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County school board race heats up

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet staff
Friday January 04, 2002

It’s the other race. And it’s a doozy. 

In recent months, the city has focused much of its political energy on the three-way contest to replace State Assemblymember Dion Aroner, D-Berkeley, leaving office because of term limits.  

But on March 5, Berkeleyans will join voters from Albany, Emeryville, Piedmont and portions of Oakland to elect a member to the Alameda County Board of Education, representing Trustee Area 1. The election will end a contentious race between incumbent Jerome Wiggins, vice president of the board, and challenger Jacki Fox Ruby. 

Seats in Trustee Area 4, in the Hayward-Union City region, and Trustee Area 7, in the Dublin-Pleasanton section of Alameda County, are also on the ballot. 

Among other tasks, the sevenmember board approves the county school budget, serves as an appeals board for students expelled by individual districts in the county, and oversees county-run education programs at the juvenile hall in San Leandro, and in four community day schools that serve youth expelled by local districts, or who are referred by the courts.  

Much of the campaign has focused on the factionalism plaguing the current board, and the tense relationship between Wiggins and County Superintendent Sheila Jordan, who will run for re-election unopposed in March. 

These divisions exploded into public view last summer when the board majority, including Wiggins, clashed with Jordan and the board minority over the county’s annual $30 million education budget. 

Jordan sought to increase staff salaries, arguing that a raise was necessary to attract and retain talent. She also suggested expanding support services for the individual school districts, such as Berkeley Unified, under the county office’s jurisdiction.  

Wiggins and the board majority argued that Jordan’s initiatives would come at the expense of direct services for the at-risk students in the community day schools and other county-run programs.  

Eventually, with mediation from the California County Superintendents Association and the California Association of School Boards, the two sides reached a compromise. But the wounds remain, and the budget fight has bled into the current Board of Education campaign. 

Wiggins, who also works as transportation program specialist in the U.S. Department of Transportation’s regional office in San Francisco, said the superintendent, who has endorsed Ruby, is making a play to dominate the board in the wake of the budget fight.  

“Sheila Jordan believes that the County Board of Education is her board to control,” Wiggins said. “Mrs. Ruby will simply be a pawn for Sheila Jordan.” 

Jordan said she does not want to control the board. “What I’m looking for is honest discourse and dialogue,” the superintendent said, “and that has not happened with Jerome.” 

“Anyone who knows Jacki Fox Ruby,” she continued, “knows she’s not a rubber stamp for anybody.” 

Ruby, who worked as a teacher in the Berkeley public schools from 1968 to 1996, served as president of the Berkeley Federation of Teachers from 1991 to 1998, and is now an official with the statewide union, said she will be an independent voice on the board. 

But, Ruby said she will also work to develop cooperative relationships with board members and the superintendent. “I went to a number of board meetings in June and July and what I saw there appalled me,” she said. “I didn’t see a process where people were discussing issues. I saw vilification and ego-tripping.” 

“Collaborative relationships are what works,” Ruby added. 

The candidates have also rehashed the debate over whether to prioritize the county or district schools. Ruby and Wiggins take pains to suggest that it is not an either-or proposition, but they offer decidedly different perspectives on the matter. 

“The issue is maintaining services to the kids who are most at-risk,” said Wiggins, referring to the young people in county-run programs, many of whom have been expelled by local school districts. “They are students who are no longer being served by their districts.” 

Ruby, on the other hand, said that community day schools receive higher per pupil spending from the state than district schools, and suggested that it may be time for an evaluation of how community day schools spend their resources. 

She also voiced support for expanding support to the district schools, in the form of teacher training, fiscal oversight and violence prevention programs. 

All five members of Berkeley’s Board of Education have endorsed Ruby. Shirley Issel, the board’s president, said the challenger’s experience as both a teacher in the classroom, and a union leader who has lobbied state officials in Sacramento, makes her a strong candidate.  

Issel also suggested that Ruby would work well with Superintendent Jordan and provide support for district schools. 

“It’s very important to get competent school board members who can work with (Jordan) and share her vision,” Issel said. 

A majority of the City Council, including Mayor Shirley Dean and councilmembers Linda Maio, Dona Spring, Polly Armstrong, and Miriam Hawley, has officially endorsed Ruby. But Councilmember Kriss Worthington is backing Wiggins, citing his support for county schools. 

“He seems to fight hard for funding for low-achieving kids,” said Worthington. “We have to pay attention to every single child.” 

But Ruby suggests that Wiggins has not been as active in helping low-achieving students as he would suggest, noting that Alameda County did not put special education services in place at its schools until the 2000-2001 school year, when the U.S. Office for Civil Rights demanded action. 

