to the kid who’s a pacifist?” asks Bluestein, author of the new book “Creating Emotionally Safe Schools: A Guide For Educators and Parents.” 

But some students say they do feel free to express their opinions. 

“The teachers aren’t telling us what to think — they’re getting our thoughts on it,” says Jennifer Ewa, a sophomore at Walter Payton College Prep High School in Chicago, who opposes bombing Afghanistan. “They’re really telling us to think for ourselves.” 

Kajal Alemo agrees that students need a safe space to air their views.  

One good place for him is the daily discussion of current events in his history class at Episcopal Academy, a private high school in Merion, Pa. 

“It’s helped everyone calm down a lot,” the 10th-grader says. 

Other students, including eighth-graders at Liberty Junior High School in Liberty, Mo., have taken their opinions — including support and a mix of advice — all the way to the top, by writing letters to President Bush. In Virginia Beach, Va., the attacks have sparked an unprecedented interest in voting.  

Organizers of a Kids Voting USA project say they’ve been overwhelmed with students who want to staff practice voting booths for young people in the general election.  

And even if children don’t understand all the words, Kathy Hoveland, a second-grade teacher in Madison, Wis., thinks the pledge has been a comfort to them. At home, some of her students have been sneaking downstairs to sleep, where they feel safer. 

Says Hoveland: “We have kids who are clinging to anything to feel better.”


Anthrax found in New York governor’s office

By Shannon McCaffrey The Associated Press
Thursday October 18, 2001

NEW YORK — Gov. George Pataki said Wednesday that anthrax had been found in his midtown Manhattan office, the third time the dangerous germ has turned up in the city in less than a week. 

No one was believed to have the disease in Pataki’s office, but the governor said he had begun taking the antibiotic Cipro as a precaution. 

He also said he didn’t plan to be tested for the disease that has infected two other people in New York City. Three more have tested positive for exposure. 

“I don’t think it’s necessary,” Pataki said, who was advised by the state health commissioner on whether to be tested. “I feel great.” 

A positive result from an initial anthrax test came back Wednesday morning and all 80 people working in the office were relocated.  

Results from more sophisticated tests are due by Friday, but Pataki said he was confident they would prove anthrax was present. 

The source of the anthrax is under investigation but Pataki suggested it could have been tracked in by state police who have accompanied him to anthrax investigations at two news networks. 

“The state police have been obviously at NBC, at ABC, all over the environs over the course of the past month,” he said. 

A suspicious letter prompted Pataki to order testing, but he said he didn’t think the package is the source. 

The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Wednesday that the anthrax mailed to NBC appeared to match a strain discovered at a Florida tabloid publisher earlier this month. An employee of the company died of anthrax on Oct. 5. 

The strain occurs naturally and responds well to antibiotics, CDC spokesman Tom Skinner said. 

Matching strains do not necessarily mean the anthrax came from the same source. More tests would be needed to confirm that. 

Elsewhere, city health officials gave a clean bill of health to the Rockefeller Center headquarters of NBC, where an assistant to anchor Tom Brokaw tested positive for the skin form of anthrax last week. Tests on some 500 employees came back negative. 

An anthrax test of air filters at ABC’s Upper West Side headquarters came back negative, the network said.  

On Monday, the 7-month-old son of an ABC News producer tested positive for anthrax after spending time at the facility. Other test results are pending. 

The governor ordered the Capitol in Albany tested for anthrax.  

Mayor Rudolph Giuliani said city health officials have also tested City Hall and other agencies as a precaution. No results were immediately available. 

At Pataki’s office on Third Avenue between 40th and 41st streets, the substance was detected on a desk in the state police offices on the 39th floor. The area was not open to the public or large numbers of staff. 

The anthrax testing began after the governor’s secretary became concerned about a letter that arrived at the office a few days after its Sept. 25 postmark. She turned it over to state police, who found it did not contain any threats or suspicious substances, Pataki said. 

Anthrax tests on her and two mail handlers were negative, Pataki said. 

The governor and his staff refused to say who sent the letter or what prompted the concern. They did say the letter came from an organization within New York state; representatives of the organization have since been interviewed by state authorities. 

Environmental tests in four areas of the governor’s office were performed Monday night, after ABC News disclosed the baby’s infection. 

The governor’s complex of offices on the 38th and 39th floors has been closed for further testing and decontamination work. It is expected to reopen Monday. 

Rick Owen, a banker who had an appointment in the building Wednesday, said he is not worried but his wife is concerned. 

“She already told me that when I get home I have to put my clothes in a bag,” said Owen, of Boonton Township, N.J. 


Navy divers recover body of one of the nine victims of submarine accident

By Jean Christiensen The Associated Press
Thursday October 18, 2001

HONOLULU — Navy divers entered the wreck of the Ehime Maru and recovered the body of one of the nine men and boys killed when the Japanese fishing boat was accidentally sunk by a surfacing U.S. submarine. 

Navy officials gave few details about Tuesday’s operation, such as where on board the vessel the body was found. 

“The U.S. Navy is committed to treating the families respectfully and honorably. We’re committed to an honorable closure for those families,” said Lt. Cmdr. Neil Sheehan, the Navy’s liaison officer for the Japanese victims’ families. 

The search for the dead is expected to take a month. 

Divers using cameras spotted the body before actually entering the Ehime Maru. 

Lt. Cmdr. Gregg Baumann, a spokesman for the operation, said divers still must clear large amounts of fishing line and dislodged objects — including a refrigerator — from the exterior and interior of the vessel. 

Over the weekend, the Ehime Maru was towed 16 miles underwater from the 2,000-foot waters where it sank Feb. 9 after it was rammed by the USS Greeneville during a rapid-surfacing drill. 

Twenty-six people from the high school fisheries training vessel from Japan were rescued.  

Four students and five adults were never found and are believed to be in the wreck. 

The wreck now lies in 115 feet of water a mile off Oahu’s southern shore. 

“I pray that as many bodies as possible will be found, and am thankful for the U.S. Navy’s thorough preparations leading up to this day,” said Moriyuki Kato, governor of the Ehime state, where the fisheries school is located. 

Once the bodies are removed, the Ehime Maru will be towed more than six miles out to sea and allowed to sink. 

The unprecedented recovery effort has cost more than $60 million.


United Airlines teeters on ominous financial edge

By Dave Carpenter The Associated Press
Thursday October 18, 2001

CHICAGO — The warning by United Airlines’ chief executive that the carrier is in danger of going out of business prompted criticism Wednesday from its labor unions and sent the stock plunging to its lowest price in more than a decade. 

United shares fell 10 percent after James Goodwin said in a letter to employees that it will stop flying sometime next year if it doesn’t stop “hemorrhaging” cash at the current pace, which accelerated after the Sept. 11 attacks. 

Aviation industry experts are divided on whether United could fail that quickly, with some calling it unlikely and others possible. They say such carriers as US Airways, America West and perhaps Continental are in more dire situations, although troubled United is going through its cash alarmingly quickly. 

Labor officials representing United employees angrily dismissed the warning as a “Chicken Little letter” — a scare tactic intended to force a reopening of its costly labor contracts or at least gain leverage in negotiations with 15,000 mechanics and 30,000 ramp and customer service workers. 

Reservations agents, they said, were being swamped with calls from nervous passengers seeking ticket refunds. 

Tom Buffenbarger, president of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, assailed Goodwin for an “alarmist rant” that undercut passenger confidence in air travel just when it was beginning to return. 

“Goodwin’s credibility with employee-owners and the IAM is shot,” he said. “I refuse to accept his assessment of United’s future. We want to see the books.” 

Federally mediated contract talks, which remain deadlocked after nearly two years, are due to resume Oct. 31 with ramp and customer service workers and Nov. 6 with mechanics. 

IAM spokesman Frank Larkin said United’s management may also be trying to get more money out of the government, which already rescued the airline industry with a $15 billion package designed to stave off bankruptcies. 

“The letter may represent a new high in pre-negotiations rhetoric, or it may be greasing the door for a return to Washington for additional bailout billions,” Larkin said. 

Herb Hunter, union leader for United pilots who signed an industry-leading wage agreement last year, said the letter raised troubling questions — particularly since bookings are high again and “there are a lot of full airplanes.” 

“It scares the people, it scares the employees,” he said. “It sounds like labor negotiations 101 and using fear as a tactic.” 

United spokesman Joe Hopkins declined comment on the union charges that Goodwin’s remarks were a ploy. 

Investors took the warning seriously, sending the stock of United parent company UAL Corp. — which peaked at over $100 in 1997 — as low as $16, down 14 percent, before it recovered somewhat. Shares finished the session down $1.79 to $16.85 on the New York Stock Exchange, near the post-attacks closing low of $16.22 reached last month. 

The last time UAL shares closed as low as $16, including adjustments for stock splits, was Sept. 9, 1988, according to the Center for Research in Security Prices, run by the University of Chicago’s Graduate School of Business.  

Intraday lows, or those reached during trading sessions, are not available for that far back. 

Analysts estimate that United is losing as much as $20 million a day and risks burning through its cash by next summer. But with schedules, fares and work force levels all in flux, they said it’s impossible to assess exactly how badly it’s doing or how full its planes need to be in order for it to break even. 

United has announced plans to lay off about 20,000 of its 100,000 employees and reduced daily capacity by 26 percent, to 1,654 flights. 

“I think Goodwin has been understating the situation all along, and it’s about time he told everybody what the true picture was,” said ABN Amro analyst Ray Neidl. “Every airline is in danger.” 

He noted that United, which depends more heavily on business travel than other carriers, accounted for two-thirds of airline industry losses in the second quarter when it lost $292 million. 

But others think United’s chairman and CEO overstated the case. 

“We believe Goodwin’s comments are designed to ensure UAL’s employees fully understand the magnitude of UAL’s financial difficulties as he likely seeks wage and/or work rule concessions,” Brian Harris said in a research note for Salomon Smith Barney. 

“We do not think UAL will ’perish’ because we fully expect the combination of revenue claw-back and cost reductions via unprecedented capacity reductions will be sufficient ... to survive.” 


Sprint Corp. announces mass layoff due to poor economy

By Margaret Stafford The Associated Press
Thursday October 18, 2001

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Sprint Corp. will lay off about 6,000 employees, or about 7 percent of its workforce, and 1,500 contract workers because of the weak economy, the company said Wednesday. 

Sprint also said it would discontinue its money-losing voice and high-speed Internet unit, ION. 

The announcements came as Sprint, the nation’s third-largest long distance provider, reported lower third-quarter earnings and a loss for its PCS wireless division. 

The decision was based on “rapidly changing industry landscape and future funding requirements for the ION, especially in light of the economic slowdown and the uncertainty of the timing of the recovery,” William T. Esrey, Sprint’s chairman and chief executive officer, said in a statement. 

Additionally, Sprint said it will restructure various divisions and its fixed wireless services, which allows customers to operate wireless devices or systems in fixed locations such as homes and offices. 

Sprint, the nation’s third-largest long distance provider, hopes to save an estimated $1 billion annually starting in 2002 with the changes. 

Sprint employs 84,000 worldwide. About 14,500 of them are in the Kansas City area, where Sprint is the largest private employer. 

The company had held out on layoffs even as its telecommunications competitors shed about 225,000 workers. 

The Kansas City Star reported Wednesday that Sprint’s layoffs will be complete by mid-November. 

ION let customers connect to the Internet and simultaneously use one or more separate phones, all through a single phone line. 

The service was ballyhooed when it was announced in 1998, but “it just kind of fizzled,” said Tom Morabito, a telecom analyst with McDonald Investments in Cleveland. 

For the quarter ended Sept. 30, Sprint Corp. FON Group reported a 60 percent drop in earnings to $154 million, compared with $384 million the year before. 

Sprint PCS, the company’s wireless division, reported a loss of $288 million, or 29 cents per share, in the quarter, compared to a loss of $390 million, or 41 cents per share, a year ago. This quarter’s loss was wider, however, than the 22 cents expected by analysts. 

Even so, Sprint is in better shape than some other telecom companies, said Ramkrishna Kasargod, an analyst with Morgan Keegan & Co. in Memphis, Tenn. 

“They do have customers, they do have revenues,” Kasargod said.


Dot-com collapse, economic slump leaves glut of office space

By Dan Levy The Associated Press
Thursday October 18, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO — With millions of square feet in new office construction and few tenants in sight, San Francisco is facing a commercial real estate glut rivaling the excess development of the late 1980s. 

More than 3 million square feet of prime office space is under construction and scheduled for delivery within 12 to 18 months, according to brokers. Another 3 million square feet is approved for building in San Francisco but pending groundbreaking. 

That new space, combined with falling rents, high vacancies and a huge amount of sublease space, is spelling trouble for a market that fairly recently posted record rents and single-digit vacancies. 

“This is the highest vacancy in two decades, and millions of square feet of sublease space is hanging over the market and depressing rents,” said Margaret Duskin, a senior director at Cushman & Wakefield, a global real estate firm. “We’re all concerned at the lack of demand in office product.” 

Many of the new buildings coming online were planned during the dot-com boom and will apparently open up amid slumping demand for space. Developers, for their part, say they are continuing to build during the slower climate because city entitlements carry strict construction timetables. 

“We are going forward because the entitlements are structured in such a way that we have to go forward,” said Rob Paratte of Wilson Equity Office, which is building the 1.1 million-square-foot Foundry Square office complex. “Our view is that things will be very difficult, but it’s not going to get appreciably worse.” 

Foundry Square was intended to serve thousands of new tech workers. Technology giant Sun Microsystems preleased about 500,000 square feet, but brokers said that as much as half of that space will be dumped on the sublease market as soon as the buildings open. 

Developers of a number of other high-profile projects who were counting on the dot-com economy to provide tenants are also proceeding despite an uncertain future. 

The projects include a 155,000-square-foot building across from Pacific Bell Park, a 260,000-square-foot building on Potrero Hill and a 660,000-square-foot building in the south Financial District. 

The Financial District building was preleased by JP Morgan Chase, but that firm said it will put the space on the sublease market.  

Brokers said it illustrates the current dilemma facing companies that preleased space at high rents in a hot market. 

“The JP Morgan lease deal was done in a bold environment,” said Dan Cressman, managing director at real estate services firm Grubb & Ellis, which recently predicted a 25 percent vacancy rate in San Francisco by the middle of next year. “It was dot-com growth that fueled the increase in rental rate.” 

As of Oct. 1, the average Class A office rent in San Francisco was $43 per square foot, a stunning decrease from the record high of $80 last year. Average Class B rents have fallen to $30 per square foot from a record $68 last year. 

The last time the city endured such a glut was the late ’80s, a period that followed an intense political debate over downtown development. The excess office space produced by that boom took several years to fill. 

Experts said the spike in construction this time happened much more quickly, with normal business assumptions temporarily suspended. 

“Nobody looked at operating expenses,” said Paratte, referring to the headlong rush to find office space. “People focused on tying up space. Now it’s back to basics.” 

On the other hand, Cressman said the current market means it is a great time to be a tenant. 

“Ten years ago, the (downturn) occurred a lot more slowly,” he said. “We’re taking a big hit, but I think a lot of the empty space will be absorbed over time. You can view it as the sky is falling, or you can see the net of it all as greater opportunities for tenants.” 


AMD posts $186.9 million loss, meets expectations

By Matthew Fordahl The Associated Press
Thursday October 18, 2001

SAN JOSE — Advanced Micro Devices Inc. on Wednesday posted a third-quarter loss of $186.9 million as the chip maker suffered the effects of a price war with rival Intel Corp. 

For the three months ended Sept. 30, the company lost 54 cents a share, compared with a profit of $17.4 million, or 5 cents per share in the same period a year ago. 

Excluding one-time charges, the company lost $97 million, or 28 cents per share, compared with net earnings of $219 million, or 70 cents per share, a year ago. 

Analysts were expected a loss of 28 cents per share, according to a survey by Thomson Financial/First Call. 

Revenues fell 22 percent, to $765.9 million. Last year, AMD reported sales of $985.3 million. Analysts were expecting revenue of $779 million. 

Earlier this month, the Sunnyvale, Calif.-based company warned losses would be between $90 million and $110 million, or 26 cents to 31 cents per share.  

Prior to the warning, analysts were expecting a loss of 12 cents per share, excluding one-time charges. 

AMD says sales of its microprocessors are increasing, but its results are diminished by lower selling prices as it matches Intel’s price cuts on Pentium 4 processors. 

“AMD held market share in the 22 percent range in a very weak PC market made more difficult by our principal competitor’s efforts to halt our forward momentum,” said W. J. Sanders III, AMD’s chief executive. 

Sanders claims Intel resorted to the price cuts to make up for performance deficiencies of its processors. Intel says it’s passing on savings from more its more efficient production. 

Shares of AMD closed down 90 cents to $9.71 in Wednesday trading on the Nasdaq Stock Market before the earnings release. In after-hours trading, shares lost 6 cents. 

——— 

On the Net: 

AMD: http://www.amd.com 


Apple Inc.’s profits drop by 61 percent

By May Wong The Associated Press
Thursday October 18, 2001

CUPERTINO — Apple Computer Inc. reported a 61 percent drop in fourth-quarter profits Wednesday, beating Wall Street’s expectations. But the company warned of a shortfall in profits and revenues in its fiscal first quarter. 

Shares of Apple fell $1.02, or 5.6 percent, to $16.99 on the Nasdaq Stock Market ahead of the report. The stock was off 35 cents in after-hours trading. 

For the three months ended Sept. 29, the Cupertino-based company reported net income of $66 million, or 19 cents per share — compared with $170 million, or 47 cents a share, in the year-ago quarter. 

Excluding a one-time investment gain, the company earned $65 million, or 18 cents per share. Wall Street analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial/First Call predicted earnings of 16 cents per share. 

Revenue for the quarter reached $1.45 billion, down 22 percent from the year-ago period. 

Revenue in the first quarter is expected to be flat at about $1.4 billion and earnings per share are now expected to fall to 10 cents per share, Apple said. Thomson Financial/First Call estimates were for earnings of 18 cents per share on revenue of $1.6 billion. 

For the year, Apple reported losing $25 million on revenues of $5.36 billion. In 2000, the company earned $786 million, or $2.18 per share, on revenues of $7.98 billion. 

Seeing no upturn in the slumping personal computer market, Apple officials in July lowered their fiscal year revenue expectations to about $3 billion from a range of $3.2 billion to $3.4 billion. 

The personal computer has been struggling with the economic slowdown. Market researcher International Data Corp. has lowered its annual forecasts several times this year and predicts global shipments of PCs to decline in 2001 by 1.6 percent to about 130 million units. A recovery isn’t expected until 2003. 

Despite the industry’s gloomy performance, Apple is forging ahead with product rollouts and upgrades. Tuesday, the company beefed up its iBook and PowerBook G4 mobile laptops, adding faster processors, bigger hard drives and wireless networking features. The company kept prices the same. 

Next week, Apple said it will announce a new digital device — “not a Mac” — but won’t give any more details. 

——— 

On the Net: 

http://www.apple.com 


Out & About

Staff
Wednesday October 17, 2001

Wednesday, Oct. 17 

Prose Writers’ Workshop 

7 - 9 p.m. 

Berkeley/Richmond Jewish Community Center Library 

1414 Walnut St.  

From Op-ed to fiction, memoir to the feature article - a community 

writers' group to support and encourage a community of interests. Workshop format. Free. 524-3034 

 

Golden Age Party 

1:30 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

Party for the over 90 club and any who wish to attend. Swing Notes, a women’s acappela group will entertain and there will be refreshments. 

 

Toddler Storytime 

7 p.m. 

West Berkeley Library 

1125 University Ave. 

For families with children three years or younger, a program to expose the youngest readers to multicultural stories, songs and finger plays. 

Every Wednesday through Nov. 28. 

 

Conversation: Rosemary  

Radford Reuther and Carolyn  

Merchant 

5:30 - 8 p.m. 

#1 LeConte Building, UC Berkeley 

“Women, Religion, Science, and the Environment.” 649-2490 

 

Thursday, Oct. 18  

 

Simplicity Forum 

7 - 8:30 p.m. 

Claremont Branch Library 

2940 Benvenue Ave. 

Cecile Andrews, author of Circles of Simplicity, Return to the Good Life, speaks on “Rekindling Conversation.” 549-3509 www.seedsofsimplicity.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 

 

Friday, Oct. 19 

Cooperative Center Federal  

Credit Union 

Grand Opening Celebration 

4 - 7 p.m. 

2001 Ashby Ave. 

A family affair with food, entertainment and a special treat for the kids. Congresswoman Barbara Lee, Honorary Chairperson is scheduled to attend. Faith Fancher is the Mistress of Ceremonies. 415-346-0199 

 

YAP’s FNL Teen Club: “Pop  

Ya Colla! Dance” 

7 -11 p.m. 

1730 Oregon St. 

Young Adult Project presents dance for 13 to 18 year olds only. Must have B.U.S.D. I.D. “No haters, no problems.” 644-6226 

 

Saturday, Oct. 20 

Earthquake Retrofitting 

10 a.m. - 5 p.m. 

Office of Emergency Services 

812 Page St.  

Free classes in Community Emergency Response Training (CERT). 981-5605 www.ci.berkeley.ca.us 

 

BART Job Fair 

9 a.m. - 3 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

BART will be recruiting to fill approximately 160 jobs that week be opening up next year. The jobs to be filled are in accounting, planing, engineering, insurance, purchasing, police, maintenance and electronics. 

 

Sunday, Oct. 21 

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 

 

Halloween Magic 

1 - 2 p.m. 

Berkeley Richmond JCC Auditorium 

1414 Walnut St.  

Los Angeles Magician and Comedian “Hotei the Magic Guy.” For kids 2 through 12 and their parents. $7. 236-7469 www.thebuddyclub.com 

 

Berkeley Architectural Heritage Fall House Tour 

1 - 5 p.m. 

St. Clement’s Episcopal Church 

Claremont Blvd. & Russell St.  

This year’s tour “Around the Claremont Hotel” features 10 houses in the historic neighborhood of residences and gardens that surround the landscaped park of the hotel. There will be a reception at one of the houses. $30. 845-8507 

 

 

 

– compiled by Guy Poole 

 

 

 


Forum

Staff
Wednesday October 17, 2001

Proud to be a citizen of Berkeley 

 

Editor: 

I am troubled by local reaction to Dona Spring’s alleged statement comparing the actions of our federal government to those of a terrorist state. I find it troubling that the response from mainstream media might intimidate a public figure from speaking the truth as she sees it.  

I am troubled that other elected officials exploit the situation to embarrass a colleague. I am troubled that our mayor is embarrassed by the words of our elected leaders who speak from the conviction of their moral conscience. 