“Where was the board before that?,” she asked. 

Wiggins said the county office moved quickly when the issue arose, but suggested that Superintendent Jordan was to blame for not providing special education services before then. 

Wiggins, in turn, has argued that Ruby, who worked as a union leader in Berkeley for years, must share responsibility, with other local leaders, for the “achievement gap” separating white and black students in Berkeley. 

Ruby said she has worked on the “achievement gap” issue for years, recalling a series of workshops that she helped set up in the 1980s that focused on the matter. She also argued that Wiggins has done little as a member of the county board to address the problem. 

Wiggins countered that district leaders should have handled the issue themselves, and touted a proposal he made this week to convene local leaders, under the auspices of the county board, to discuss the “achievement gap.”  

 

 


Bears face Stanford two times this weekend

By Dean Caparaz Special to the Daily Planet
Friday January 04, 2002

Cal opens its Pac-10 basketball season with a tough test. The 9-1 Golden Bears take on rival and No. 12-ranked Stanford twice in three days in an unusual bit of scheduling this weekend. 

“It’s a new experience for us,” said Cal coach Ben Braun. “There’s no advantage or disadvantage, I think, in anybody’s favor. Would Stanford and us like to play and divide it up? Probably. But that’s not going to happen this year and you make the most of it and consider it a big challenge.” 

Cal center Solomon Hughes was a bit more succinct. 

“That’s the best way to start.” 

The first game, at Stanford’s Maples Pavilion at 4 p.m., pits Cal against a post-Collins twins Cardinal that is still considered the cream of the crop in the conference. Stanford boasts a 7-2 record, with losses to Texas and BYU. The rematch comes on Sunday at Haas Pavilion at 7 p.m. 

As recently as last year, two straight games with Stanford would have meant two straight losses probably of the blowout variety.  

Not so in 2002. An improved Cal team could easily come out of the next two games with a split. 

The Bears have gotten better with the addition of freshmen Jamal Sampson and Amit Tamir and the improved play of starters Solomon Hughes, Joe Shipp and Dennis Gates.  

Shipp, the 6-5 junior forward, leads the Bears in scoring with a career high 14.9 points per game, while Sampson leads the Bears in rebounding with 8.2 per game. Sampson also chips in with 7.6 points per game. 

Gates, who will have plenty of help, will have his hands full with Stanford star Casey Jacobsen. The junior guard, who is almost as lethal with his distribution as he is from the outside, leads his team with 20.6 ppg. The 6-6 Jacobsen also leads Stanford in assists with 3.7 per game and is Stanford’s second-leading rebounder with 5.1 per game. 

Stanford is still strong in the paint, thanks to 7-0, 240-pound center Curtis Borchardt (16.2 ppg, 10.9 rpg) and 6-8 forward Justin Davis (7.6 ppg, 4.2 ppg).  

Borchardt, a junior who gets the bulk of the minutes down low since the Collins twins left for the NBA, has clogged up the middle with 26 blocks on the season. 

“Last year they had the two Collins twins that you had to go in and score on,” Braun said. “I wouldn’t say it’s any easier necessarily now to go in. When you go in now, both Justin Davis and Curtis Borchardt are two very good defensive players. Borchard’s always a threat on the defensive end because of his shot-blocking ability. He’s a long player. It’s tough.” 

However, the presence of the 6-11 Hughes, the 6-11 Sampson and even the 6-10 Tamir, the 22-year-old Israeli army man who just started playing last weekend, gives Cal the size advantage that Stanford used to have over the Bears. 

Cal’s defense has improved on the perimeter and inside, where Sampson has blocked 20 shots and Hughes has blocked 15 shots this season. Overall, the Bears already have 55 blocks, compared to just 66 blocks all last season. 

“We definitely match up better this year,” said Solomon Hughes, who enters the week as Cal’s second-leading scorer at 11.4 ppg. 

“We actually have three solid post defenders,” Braun said. “That helps us, if one guy gets into foul trouble or one guy gets fatigued, there’s never been any question. We’ve been able to rest a guy, been able to give a guy a break.” 

Cal’s outside shooting will also help against a tough Stanford defense. Shipp has hit 23 shots from three-point land and shoots 41 percent from behind the arc. Point guard Shantay Legans has hit 12 times from downtown. 

Indeed, the fact that scoring comes from more sources than it used to when Sean Lampley played at Haas gives Cal an edge over the teams that struggled against Stanford the last several seasons. Lampley scored 19.5 ppg as a senior last season and was often Cal’s first, second and third scoring option. 

“Their emphasis was pretty much prepared for a given that the ball would be in Sean’s hands a lot,” Braun said. “One thing you see from our team this year is we’ve been able to score in a variety of ways. We’re trying to get baskets in transition. We’re trying to get different touches, different looks. 