What makes Berkeley a beacon throughout this country is its historical willingness to challenge mainstream posturing that perpetuates national arrogance and self-righteousness.  

If leaders and citizens of Berkeley fail to hold up the mirror of accountability, where else in the United States will people ask the hard questions? 

Our mayor continues to remind us that this is not the 60’s. I agree; we have lost the innocence of the 60’s. But hopefully we have gained wisdom to recognize a familiar path our country has tread too many times in the past four decades. Whether Dona Spring said it or not, many of us who examine the evidence recognize this country’s acts of terrorism against innocent civilians in the Middle East and in other third world countries. 

I am troubled by a reported statement that suggests the mayor of Berkeley is embarrassed by our most valuable characteristics – our moral conscience and our willingness to stand up for it. That Barbara Lee and Dona Spring draw attention to our city because they speak from moral conscience brings pride to our city.  

At times throughout my adult life I have traveled outside the United States – in Europe, during two Republican administrations’ bombing of Libya and Iraq, and again while a Democratic administration bombed Kosovo. At those times I was ashamed to admit I was from the United States; I have never been ashamed to say I am from Berkeley. 

 

Pamela Webster 

Berkeley 

 

 

Blame bin Laden for death of civilians 

 

The Daily Planet received the following letter addressed to Councilmember Dona Spring: 

While you have a right to your opinion, I do not believe you have a right to inflict your opinion on the city and citizens of Berkeley as an elected representative. Have you consulted with the people of Berkeley as to their opinions on the U.S. war on terrorism? 

There comes a time when talk and coalitions cease to be effective. The terrorist acts upon the United States were unmerciful, violent attempts to destroy our country by destroying our freedoms. No terrorist involved cared about the lives they ended and the many more lives that they have tragically affected forever. No, the majority of the citizens of Afghanistan are not responsible for Sept. 11 or what terror may come to the United States. And no, they should not have to die because of what some of their countryman did.  

But it is not the United States killing Afghan civilians. It is Osma bin Laden and his organization who are killing them. (Why would we be bombing Afghanistan if it weren’t for bin Laden?) I think they want to get rid of bin Laden almost as much as we do. You have to understand – bin Laden et.al. do not comprehend diplomacy. They do not want to solve anything peacefully. The man is using his religion as a front for his evil. He is not capable of compromise or working toward a common goal unless that goal is to tear down the United States. At the same time he denounces our “system,” he uses that same system for profit to fund his campaign against us. By the way, do you really think he or members of his organization would ever keep their diplomatic word? Come now. 

What you are asking the city manager and ultimately the people of Berkeley to do is to join bin Laden’s side–work to divide our country instead of being the kind of patriots our Founding Fathers were and support our president. Does “Give me Liberty or give me death” ring a (Liberty) bell? I think you should reevaluate what you are in office to do, how you were even afforded the opportunity to hold office via our government structure and uphold the Constitution of the United States instead of work to tear it down. 

 

Becky Kaiser 

Bakersfield  

 

Follow the money 

 

Editor: 

While all the news reporters watch and report on every bright flash of light, every loud explosion, why aren’t they covering, with equal ferocity, the war on terrorist finances?  

Like any organization, the far-flung network of terrorists needs money to function. Who is reporting and watching whether our government is going after their stock accounts, banks, and trading companies with an equal ferocity that we launch jets with big bombs? 

The terrorists hit the World Trade Center because it is a symbol of the global economy. So, let’s give them what they want, let’s unplug them from their money. 

Responsible journalism should keep watch that Bush’s war on terrorism is being fought where the action is, and not just focus on watching rubble bounce. Afghanistan is a side show, how about reporting on the Main Event? 

 

Bruce Joffe 

Piedmont 

 

 

International law should rule 

 

Editor: 

We killed the messenger of bad news and learned very little from his message; certainly not enough to prevent what happened on Sept. 11, 2000.  

He was a U.S. combat-veteran awarded for bravery in action, who bombed a federal government building in Oklahoma City in protest against his government’s action in Waco, Texas, when it killed 80 men, women and children in the Davidian community that was not threatening our national security in any way requiring their obliteration. 

We should have learned then that we needed to mend our ways and stop trying to dominate the world with our super military might. 

I believe the sponsors of the multiple murders and massive destructive actions in New York, Washington, D.C. (actually Arlington, Virginia) and Pennsylvania, must be identified and arrested by United Nations action since all of its members have declared themselves opposed to barbarism and terrorism, and we should add: militarism (namely war-waging and preparations for the same, to which the 1945 U.N. Charter refers as a “scourge” from which “succeeding generations should be saved”): I repeat: action that consists in and amounts to effective global police action, as noted above. 

Timothy McVeigh took the law into his own hands and made a terrible mistake for which he paid with his own life. No person nor gang of persons, nor a single nation or gang of nations, should make that mistake and risk the lives of the world’s people and their ways of life in so doing.  

The 9/11 killers self-destructed. Arresting the sponsors requires super global police action by the United Nations. 

 

Alfred C. Williams 

Member, World Community Advocates, 

Unitarian Universalist Center,  

San Francisco 


Award-winning author tours life, death and history

By Maryann Maslan Special to the Daily Planet
Wednesday October 17, 2001

The collective heartbeat, tears and history of America were never better exemplified until Monday night at Zellerbach, when a near-capacity crowd listened, laughed and paused silently in communal empathy with the words and reminiscences of Pulitzer Prize-winning author Studs Terkel. 

“I'm getting as deaf as a post just like Rush Limbaugh and it couldn't happen to two nicer guys,” said Terkel. 

“And that's the only thing they have in common,” added host Orville Schell, dean of UC Berkeley School of Journalism. 

Spending an evening with Terkel is a tour of contemporary American history through the stories of the people who lived it. He has written over a dozen books ranging from “The Giants of Jazz” (1957) to his Pulitzer Prize-winning “The Good War” (1985) and “Working” (1974), each one exploring a different theme. 

“We as a country have a national Alzheimer's disease,” said Terkel. “The only hope is if we have a memory of the past through the eyes of ordinary people.” 

With 89 years of ageless wit and wisdom, he records the oral history of the famous and the not so famous. In his latest book, “Will the Circle be Unbroken? Reflections on Death, Rebirth and Hunger for a Faith” (New Press), he listens to the stories of death and the life surrounding it as told by doctors, veterans, singers, AIDS victims and the people he calls “ordinary heroes.” 

Exploring how Americans live with death was an idea suggested to him by Gore Vidal more than 25 years ago over martinis. At the time, Terkel admitted, all he could see was the olive or lemon peel in the martini, not the subject for a book.  

He felt differently after his wife of 60 years died in 1989. 

Reflecting on his new book he said: “This is therapy for me; palliative beyond description. 

“The irony is that ‘Death’ is the liveliest book I've written.”  

Terkel entertained and moved the Zellerbach audience with stories from the book.  

He responded to questions by Schell and co-panelist Peter Coyote, an author and actor, with a series of stories from his other works and his colorful life. 

Terkel is a graduate of the University of Chicago with degrees in philosophy and law. His varied career includes a 45-year stint at WFMT-FM in Chicago as a music show host. This gig led to interviewing artists and gathering material for his first book. He also played gangsters on Chicago soaps. In 1950, he started a television show at NBC called “Stud's Place,” but was eventually let go because of his political views. 

“I never saw a petition I didn't like,” he said, recalling the Senator McCarthy era. “All I had to say was that I was stupid, that I had been duped into signing the anti-Jim Crow petitions, but my ego and vanity were at stake.” 

With America at war again in 2001, he was asked to compare his generation, which experienced the depression and World War II, with following generations. Calling the 1960s a great generation because they looked outside themselves to the civil rights and peace movements, he then asked what have “we” learned. 

“We are hungry for something, a kind of immortality. If we reach someone and he in turn reaches someone else, that gives us solace,” he said. 

Sharing his thoughts about his next book, “Hope,” he gave the audience the promise of another guidebook to help us remember our past. 

"I may not finish it," he smiled, "but it makes the journey go faster."


Arts

Staff
Wednesday October 17, 2001

 

“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 

 

“Swanwhite” Through Oct. 21: Thur. - Sat., 8 p.m., Sun. 7 p.m. A new translation of the Swedish Play that asks the question what good is romantic love, directed by Tom Clyde. $20, Sundays are “Pay What You Can”. Transparent Theater, 1901 Ashby Ave. 883-0305, www.virtuous.com 

 

“Orestes” Through Oct. 21: Fri. - Sat., 8 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m. An adaptation of the classical play by Euripides that incorporates passages inspired or taken from various 20th century texts. Written by Charles Mee, Directed by Christopher Herold. $6-12. Zellerbach Playhouse on the UC Berkeley campus 642-8268 

“Approach” Through Oct. 27: Thur. - Sat., 8 p.m. An examination of the search for intimacy as our most precious form of survival. Written by Susan Wiegand, Directed by Katie Bales Frassinelli. $15 general admission, $10 students and seniors. Eighth Street Studio Theatre, 2525 8th St. 655-0813 www.shotgunplayers.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 

 

“Nocturne” Through Nov. 11: Tues./Thurs./Sat. 8 p.m., Weds. & Sun. 7 p.m, matinee on Thurs./Sat./Sun. 2 p.m. Mark Brokaw directs Anthony Rapp in One-Man Show. Written by Adam Rapp. $38 - $54. Berkeley Repertory’s Thrust Stage, 2025 Addison St. 647-2949 www.berkeleyrep.org 

 

“Travesties” Through Nov. 17: Fri. - Sat., 8 p.m., and Thurs., Nov. 15, 8 p.m. A witty fantasy about James Joyce meeting Lenin in Zurich during World War I. Written by Tom Stoppard, Directed by Mikel Clifford. $10. Live Oak Theatre, 1301 Shattuck. 528-5620 

 

 

 

“Lisa Picard is Famous” Through Oct. 19: Documentary chronicles New York actress who hopes to get more than a fleeting taste of fame when a racy cereal commercial brings her unexpected national notoriety. Shattuck Cinemas, 2230 Shattuck Ave. 843-3456 

 

“Loaded Visions” Oct. 17: 8 p.m. Experimental short films by Antero Alli (Eight Videopoems and “Lilly in Limbo,” plus live music from Sylvi Alli). $5 - $10 sliding scale. La Pena Cultural Center, 3105 Shattuck Ave. 464-4640 www.verticalpool.com 

 

Pacific Film Archive Theater Oct. 15: 7 p.m., Genesis; Oct. 16: 7:30 p.m., La Région centrale; Oct. 17: 7:30 p.m., Video in the Villages and Amazonian Trilogy; Oct. 19: 7:30 p.m., Jungle Secrets, Yãkwa; Oct. 20: 3:30 p.m., Berkeley High/Bay Area Film Festival; 7 p.m., The Testament of Dr. Mabuse; 9:20 p.m., The Thousand Eyes of Dr. Mabuse; Oct. 21: 3:30 p.m., Kiss and Film, 5:30 p.m., Harakiri; Oct. 22: 7 p.m., The Closed Doors; Oct. 23: 7:30 p.m., Super-8mm Films by Theresa Cha; Oct. 24: 7:30 p.m., The Rainy Season and Wai’a Rini; Oct. 26: 7:30 p.m., The Passion of Joan of Arc, 9:15 p.m., Vivre sa Vie; Oct 27: 7 p.m., New Music for Silent Films by UCB Composers; Oct. 28: 5:30 p.m., Vampyr; Oct. 29: 7 p.m., A Time for Drunken Horses; Oct. 30: 7:30 p.m., An Evening with Leslie Thornton; Oct. 31: 7:30 p.m., 9:20 p.m., Saudade do Futuro. 

2575 Bancroft Way, 642-1124 www.bampfa.berkeley.edu 

 

Exhibits 

 

 

“First Annual Art Show” UC Berkeley Life Drawing Group Reception, Oct. 20: 3 p.m.; Oct. 21- 26: 7 - 10 p.m. Figure studies from the workshops at UC Berkeley. 1014 60th St., Emeryville. 923-0689 

 

“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  

 

“Cut Plates and Bowls” Annabeth Rosen, “Just Jars” Sandy Simon Through Nov. 3; Saturdays 10 - 5 or by appointment. Trax Ceramic Gallery, 1306 3rd St. 526-0279. cone5@aol.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. Mon. - Fri. 8 a.m. - 6 p.m. U.C. Berkeley, Graduate School of Journalism, North Gate Hall, Hearst and Euclid. Free. 642-3383 

 

“Jesus, This is Your Life - Stories and Pictures by Kids” Through Nov. 16: California children, ages four through twelve, from diverse backgrounds present original artwork, accompanied by a story written by the artist. “Cleve Gray, Holocaust Drawings” Oct. 15 through Jan. 25: 21 works on paper inviting the viewer to consider the atrocity of the Holocaust in ways unattainable through words or text. Mon. - Thur. 8:30 a.m. -10 p.m., Fri. 8:30 a.m. - 6 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m. - 6 p.m., Sun. 12 p.m. - 7 p.m. Flora Lamson Hewlett Library, 2400 Ridge Rd. 649-2541. 

 

“Changing the World, Building New Lives: 1970s photographs of Lesbians, Feminists, Union Women, Disability Activists and their Supporters” 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. 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 

 

“2001 James D. Phelan Art Awards in Printmaking” Honorees: Bridget Henry, David Kelso, and Margaret Van Patten. Oct. 19 - Nov. 30 Tues. - Fri. noon - 5 p.m., other times by appointment. Kala Art Institue, 1060 Heinz Ave. 549-2977 www.kala.org 

 

“The Whole World’s Watching: Peace and Social Justice Movements of the 1960s and 1970s” Through Dec. 16: A documentary photo exhibition which examines the rich history of the social movements of the 1960s and 1970s. 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 Oct. 18: Patricia Nell Warren reads from her novel “The Wild Man”, Oct. 22: J.M. Redmann reads from “Death By the Riverside”; 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 Oct 18: Tamora Pierce talks about “Protector of the Small”; 1730 Fourth St. 559-9500 

 

Cody’s on Telegraph Ave. Oct 15: Amir Aczel poses The Riddle of the Compass: The Invention That Changed the World; Oct 16: Kip Fulbeck talks about “Paper Bullets”; Oct 18: Suzanne Antoneta & micah Perks talk about “Body Toxic: An Environmental Memoir” and “Pagan Time: An American Childhood; All shows at 7:30 p.m.; 2454 Telegraph Ave. 845-7852 

 

Coffee Mill Poetry Series Oct. 16: 7 - 9 p.m. Steve Arntsen and Kathleen Dunbar followed by open mike reading. 3363 Grand Ave., Oakland 465-3935 ksdgk@earthlink.net 

 

Eastwind Books of Berkeley Oct. 20: Miriam Ching Louie reads from “Sweatshop Warriors: Immigrant Women Workers Take on the Global Factory”; 2066 University Ave. 548-2350 

 

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.  

 

University of California Berkeley Art Museum Pacific Film Archive has reopened after its summerlong 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. 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  

 

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


Local firefighter recounts FEMA experience in New York debris

By Darren Bobrosky
Wednesday October 17, 2001

Apparatus Operator Darren Bobrosky, of Berkeley’s Fire Station 5, recently returned from a 10-day stint as a rescue worker in Lower Manhattan. Bobrosky and his partner, Dylan, a highly-trained search and rescue dog, are affiliated with Oakland’s Urban Search and Rescue team, one of the 28 FEMA-affiliated USAR teams nationwide. Following is Bobrosky’s story, edited by Daily Planet reporter Hank Sims.  

This is the first of a two part series. Look for the second part in Thursday’s edition. 

 

I was here at the firehouse when we got the word. We all got up at 8 o’clock that morning, the 11th, and we were watching what was going on. They paged me at about 8:30 and said, “You’re on standby. Do you have your stuff together?” 

I got a number of other calls that day, asking about my status. The state Office of Emergency Services called me, a fire chief from Sacramento called, the USAR team manager from Oakland called – they were just checking and double-checking the members to see if they were available and ready to go.  

I normally keep a 10-day supply of food for Dylan and supplies for myself in my truck at all times anyway, so we’re always ready. We are supposed to have a two-hour response time to get to our rendezvous point in Oakland, so that’s no problem. 

But then we got put on standby, and then we were told to stand down. Then again – standby, stand down, all throughout the two weeks we were ready to go. It was terrible. I had a few chances to go with the Sacramento team, but I was fifth on their roster. One guy couldn’t go, and they couldn’t get ahold of another one, but then it didn’t happen. 

I knew I would get to go with Oakland – that’s the team I’m assigned to – but since there aren’t enough dogs to go around, they send whatever dogs they need with whatever teams go out. So we can cross over to other teams, whereas other members – the engineers, or the logistics people – don’t. 

I was concerned that if they wait and don’t send us until late in the game, we wouldn’t go at all. Generally, the dogs are not required to be certified as cadaver search dogs. I do train Dylan with cadavers whenever possible, just so I know his reaction, but they are primarily live-find dogs. 

It was hard to get solid information, even at the task-force leader level. I’ve got things going on in my life – I was trying to maneuver things around, get things squared away. My wife’s birthday was October 8th, so I was hoping to be back by then. 

They finally activated us on the 26th. We met at Oakland two o’clock the next afternoon. They bussed us out to Travis Air Force Base at 5:30, and we waited at Travis until midnight. Then they flew us to McGuire Air Force Base in New Jersey. 

We took another bus into New York, and got our accommodations set up. They put us up in the Javits Convention Center. Usually they try to give you that first day off as a rest period, so you can get your bearings. They took us out to the pile the next morning. 

It was bigger than I thought it would be. I’d seen it on TV a few times. When you initially saw it on TV, you saw everything from a distance, from ground level. It looked pretty amazing, but you couldn’t get a feel for it. Then they took it to another level when they let the helicopters fly over. From the top, you could see that it was huge. 

But you don’t get the true sense of it until you get right up to it, or right in it, and you see people 200 or 300 feet from you that look like ants compared to the structure they’re looking at.  

When you tour some of the buildings around the perimeter, you see how much destruction and debris hit the building that surrounded the towers.  

The concrete was turned into powder. That was another problem we had with searching and digging through the rubble. We train in rubble all the time, pieces the size of a picnic table down to pieces the size of bricks. This pile looked like steel with dirt thrown on top of it. All that concrete just became dust.  

There were areas you could see around the fringes that looked like the rubble we’re used to seeing – broken-up concrete like a recycling plant would have, or a small, recently-demolished building. This one, though, it came down with such force that it pulverized concrete and twisted those big I-beams in half.  

They split our team in half. The next day, the New York City fire department asked us to cover for their Collapsed Structure Response Unit, up in Queens. They had lost all the guys from that unit in the rubble. Since we were collapsed structure specialists, basically, they had us cover. The other half of our team went to the pile. 

USAR teams are designed to split in half. One half takes the first 12-hour shift, the other half the second. Once we got there, we found out that we weren’t going to be working 24 hours a day. So we switched to day shifts only, and half of us went to Queens first. 

We were in Queens for two and a half days. It was away from all the action, but it was nice – very relaxed and peaceful. You could get sleep up there, which you couldn’t do in the Convention Center. The dogs had a park to play in. 

But knowing that we had things to do back in Manhattan, we were tense about being up there. We didn’t want to be there, we wanted to be back working on the pile.  

Knowing that we were doing a service for the fire department in New York made us feel better. They asked us to help, and cover that area for them. We were doing something, even if it wasn’t what we were planning to do originally. Their Collapsed Structure Response Unit deals with 150 collapsed buildings a year, but we never got called. 

We were staying in the officers’ quarters at an Army base. We had one New York fireman with us, who was going to be our liaison if we ever got a call. We didn’t know the city, so were going to have to follow him. We had three trucks full of gear that we would bring, so we would go in a convoy if we got any type of call. 

He was the only fireman we talked to up there. But as we got more involved with the pile, at Ground Zero, we started to talking to more guys. They were happy to see us there. They knew what we could do, and that we weren’t there to take over from them or anything. They were in charge of the rubble, and they wanted to get their people out. That was their deal.


Berkeley High principal to leave immediately

By Jeffrey ObserDaily Planet staff
Wednesday October 17, 2001

Berkeley High School’s now ex-principal, Frank Lynch, wasted no time in hitting the road. In an e-mail sent Monday to Parent Teacher Student Association President Joan Edelstein, Lynch wrote: “Wednesday is my official last day.”  

On Tuesday, some officials had assumed he would be around until Nov. 1. Now the question looms of who will run the high school beginning Thursday. 

“I didn’t get the impression that the transition to a new administrative model at Berkeley High was going to take place as early as tomorrow,” said Terry Doran, the school board president.  

The board and Superintendent Michele Lawrence will discuss the matter at Wednesday’s school board meeting, Doran added.  

Lynch accepted the superintendent post in the Del Norte County Unified School District late last week.  

Lawrence sent an e-mail to the Berkeley High community Monday to announce his departure and reassure parents. It said Lynch would leave “by Nov. 1.” 

“Parents are very upset,” Edelstein said. “They finally after a year got used to having a new principal. There was a lot of questioning when he came whether he was really committed to Berkeley, because he wasn’t moving into Berkeley.” 

Lynch lives in Petaluma. 

“The professional thing to do would be not to depart until a replacement was identified,” said Bob Epstein, parent of a Berkeley High sophomore and senior, “otherwise he would leave the school at a needless risk.” 

“A lot of parents have said to me in e-mails that there has been so much stress and anxiety since the Sept. 11 events, that to add to the disruption only causes even worse anxiety,” Edelstein said. “What they really want is some normalcy and continuity in their kids’ lives, and they need reassurance that this is going to be happening.” 

Edelstein also said some parents she had spoken to wondered why the district had kept Lynch’s possible departure under wraps. 

“He was really working on establishing a relationship, and parents were finally starting to feel comfortable,” she said. “It came as a big shock, and it seemed that it had been kept as a secret rather than helping to prepare the parents for a potential transition.” 

Doran said keeping Lynch’s job search quiet was not unusual. He pointed to former superintendent Jack McLaughlin, who was asked to apply for “many jobs.”  

“If every time he was asked to apply for a job, we made that a public announcement, it really would have hurt his ability to be an effective superintendent while he was here,” Doran said. “It didn’t serve any purpose whatsoever.” 

In her Monday e-mail, Lawrence stated a desire to move on. 

“While we could debate the merits of his leaving just now, and the District’s legal right to retain him, I see only harm in that discussion,” Lawrence wrote.  

Outlining the steps she saw the administration taking in response to Lynch’s departure, Lawrence wrote of the need to “examine the entire staffing allocation and current administrative assignments” and possibly add more personnel in spite of budget constraints. She pointed to time-consuming disciplinary burdens as one impediment to retaining teachers and administrators. 

Acknowledging the need for more consistency and stability, the superintendent called for better decision-making procedures and asked for parents’ patience. 

“I remain steadfast in my commitment to make the school and District one of the best in the nation... It’s just going to take some time,” she wrote. 

Lawrence’s e-mail also announced that officials of the Western Association of Schools and Colleges might allow the district some wiggle room in its ongoing struggle to meet accreditation deadlines. 

Last spring, WASC gave Berkeley High until next fall to upgrade its performance and accountability or lose its standing. 

“I’ve had a long term relationship with WASC so I believe they were willing to entertain alternative solutions to our current dilemma,” she wrote. “We reached agreement on some compromise. While the accreditation will not be canceled or postponed it can be modified and packaged in a way to help us meet a more realistic time line.” 


More than a year away, the mayor’s race begins

By John Geluardi Daily Planet staff
Wednesday October 17, 2001

The recent increase in hostility, posturing and backbiting between the two City Council factions could be the first stirrings of a mayoral election that is still more than a year away. 

Some council watchers say the sharp rhetoric, which has characterized recent council debates between progressives and moderates over redistricting and an anti-U. S. bombing resolution is a sign that incumbents are wrangling for advantage over potential challengers in the November 2002 elections. 

Moderate Mayor Shirley Dean said last week she would run for a third term. Progressive Councilmember Linda Maio may be another likely candidate, although she has not publicly stated she will challenge Dean. 

So far Dean, who will be 67 next month, is the only elected official on the council who has announced a re-election campaign, although she isn’t saying much else other than she is confident she will win.  

“Yes I am running, but I haven’t made any campaign plans yet and haven’t given any thought to what the issues will be.” she said. “I’m totally confident but I’m going to run hard because that’s the way I am.” 

Dean’s unofficial announcement ends any speculation that she was planning a bid for Dion Aroner’s State Assembly seat. Aroner will be ousted by term limits in November 2002. 

Maio, 58, will not admit she’s a candidate for mayor, but one can hear the echoes of political barnstorming when she talks about the coming election. 

“The city needs new leadership,” Maio said. “The city needs to be worked on, not superficial work, I mean really worked on.” 

One reason for Maio’s reluctance to announce her bid for mayor might be that she will have to give up her seat on the City Council. According to the city clerk, incumbents cannot run for two seats at the same time. Maio’s seat as representative of District 1 will also be on the ballot next year. 

Other councilmembers up for re-election are progressive councilmembers Dona Spring and Kriss Worthington in districts 4 and 7 and moderate Councilmember Polly Armstrong in District 8. Currently, the council’s five progressives hold a slim majority on the nine-member council.  

Another issue for potential mayoral candidates to consider is money. Mayoral elections in Berkeley are expensive. According to city campaign records, Dean spent nearly $200,000 on her campaign in 1998. That’s no small amount when the Berkeley Election Reform Act limits political contributions to $250 per person.  

Dean, who has traditionally enjoyed the support of property owners, developers and business interests, said she is not worried about raising money for the campaign.  

“I’ve never had a problem raising money,” she said. 

On the other hand, Maio said progressives have a tougher time filling their campaign coffers. But she said progressive supporters make up for money shortages with devotion and enthusiasm. 

“Progressives are the ones who will roll up their sleeves and go door to door, block to block in a walking–talking campaign,” she said.  

Maio said a potential campaign issue might be development, especially in the western part of town, which has seen thousands of square-feet of small manufacturing and artisan space converted to offices. 

“Artists, musicians and crafts people are the life’s blood of Berkeley,” Maio said. “We received a wake-up call from San Francisco where they lost so many artists and nonprofits because development overran them. We have to see how we can keep these people in Berkeley.” 

Dean said a staff report describes claims of offices taking over west Berkeley exaggerated. She added that it would be hard to run against her record as a supporter of the arts. Dean pointed to her work in establishing the Downtown Arts District and the West Berkeley Artisan District. 

“If Councilmember Maio makes a bid for mayor, then I’m sure we’ll discuss all of these issues and discuss them at length,” Dean said.


Council condemns terrorists, mourns loss in resolution

By Judith Scherr and John Geluardi Daily Planet staff
Wednesday October 17, 2001

In a resolution that was, perhaps, the first like it in the nation, the Berkeley City Council passed a resolution Tuesday, mourning the loss of those who died in the Sept. 11 attacks, condemning the attackers and calling on elected representatives to minimize the risk to American military personnel while avoiding actions that could endanger the lives of innocent people in Afghanistan. 

A divided council debated the issue before a packed council chambers, with most of the audience in support of the resolution and some 20 apparently opposed. 

Councilmember Polly Armstrong tried to counter the motion, authored by Councilmember Dona Spring, and put forward a resolution to support the president and honor his bringing together a coalition of 60 countries to fight terrorism. This resolution was defeated. 

Comments from the public mostly reflected support for the main council motion. Ann Fagen Ginger from the Meiklejohn Institute made a point that the fight against terrorists should be confined to international law. Barbara Lubin from the Middle East Children’s Alliance called on the council to support a cessation of the bombing.  

“I have seen the result of American bombing on starving Iraqi children,” she said. 

Eric Skidmore was one of those supporting the attacks on Afghanistan. He is part of United Students for America, a group formed on the UC Berkeley campus soon after Sept. 11 to provide a counter voice to the anti-war sentiment on campus.  

“To approve this recommendation will not only make Berkeley a laughing stock, but will misrepresent most Berkeley citizens,” he said. “There are many people (in Berkeley) who support America.”  

While Councilmember Betty Olds, a member of the moderate council faction, talked about the difficulty of responding to the terrorists “who do not value human lives.”  

Councilmember Polly Armstrong, also a moderate, said those supporting the resolution cause the city to appear out of step.  

“Instead of a thoughtful city, we come across as a bunch of nuts,” she said, condemning the progressives. 

Speaking in favor of the resolution, Councilmember Kriss Worthington pointed to the “damage and destruction (the United States) has caused in Afghanistan” and said he would not give in to the pressure to “sit down and shut up” on the question. 

“The loss of lives is horrifying,” said Councilmember Linda Maio, arguing that terrorism can be overcome by changing policies that cause others in the world to hate the United States. “We can overcome terror by making it irrelevant,” she said. 

The main motion, which was approved, was broken up into various parts: 

• Dean and the five progressives – councilmembers Worthington, Spring, Margaret Breland, and Linda Maio and Vice Mayor Maudelle Shirek voted in favor of expressing grief at the atrocities and honoring “the valiant firefighter and police...and our military personnel now engaged in Afghanistan.” 

• Dean also supported the progressives in calling for a national campaign to lessen dependence on oil from the Middle East and to commit to using renewable energy sources. 

• The council split 5-4 – progressives voting in favor and moderates abstaining – on calling for an quick conclusion to the bombing and avoiding actions that could endanger civilian lives in Afghanistan and U.S. military lives; on calling for an international body to bring the terrorists to justice; and on “addressing and overcoming those conditions such as poverty, malnutrition, disease, oppression and subjugation that tend to drive desperate people to acts of terrorism.”


Maintenance director to leave school district end of October

Planet staff
Wednesday October 17, 2001

Fresh on the heels of Berkeley High principal Frank Lynch’s abrupt departure, another key figure in the district administration announced Monday he would resign. 

Gene Le Fevre, the district’s maintenance director, will leave his post at the end of October, Superintendent Michele Lawrence said Tuesday.  

Le Fevre has worked in Berkeley for over two years, working on an interim basis for his first several months. He took over from Harvey Delorum, who left the district after only eight months to direct maintenance at Sonoma State University. Le Fevre could not be reached for comment Tuesday. 

The resignation comes just as Lawrence has created a new structure for the maintenance department. The school board is slated to vote on the plan at its meeting Wednesday evening.


BART union rejects management offer, could strike Monday

The Associated Press
Wednesday October 17, 2001

OAKLAND — The small union that represents BART train controllers and supervisors rejected an offer from BART management Monday, which could trigger a strike early next week that would strand more than 300,000 commuters. 

The one-week delay is meant to give BART and the union time to reconvene the so-called Labor Day Committee, a seven-member team of Bay Area elected officials who helped broker a deal with the transit agency’s two largest unions in September. 

The 238-member American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Local 3993 voted 130-43 to reject the contract offer that’s largely similar to those won in September by the 2,500-member Service Employees International and Amalgamated Transit Unions. 

Those contracts call for a 22 percent wage increases over the next four years, continued health care coverage at no added cost to employees and increased pension plan contributions. 

“Please, let’s get back to the table and settle our issues,” said Norma del Mercado, president of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Local 3993. “Let’s avoid a strike. Nobody wants a strike.” 

While union leaders supported continuing negotiations, BART managers said their offer is final. 

BART General Manager Tom Margro said the system would be willing to meet with AFSCME negotiators, but would not improve its offer. 

“Our position is we have a best and final offer out there,” he said. 

BART spokesman Mike Healy said trains would run even if Local 3993 rejects the contract next week, though with possibly disruptions or delays. 

Leaders at Service Employees International Union and Amalgamated Transit Union say their members will not cross the picket line. Privately, however, they say fears of a recession could make it hard for many workers to give up their paychecks.


SFO public parking lot a ‘has-been’

The Associated Press
Wednesday October 17, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO — San Francisco International Airport officials announced Tuesday that a parking lot that has been used for years as a public viewing area will be closed. 

The lot, which also serves as a staging area for buses, limos and door-to-door vans waiting to be called to a terminal, will be closed for an indefinite period starting Wednesday morning because of security concerns. 

The lot, which is located close to a departure runway at the southern end of the airport, has been a popular spot for plane-watchers for years. 

“A lot of people plan to have their lunches there,” said airport spokesman Ron Wilson. “They will be disappointed. We just don’t want to take any chances.” 

The commercial vehicles will be moved to a lot at the northern end of the airport, but no new public viewing area will be established at the airport. 

––––––––– 

SAN JOSE — Out of money and unable to pay its musicians, the San Jose Symphony board voted Monday to temporarily shut down its business operations, but still hasn’t decided what to do about the rest of its concert season. 

Most of the office staff will be let go, said Dick Gourley, the symphony’s acting chief executive officer. The board will discuss at a meeting Thursday whether to cancel upcoming performances, including concerts scheduled for Oct. 26 to 28 in San Jose and Cupertino, and a November fundraiser.  

It isn’t clear yet what will happen to tickets for more than 40 future performances scheduled through June. 

The symphony had a $7.8 million budget last year and ended the fiscal year in July with a deficit of $2.5 million. It has been operating with almost no cash reserves since the summer. 

Curtis Dudnick, the acting chief financial officer, told the board in August that if it couldn’t raise at least $2.7 million by year’s end, the orchestra would be facing bankruptcy. The $1 million raised has been used to pay operating expenses. Last month, musicians were paid only after trustees wrote personal checks after a board meeting. 

——— 

MARTINEZ, Calif. (AP) — Contra Costa County health officials want to know why it took the Equilon refinery more than a half-hour Sunday night to activate warning sirens after the start of a smoky release that showered soot for miles. 

Meanwhile, Equilon has begun a huge cleanup, paying to sweep city streets and school playgrounds and offering to pay the cleaning bills for cars, houses or other private property dirtied by the black dust. 

County health officials said the fluffy particles are not hazardous to touch and they have no reports of anyone being injured by breathing the particles. 

Equilon equipment released alumina silica for about 65 minutes Sunday, the company reported to the county. The cause of the accident is under investigation. 

In deciding initially that the release was not serious enough to warrant sirens, Equilon also postponed activating the county’s automated phone system to dial prerecorded warnings to refinery neighbors. 


UC regents to discuss more changes to admissions process

By Michelle Locke The Associated Press
Wednesday October 17, 2001

BERKELEY — University of California faculty members are considering recommending that the nine-campus system stop judging applicants on the basis of grades alone. 

The proposal, which will be discussed Wednesday at the UC Board of Regents meeting in San Francisco, follows the board’s decision in May to rescind a 1995 vote dropping UC’s old affirmative action program. 

The repeal was largely symbolic, since a state law passed in 1996 bans considering race or gender in public education. However, the vote did call into question a requirement in the 1995 measure that at least 50 percent of students at each campus — up from the previous minimum of 40 percent — be chosen solely on the basis of academic criteria. 

Remaining students are selected on the basis of grades and supplemental factors such as talent, leadership and ability to overcome disadvantage. 

The issue comes back to regents Wednesday by way of a report from a faculty committee suggesting that it may be better to take the larger view of all applicants, a system known as “comprehensive review.” 

“The important thing is it is not just one or two academic criteria like high school GPA or the standardized test scores that determine the potential for success. There are other criteria also that one should take into account,” said Chand Viswanathan, the faculty representative to the regents. 

The proposal has not yet been voted on by UC’s Academic Senate. If approved, it would go back to the regents for a vote, possibly as early as the November meeting. 

The May repeal ordered that any changes take effect for students entering in fall 2002. 

The move toward comprehensive review is the latest in a series of changes in UC admissions policies. 

In 1999, regents guaranteed eligibility to students who finished in the top 4 percent of their high school, based on UC-required courses.  

This year, they approved expanding that guarantee to the top 12.5 percent, provided students who fell in the latter 8.5 percent went to community college for the first two years, although that proposal stalled last month for lack of state funds. 

UC President Richard C. Atkinson also has asked faculty members to consider dropping the SAT 1 as a requirement.


New Jersey Rabbi’s mistress accused of murdering his wife

By Geoff Mulvihill Associated Press Writer
Wednesday October 17, 2001

CAMDEN, N.J. — The mistress of a rabbi charged with killing his wife testified Tuesday that he once told her about a dream in which “violence was coming” to his spouse and that she ultimately feared for her life. 

Rabbi Fred Neulander, 60, is accused of arranging the bludgeoning death of his wife Carol in 1994 so he could pursue the affair with Elaine Soncini, a former Philadelphia radio personality. He is charged with murder and conspiracy. 

Elaine Soncini said she met Neulander the day her husband, Ken Garland, died in December 1992. After the funeral, she testified, the rabbi asked if they could meet for lunch. 

They were having “relations” within two weeks, she said — either at her house during lunch or in his office at Congregation M’kor Shalom, the temple he founded with his wife in wealthy Cherry Hill, southeast of Philadelphia. 

Defense lawyer Jeffrey Zucker acknowledged to jurors that the rabbi had an affair, but said his client is not on trial for adultery. Soncini said the relationship was immoral and she accepted responsibility for it. 

Soncini, who didn’t look at Neulander as she testified, said the two exchanged expensive gifts and spoke as many as 10 times a day. She said she told Neulander at one point in 1994 about bad dreams she’d been having and he told her about some bad dreams of his own. 

“He dreamed that violence was coming to Carol,” she said. 

Carol Neulander was beaten to death with a metal pipe in her living room as her husband was at synagogue. A few months later, Neulander resigned as senior rabbi, citing unspecified moral indiscretions. 

Prosecutors later identified Neulander as a suspect and Soncini acknowledged the affair, saying she ended it after learning he was suspected of arranging his wife’s death. 

Since then, former private investigator Leonard Jenoff and another man have confessed to the slaying. Both men pleaded guilty to manslaughter and have agreed to testify against Neulander. 

Soncini said she considered it a sign when Neulander came into her life just as her husband was dying and ended up converting to Judaism. 

But she said she decided she needed to make changes in her life and told the rabbi their relationship would end by the end of 1994. She said the rabbi insisted they would be together by her birthday in mid-December. 

Soncini also said Neulander called her to his office less than two weeks after his wife’s Nov. 1 slaying and told her he would marry her “as soon as appropriately possible.” 

She said he told her: “Trust me, when God closes a door, He opens a window.” 

She said when she was questioned by investigators Dec. 5, she began to fear for her own safety. 

“I was afraid Fred Neulander might kill me, as a matter of fact,” she said, “because I didn’t know what had transpired” the night Carol Neulander was killed. 


Explosive Hollywood films serve to inspire terrorism, movie-maker Altman says

The Associated Press
Wednesday October 17, 2001

LOS ANGELES — Afghanistan may have been the breeding ground for last month’s terrorist attacks, but Hollywood served as a source of inspiration, says director Robert Altman. 

“The movies set the pattern, and these people have copied the movies,” Altman said Tuesday by phone from London, where he’s finishing his film “Gosford Park.” “Nobody would have thought to commit an atrocity like that unless they’d seen it in a movie.” 

So violent action movies with huge explosions amount to training films for such bold attacks, as studios spend a lot of time and money trying to appeal to young males, the 76-year-old filmmaker said 

“How dare we continue to show this kind of mass destruction in movies,” said Altman, whose directing credits include “M-A-S-H,” “Nashville” and “Dr. T & the Women.” “I just believe we created this atmosphere and taught them how to do it.” 

Altman hopes audiences will lean more toward thoughtful, character-driven films after witnessing the horror of the attacks on television. 

His “Gosford Park” — a combination class-war satire and Agatha Christie-like murder mystery set at a British manor in 1932 — features Helen Mirren, Emily Watson, Clive Owen, Kristin Scott Thomas and Maggie Smith. 

“Maybe there’s a chance to get back to ... grown-up films,” Altman said. “Anything that uses humor and dramatic values to deal with human emotions and gets down to what people are to people.”


Knight Ridder’s earnings fall 27 percent; attacks partly to blame

By Seth Sutel The Associated Press
Wednesday October 17, 2001

NEW YORK — Knight Ridder’s net income plunged 27 percent in the third quarter as the Sept. 11 attacks led to a steep drop-off in newspaper advertising and higher costs associated with increasing news coverage. 

Knight Ridder, the nation’s second-largest newspaper publisher after Gannett Co., on Tuesday reported net income of $55.7 million for the three-month period ending Sept. 30, compared to $76.1 million in the same period a year ago. 

Revenues slumped 10 percent to $693.1 million from $769.2 million. 

Per-share profits were 65 cents, in line with guidance the company issued a month ago and 2 cents above the estimate of analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial/First Call. Year-ago earnings were 87 cents. 

Knight Ridder’s chairman and chief executive Tony Ridder said in a statement that the Sept. 11 attacks cost the company a total of $10 million, including $9 million in lost advertising revenue, after accounting for temporary increases from condolence ads, and additional costs of $2 million for extra editions and creating more space for news. Offsetting those costs were added circulation revenues of $1 million. 

Other newspaper publishers and media companies have also been affected by the slumping advertising market, which was made far worse by the Sept. 11 attacks on New York and Washington.  

But so far Knight Ridder has offered the most specific details on the direct financial impact of the attacks on its bottom line. 

Ridder said the attacks reversed a slight comeback in retail advertising.  

That combined with an already soft market for general advertising and help wanted ads turned September into a “memorably bad month,” he said in a statement. 

In a separate report also issued Tuesday,  

Knight Ridder reported that total advertising revenues at its newspapers fell 16 percent in September compared to the same month a year ago. Year-to-date advertising revenues were off 7 percent. 

Ridder said that while the company’s prospects had started to look up in the weeks after the attacks, they fell back again once the U.S. bombing campaign began in Afghanistan. But he noted that cost savings from a downsizing effort announced in April were paying off, and he also said newsprint costs were heading lower. 

He did not specifically lower the outlook for the company’s full-year earnings, which currently stand at $2.91 per share, as measured by Thomson Financial/First Call, but he noted that there still exists a “harsh revenue environment” and that achieving full-year earnings goals would be contingent upon “resumption of more normal business patterns.” 

Investors seemed to take the news favorably, sending Knight Ridder’s shares up 60 cents to close at $57.72 in trading Tuesday on the New York Stock Exchange. 

Investors seemed to take the news favorably, sending Knight Ridder’s shares up 90 cents to $58.02 in early afternoon trading on the New York Stock Exchange. 

Knight Ridder, which is based in San Jose, Calif., publishes 28 newspapers in major markets across the country, including the San Jose Mercury News, The Miami Herald and The Philadelphia Inquirer. 

For the first nine months of the year, net income fell 67 percent to $109.8 million compared to $333.2 million in the same period a year ago, while per-share figures fell to $1.28 from $3.71. Revenues were off 7 percent to $2.17 billion from $2.33 billion. 

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On the Net 

Knight Ridder’s company Web site: www.kri.com. 


Wells Fargo reports 42 percent profit increase

By Michael Liedtke The Associated Press
Wednesday October 17, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO — Wells Fargo & Co. reported Tuesday that its third-quarter profit surged by 42 percent, as the West’s biggest bank cashed in on a home-loan boom fueled by falling interest rates. 

The San Francisco-based company earned $1.16 billion, or 67 cents per share — up from $821 million, or 47 cents per share, at the same time last year. 

If not for the bank’s acquisition of Utah-based First Security Corp., Wells said its earnings per share would have improved by 5 percent. 

The results lagged the consensus earnings estimate of 69 cents per share among analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial/First Call. The shortfall clipped Wells’ stock, which fell 58 cents to close at $40.19 Tuesday on the New York Stock Exchange. 

Wells’ mortgage division propelled the bank’s third-quarter performance. 

From July through September, Wells funded $48 billion in mortgages. That raised its home lending volume through the first nine months of the year to $122 billion — more than it has recorded in any other previous full year. The bank, the nation’s biggest headquartered west of the Mississippi, financed $109 billion in mortgages in 1998. 

The bank ended the quarter with another $38 billion in mortgages in its processing pipeline and $476 billion in its mortgage servicing portfolio, which is a source of reliable fee income. 

Wells is benefiting from the economic weakness that has pushed mortgage rates well below 7 percent, prompting millions of homeowners to refinance existing loans and making it easier for prospective home buyers to qualify for new loans. 

“With mortgage rates at historically low levels, we are seeing unprecedented levels of applications,” said Mark Oman, Wells’ executive vice president of mortgage and home equity. 

The mortgage flurry helped lift Wells’ community banking division to a third-quarter profit of $931 million, a 51 percent improvement from the same time last year. 

The refinancing craze also means that some of Wells’ outstanding mortgages will be paid off earlier than expected. The bank increased its reserves slightly more than expected in the quarter to offset revenue losses from the anticipated payoff of mortgages, said industry analyst Joseph Morford of Dain Rauscher Wessels. 

Like other banks, the frail economy hurts Wells, as businesses and consumers begin to default on loans. The bank’s non-performing assets increased 9.5 percent, or $155 million, during the third quarter to $1.79 billion as of Sept. 30. The bank’s problem loans totaled $1.62 billion at the end of the third quarter, a 67 percent increase from last year. 

The trends are “consistent with our view that there is continuing weakness in the overall economy,” said Ely Licht, Wells’ chief credit officer. 

The credit problems are slightly worse than analysts expected, but remain in a manageable range, Morford said. 

The bank said it is still assessing its exposure to businesses hardest hit by the economic ripple effects of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. 

——— 

On The Net: 

http://www.wellsfargo.com 


ExciteAtHome again takes orders for new cable modem Comcast customers

The Associated Press
Wednesday October 17, 2001

REDWOOD CITY — Internet service provider ExciteAtHome and Comcast Corp.’s cable TV division have worked out a way to resume signing up new cable modem customers while ExciteAtHome deals with its bankruptcy reorganization. 

Comcast spokeswoman Jenni Moyer would not describe the terms of the arrangement, but said it provided a way for ExciteAtHome to resume installing cable modems for Comcast customers. 

ExciteAtHome stopped provisioning new accounts for its cable partners last week. Moyer said Philadelphia-based Comcast, the nation’s third-largest cable company, didn’t stop taking orders for new cable modems, but there could have been installation delays without Tuesday’s deal. 

A spokeswoman for Redwood City-based ExciteAtHome said she could not confirm the arrangement or whether similar deals were in the works with other cable companies. 

ExciteAtHome’s cable-access service has 3.7 million subscribers, making the company the leading provider of high-speed Internet connections.  

It filed for federal bankruptcy protection in September, and its controlling shareholder, AT&T, plans to buy the company’s network assets for $307 million.


Tennis obsession pays off for ‘Jackets sophomore

By Tim Haran Special to the Daily Planet
Wednesday October 17, 2001

At Berkeley High, a school with about 3,400 students, it’s a challenge for any one student to rise above the crowd and make a name for him or herself. And for a freshman to be recognized by random students in the often-polarized world of high school is quite a feat. 

While a freshman on the Berkeley High girls’ tennis team last season, Megan Sweeney played and won several matches as the ‘Jackets’ top singles player. After each victory, her name floated through the halls and appeared in the school newspaper. The 14-year-old quickly became known for her strong serve and powerful ground strokes. 

“It was a bit overwhelming,” Sweeney said of her instant notoriety. “I had people coming up to me and recognizing me from (articles in) the ‘Jacket. It was kind of neat.” 

Sweeney moved to Oakland from Petaluma when she was 8 years old. A year earlier her stepfather and now-athletics director at UC Santa Cruz, Greg Harshaw, introduced her to tennis. She was instantly drawn to the singles game because it allowed her “to run around a lot.”  

Exercise aside, Sweeney said the opportunity to “wear little tennis skirts” provided the motivation necessary to stick with the sport. Following her early days on the court with a racquet in hand and Harshaw on the other side of the net, Sweeney’s mother signed her up to play at a local recreation center. Three years later, she began training with a coach in a tennis program at Oakland’s Laney College. 

“I saw the 15- and 16-year-olds playing when I was younger and I always wanted to be like them,” she said. “Watching them inspired me to focus on becoming better.” 

Admitting that she wasn’t a tennis prodigy, Sweeney spent hours on the court solidifying her fundamentals and improving her technique. Her hard work paid off. Last year Sweeney was ranked as high as 13th in the Girls’ 14 division in the Northern California section of the United States Tennis Association. She finished the season ranked 34th, according to NorCal USTA.  

Sweeney is now 15 years old and a sophomore at Berkeley High. In June she moved into a higher age bracket in USTA tournaments and now plays competitively in the Girls’ 16 division. Sweeney estimates she plays between 15 and 20 tournaments a year, mostly during the high school off-season. 

After playing in about eight tournaments during the first half of 2001, Sweeney spent much of the summer taking classes at a Pre-College Academy where she was enrolled in trigonometry, chemistry and college writing. Her plans following high school are still undecided, but she knows that it will likely involve tennis. 

She currently spends up to four hours a day on the court practicing, which leaves little time for anything other than schoolwork. When free time is available, it’s quickly filled with photography, spending time with her friends or, having recently acquired her driving permit, behind the wheel of a car. 

“I enjoy driving but it’s been a little bit scary for my mom,” she said.  

These distractions, however, don’t pose a significant threat to her game. When she’s not on the court, Sweeney said she feels as if her “life is boring.”  

The tennis obsession intensified this year when she attended the U.S. Open in New York and saw Gustavo Kuerten, Monica Seles and Jennifer Capriati, among others, up close serving aces and striking cross-court winners. 

“I would love to do that,” she said of playing in a Grand Slam event. “I would wait to turn pro at least until after high school to get an education and really make sure that I love the game.” 

Now with her second season of Berkeley High tennis well underway, Sweeney’s already set her sights on helping the team reach the North Coast Sectionals. Last year the ‘Jackets finished second to Alameda High in the Alameda Contra Costa Athletic League. In the first meeting this season, Alameda defeated Berkeley 5-2. 

As a freshman, Sweeney began the year in the No. 2 singles spot behind Monique Le, but soon landed in her current position as the ’Jackets’ top singles player. 

“She’s definitely earned the spot,” said Dan Seguin, Berkeley head coach. “Megan has the ability to play the entire court.” 

As a ’Jacket, Sweeney finished last season with just two losses, but both came against Alameda’s top player, Megan Falcon, who finished the year ranked ninth in the Girls’ 14 division of the NorCal USTA.  

In a scrimmage against Piedmont High earlier this season, Sweeney posted the ’Jackets’ only win. Despite the team loss, Seguin pointed to the overall benefit of Sweeney’s victory. 

“It’s nice having someone who’s on a roll,” he said. “It really pumps up the team and for girls who are new to the team, it’s important to have her leadership.”


Opinion

Editorials

February dedication plans for Rosa Parks hit drawing board board

By Jeffrey Obser Daily Planet staff
Tuesday October 23, 2001

Rosa Parks Elementary School won’t have the official dedication ceremony for its new name until February, but students, parents, and teachers are gearing up now to get as much educational mileage as possible out of the highly symbolic designation. 

In partnership with the Museum of Children’s Art (MOCHA), students are beginning to choose civil-rights-related symbols and images for tiles which they plan to paint, bake, and see installed on two concrete half-moon benches out front. 

In the meantime, staff are putting together a “resource box” with photos and kid-friendly materials on Parks, who touched off the modern civil-rights movement when she refused to give her bus seat to a white man in Birmingham, Ala. on Dec. 1, 1955. 

“The kids really are studying it now because we’re talking about it in class time with MOCHA,” said Kathy Freeburg, the dedication’s program coordinator. 

Rosa Parks herself, 88 years old and living in Detroit, was invited to attend the Feb. 23, 2002 dedication. However, said Freeburg, Parks doesn’t travel much any more and would have needed a specially chartered plane. 

The choice of a keynote speaker for the event remains a closely held secret, judging by the reluctance of planning committee members to share their delib erations with the press at a meeting Monday. Plans are also afoot to enlist parents and community members to donate money, flowers and food for the event. 

Kindergarten teacher Tontra Love and reading teacher Mary Burmester are also coordinating a fund-raising and awareness-building “brick campaign.” Community members purchase bricks, which are engraved and installed in front of the school, in the circle of soil between the rounded benches, which will soon be covered with children’s tiles. 

Alison Kelly, the principal, said the tiles would be laid sometime before February, and the school district’s official sign was on its way as well. 

“The idea is to celebrate the new building,” said Rebecca Herman, a parent on the coordinating committee. “We have a beautiful new building.” 

The former Columbus Elementary was rebuilt from scratch in 1997, one of the most significant and welcomed outcomes of a mid-1990s push to upgrade the Berkeley Unified School District’s aging building stock with special bond issues. Once the paint was dry on the state-of-the-art, angular orange and deep blue structure, a movement arose in the school community to reconsider the school’s name. 

Berkeley had already renamed Columbus Day as “Indigenous People’s Day” in honor of the West Indies residents who had little cause to celebrate in the tragic period of disease, death, and exploitation that followed Columbus’ 1492 arrival. 

In March, Rosa Parks won out over labor leader Cesar Chavez in a mini-referendum for the school’s name. 

“Now we have a name that was chosen by the community,” said Herman.


Disadvantaged students struggling to pay for bus fares to campuses

The Associated Press
Monday October 22, 2001

Some skip school because they can’t afford to get there; schools say they’re losing attendance revenue 

 

OAKLAND – High school students are having to pinch pennies to afford bus fares since a couple of cash-strapped school districts have cut back on free transportation services. 

School district officials at Contra Costa and Alameda counties estimate they’re losing millions in attendance revenues since some families can’t always afford the daily transportation costs. 

Alisa Gilmore, 17, said sometimes skips lunch to ensure that she has enough bus money to get home from school. There are days when she skips school altogether because she doesn’t have enough for the $4 daily bus fare to and from campus. 

“I call my friends and get my homework assignment if I didn’t have a test or anything that day,” said Gilmore, a senior at Oakland Technical High School. 

The West Contra Costa Unified School District hasn’t had the money to provide its 35,000 students with free bus service since it declared bankruptcy in the early 1990s. Only federally funded bus travel for special-education students is provided by the district. 

Students in Richmond, the district’s largest city, must go to schools in unincorporated parts of the county or surrounding cities since their is no middle school. 

A few local politicians are pushing for a pilot program to address the lack of bus service for area students. Assemblywoman Dion Aroner, D-Berkeley, is trying to get free bus passes for disadvantaged students. 

“Most districts don’t have little yellow school buses anymore. It is such an expensive service,” Aroner said. 

Her proposal, dubbed the “Lifeline Transit Network,” calls for up to $12 million to fund a three-year program to provide children with a free one-year AC Transit bus pass, and discounted $95 yearly passes for other students. 

Under the proposal, the Metropolitan Transportation Commission would pay AC Transit for the student passes. The commission coordinates Bay Area transit planning and spending. 

MTC officials want a plan developed by the end of 2001, but the commission does not have the authority to set fares. Those decisions would be left to individual transit agencies. 

Jaimie Levin, communications director for AC Transit, said his agency supports the idea of a pilot program. But AC Transit would need contributing funds from MTC or other sources to make the program run smoothly, Levin said. 

Other cities in the area haven’t reached such dire financial straights in transporting students. San Jose provides free bus service to 11,000 of its district’s 30,000 students. Santa Clara transports 2,500 of its 13,500 students each day.


Let’s get our heads out of the sand

Maris Arnold
Saturday October 20, 2001

 

Editor: 

Donaldson’s and Kawcznska’s letters (10/18) condemning the council l calling for an end to the government’s bombing of Afghanistan exemplifies an ostrich-in-the-sand attitude mingled with hysteria (fear?) over dissent from the Government’s explanation of why we are at war.  

The implications seem to be that Berkeley is an island unaffected by the immensity of the WTC attack; that we are immune to the national and international consequences of our federal government’s response; that if we ignore the nightmare we are in, it will go away; and Berkeley’s chutzpah to dare to participate in democratic dialogue is embarrassing. 

Civic life is much more than paved streets. I thank the City Council for passing the resolution and thus widening the arena as Barbara Lee did in which to debate the wisdom and truth of the government’s policies and tactics. Democracy – use it or lose it. 

 

Maris Arnold 

Berkeley


Bay Brief

Staff
Saturday October 20, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO — Nearly one in three San Franciscans would have difficulty electing an immigrant to public office, according to a new citywide poll. 

Voters would have less of a problem voting for gay men, lesbians and Arab Americans, according to the poll, which was commissioned by the Chinese American Voters Education Committee. Members of the civic education group found those results troubling, in part because a strong majority of the city’s Asian population is foreign born. 

“Clearly there are pockets of anti-immigrant sentiments,” said David Lee, the group’s executive director. “We should not assume since we live in progressive, liberal San Francisco that the voters are as progressive when it comes to immigrants.” 

The poll also found that San Francisco voters hold generally favorable opinions of Asian Americans. Though they are about one-third of the city’s population, currently only one of the city’s 11 supervisors is Asian American. 

The phone survey was conducted this month by David Binder Research. It included 600 frequent voters and had a 4 percent margin of error. Respondents were 67 percent white, 13 percent Asian, 6 percent black, 6 percent Hispanic and 4 percent multiracial. 

 

 

 

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SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) — During the prime of the old New Economy last year, Silicon Valley paychecks were fatter than those of Manhattanites — historically the nation’s best-paid workers. 

That fact, reported Thursday by the Labor Department, could have fleeting significance given this year’s dot-com crash. 

Still, during 2000, Santa Clara County rode a 24 percent rise in average wages to overtake New York County as the county with the highest average yearly pay. Santa Clara residents made an average of $76,076, while those living in New York County — that is, the island of Manhattan — earned $71,115. 

San Mateo County residents jumped to third-best compensated, on the strength of a 30 percent growth in average pay over 1999. They earned $66,943 in 2000. San Francisco County registered sixth at $57,626. 

The national average was $35,296. 

The data were based on an analysis of employment and pay trends in the nation’s 315 largest counties. Labor economists warned that the pay raises in 2000 will not likely stick. 

“The data do not reflect current economic conditions, nor do they reflect what has happened in the stock market this year,” said Stanley Stephenson, regional commissioner of the Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics. 

——— 

MARTINEZ, Calif. (AP) — Neighbors of an oil refinery that has leaked noxious clouds twice this week are pressing for tighter regulation of the plant. 

Accidents at the Equilon Martinez Refining Co. forced area residents to shelter in their homes Sunday and Wednesday, as plumes of yellowish, sooty smoke billowed from the plant. While no one reported serious injuries, the incidents are prompting Contra Costa County supervisors and the Bay Area Air Quality Management District to consider new controls over the plant. 

One idea is to let public health officials shut down refinery operations after chemical releases. The county has issued two public nuisance citations against the company. 

The Martinez City Council will hold a town meeting Wednesday about the plant. Councilman Mark Ross said he has received several calls from people wanting to close the refinery, though that is unlikely. 

——— 

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — San Francisco International Airport will use a fingerprint scanner to conduct employee background checks. 

The Federal Aviation Administration is requiring major airports to recheck the backgrounds of employees who have access to tarmacs or planes. 

Airport officials said the $40,000 scanning system should be installed within weeks, making it the ninth major airport in the nation to install the Identix TouchPrint 2000 technology. 

The fingerprint reader, which is tied to a computerized database, means employee background checks will take hours instead of weeks, said SFO spokesman Ron Wilson. He said the airport has about 35,000 employees, most requiring new checks. 


Berkeley Historical Society gets governor’s award

– Bay City News and press statements
Friday October 19, 2001

The Berkeley Historical Society received the governor’s Historic Preservation Award on Oct. 5 for its local history publication “Tales from the Elmwood, A Community Memory” by Burl Willes.  

The awards are presented annually under the sponsorship of the Office of Historic Preservation of the California Department of Parks and Recreation to organizations and groups, and federal, state and local agencies whose contributions demonstrate outstanding commitment to excellence in historic preservation.  

The book recounts almost a century’s worth of stories about people and events, using oral histories, photographs, and local trivia. The book is currently in its third edition and tells how actress Jane Fonda met her husband-to-be activist Tom Hayden at the counter-culture nursery school Blue Fairyland. We learn that Eldridge Cleaver was also planning to write his own book about the Elmwood. There are tales of the community meeting place Ozzie’s Fountain, local stores, and the early storefront for the Berkeley Repertory Theater. The history of the Judah Magnes Museum, St. John’s Presbyterian Church and Willard Junior High is also included. 

 

Food not bombs needs help 

 

 

East Bay Food Not Bombs is looking for volunteers. They pick-up food, cook, serve, clean and compost. Contact: Food Not Bombs, 3124 Shattuck Ave. or 644-4187.  

 

 

Survey for parents with a disability raising a teenager 

 

 

Through the Looking Glass, a nonprofit organization servicing families with disabilities, is conducting a nationwide survey to learn more about the experiences of families in which a parent with a disability is raising a teen, 11-17. The research is being supported by the National Institute for Disability and Rehabilitation Research, U.S. 

Department of Education. 

Contact Nancy Freed at 848-1112 ext. 174 or (800) 644-2666; TTY: (800) 804-1616; FAX: (510) 848-4445; EMAIL: nfreed@lookingglass.org; Website: www.lookingglass.org 

 

 

 

 


Nonprofit agencies get $85,000 in health grants

By Guy PooleDaily Planet staff
Thursday October 18, 2001

Three nonprofit groups in Berkeley were awarded $85,000 in health care grants this month from the Alameda Alliance for Health.  

The AAH presented 29 nonprofit groups with $1 million in grants this year from the Community Health Investment Fund. The CHIF was established in 1997 to help fill critical gaps in health care for the underserved and uninsured residents of Alameda County.  

The three recipients are: Family Violence Law Center, $50,000; The Suitcase Clinic, $15,000; and Through the Looking Glass, $20,000. 

Through the Looking Glass serves families with disabilities.  

“It's the first time AAH has funded Through the Looking Glass and we are very excited about that.” said Executive Director Megan Kirshbaum.  

The money will help provide adaptive baby care equipment to low-income families where there is a disabled parent or a parenting grandparent with a disability.  

“A parent with poor walking balance might need a walker with a baby seat attached to safely move the baby from room to room, or a deaf parent might need a baby cry alarm, or a blind parent might need an adaptive device for measuring a baby’s medicine,” said Kirshbaum.  

The Suitcase Clinic provides health services for homeless and medically indigent people through pro-bono, volunteer-run clinics. Current services include medical, acupuncture, dental, foot-care, optometry, and psycho-social counseling.  

“This is the second year in a row we received a grant from the AAH.... It’s a very competitive process,” said Priya Sonik, administrative coordinator for the clinic.  

She said the majority of the grant would go towards “pain medication, asthma medicine, inhalers, anti-bodies, pregnancy tests and also the Youth and Women’s Clinics.” 

The AAH provides low-cost health care services for county residents who do not qualify for Medi-Cal or the state and federally funded Healthy Families Program.


Prop. 36 running well in County

By Kimberlee Keala Bortfeld Special to the Daily Planet
Wednesday October 17, 2001

Three months after Proposition 36 took effect, first- and second-time nonviolent drug offenders who might have once spent time behind bars now sit in treatment centers. And in Alameda County, there is room for everyone – in outpatient treatment, at least. 

“It’s going pretty smoothly given it’s a start up program,” said Pat Furlong of the Alameda County Department of Behavioral Care, which oversees the county’s implementation of Proposition 36. “So far, we haven’t had too many problems.” 

Proposition 36, the statewide initiative approved by 60 percent of California voters last November, allows eligible offenders convicted of illegal drug use or possession to receive probation and treatment instead of incarceration. Opponents of the measure said that the program would tax the state’s already crowded substance abuse centers. According to the California Department of Alcohol and Drug Programs, there were 73,600 publicly-funded substance abuse treatment slots available in the state in April 2001, with about 5,000 people on county waiting lists. 

Despite the negative projections, Alameda County has so far been able to accommodate the increased demand for treatment, though the long-term viability of the program is unclear.  

Furlong said she worries about residential treatment capacity and warns that there might not be enough funding to sustain the program. The county was awarded $5.4 million in state funding this year to carry out the measure.  

From July 1 through Sept. 7, Furlong said the county received 248 Prop. 36 clients. Clients are first reviewed by private assessment teams and then placed in appropriate treatment, which can range from eight-week education programs to long-term residential stays. Providers report clients’ progress to the county on a monthly basis. In addition, the county evaluates clients every 90 days.  

Of the first 248 offenders referred for treatment by the courts, Furlong said 80 percent were placed in outpatient treatment, 10 percent in residential treatment, 7 percent in early intervention programs, 1 percent in methadone treatment, 1 percent in detoxification and 1 percent in day treatment. Furlong expects Prop. 36 to add a total of 2,500 to 3,000 substance abuse clients a year to the more than 8,000 already in the Alameda County system.  

“We have no problems with outpatient, but we’re at capacity right now for residential treatment,” said Furlong. “Those people in the beds now will be there for weeks. But we’ll need new beds for new people soon. The turnover is not quick enough.” 

Mark McConville, executive director of the nonprofit organization, Second Chance, Inc., a Proposition 36-contracted outpatient treatment center with sites in Fremont, Newark and Union City, echoed the need for more residential beds. 

“We currently have two people from our outpatient program who we’d like to get into a residential program,” said McConville. “But there aren’t available beds among the Proposition 36-eligible residential programs in Alameda County.”  

Residential treatment can take anywhere from a few weeks to 18 months. At present, Alameda County has contracts with six residential treatment sites and is negotiating with five additional agencies to meet increased demand, said Furlong.  

Statewide, the effect appears to be similar. Dan Carson of the California Legislative Analyst’s Office, which is tracking implementation, said that anecdotal information from counties indicates, “the numbers coming into the treatment system as a result of Prop 36 are a bit light, but that the treatment needs of the offenders are more severe than predicted.”  

Carson, however, cautioned that this early data could turn out to be very misleading and that official numbers have yet to be compiled and published. 

But so far, the anecdotal information seems on target for Alameda County.  

Whereas residential programs, the longest form of treatment, are at capacity, outpatient and detoxification centers have room for more. McConville said his outpatient agency has only received 90 Proposition 36 referrals, of which about half are currently enrolled in the program. He has 800 clients total.  

Leo Van Der Most, manager at New Leaf Treatment Center in Hayward, a Proposition 36-contracted agency, said his six-bed detoxification program is only 70 percent full on average.  

Both McConville and Van Der Most said that only 10 percent of their clientele are sober one year later and that treatment is an ongoing process. “About 80 percent of the drug offenders really want to be here,” said Van Der Most. “They say ‘I’m glad I got caught because I couldn’t stop myself.’ The others don’t cooperate and don’t want to be here. But the seed is planted.” 

McConville had a similar take. “We’ve been around for 30 years and we have a lot of people who came through as runaways years ago who are only now sober,” he said. “So we don’t get too excited if they don’t get sober the first time around.”  

In order to receive Proposition 36-referred clients, McConville said that an agency has to be state-certified and contracted with the county. Many agencies are not currently contracted with Alameda County and so are ineligible for Proposition 36. But Furlong is working to get more agencies on board.  

New Bridge Foundation in Berkeley, one of the largest drug treatment facilities on the East Bay, is negotiating a contract, according to its director Peter Budwalen. In addition, Furlong said he is working to get a contract with a 25-bed residential treatment center in Oakland.  

Besides meeting future capacity, however, Furlong said his biggest worry is funding. The state allocated $120 million for Proposition 36 to be distributed between the counties. But Furlong thinks that the counties need more.  

“The counties already indicated to the state that this isn’t going to be enough. Before Proposition 36, (Alameda County) had $19 million for the 8,000-9,000 clients in our system. But now we’re expecting 2,500-3,000 new people each year because of Proposition 36 and we only have $5.4 million to cover the difference.” 

Furlong said since the program is not yet at full capacity, funding is probably sufficient for this year. But he is concerned that funding will be a challenge down the line, especially if numbers increase. At present, the county is wholly dependent on state funds.