“Solomon has been real consistent scoring for us. At the same time we’ve given Joe Shipp and Brian Wethers a chance to post up. We’ve given our guys a chance to penetrate. We have other opportunities now. I think we’re a little harder to prepare for than we were probably a year ago.”


Compiled by Guy Poole
Friday January 04, 2002


Friday, Jan. 4

 

 

Even Stronger Women 

1:30 - 3:30 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

This week’s discussion: Helen Keller and film. 232-1351. 

 

Food Bank Discussion 

9:30 a.m. 

St. Alban’s Episcopal Church 

1501 Washington St., Albany 

The Berkeley/Albany chapter of Church Women United will host a representative from the Alameda County Community Food Bank. 526-4303 

 


Saturday, Jan. 5

 

 

Marionette Puppets 

10:30 a.m. 

Public Library, Central Branch 

2121 Allston Way 

JoJo La Plume appears with a performance to ethnic music and sounds of nature. Free. Recommended for children ages 3 and up. 649-3913, www.infopeople.org/ bpl/. 

 

Bay Area Poets Coalition  

3 - 5 p.m. 

Public Library, South Branch 

1901 Russell St.  

Open reading. 527-9905, poetalk@aol.com. 

 

Spanish Storytime 

2 p.m. 

Public Library, West Branch 

1125 University Ave.  

Spanish language storytime, books and songs for families with children ages 3 - 8. 981-6270. 

 

Peace-by-Peace Walk Benefit 

5 p.m. - midnight 

Black Box 

1928 Telegraph Ave.  

Fund-raiser and send-off party for the cross-country peace walk. $25 donation. 644-9260. 

 

Peace & Freedom Holiday Potluck 

4 p.m. - 11 p.m. 

Barn in the Back Yard 

2217 1/2 McGee Ave. 

Alameda County Peace & Freedom Party’s Annual Holiday Potluck, Supper and Party will be asking for a donation of $5 with food to share, or $20 without. 

 

 


Sunday, Jan. 6

 

 

Buddy Club Show 

1 - 2 p.m. 

Berkeley Jewish Community Center Theater 

1414 Walnut St. 

Ace Miles performs magic, juggling, ventriloquism and escape routines. For parents and children ages 2 - 12. $7. 236-7469, www.thebuddyclub.com. 

 


Free Sailboat Rides

 

 

1 - 4 p.m. 

Cal Sailing Club 

Berkeley Marina 

The Cal Sailing Club, a nonprofit sailing and windsurfing cooperative, gives free rides on a first come, first served basis. Wear warm clothes and bring a change of clothes in case you get wet. Children must be at least 5 years old and accompanied by an adult. 208-5460, www.cal-sailing.org. 

 


Monday, Jan. 7

 

 

New Testament Workshop 

7:30 p.m. 

Norton Hall 

UC Berkeley Campus 

Al Moser, Associate Pastor at Newman Hall-Holy Spirit Parish, will lead the workshop.  

 


Tuesday, Jan. 8

 

 

New Testament Workshop 

7:30 p.m. 

Norton Hall 

UC Berkeley Campus 

Al Moser, Associate Pastor at Newman Hall-Holy Spirit Parish, will lead the workshop.  

 


Wednesday, Jan. 9

 

 

Near-death Experience Support Group 

7-9pm 

Berkeley Fellowship of Unitarian Universalists Church 

1606 Bonita Ave. 

International Association for Near-Death Studies offers supportive environment for the exploration of near-death experiences. 428-2442. 

 

Baby Bounce and Toddler Tales 

7 p.m. 

Public Library, West Branch 

1125 University Ave. 

A participatory program for families with children up to age 3. Stories, songs and fingerplays as entertainment and as a way for parents to learn some new material to share with their young ones. 981-6270. 

 

Peace Walk and Vigil 

7:30 p.m. 

North Berkeley BART Station 

A peace walk and vigil to demonstrate opposition to U.S. bombing of Afghanistan. www.globalexchange.org. 

 


Thursday, Jan. 10

 

 

Sking and Snowshoing in Tahoe National Forest 

7 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment, Inc. 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

Catherine Stifter will present a slide show on her favorite ski and snowshoe tours off Highway 49 between Sierra City and Yuba Pass. 527-4140 

 

Grandparent Support Group 

10 - 11:30 a.m. 

Malcolm X School of Arts and Academics 

1731 Prince St. 

Grandparents and relatives raising their grandchildren can express their concerns and needs, plus receive support, information and referrals for Kinship Care. 644-6517. 

 

Community Health Commission 

6:45 - 9:30 p.m. 

South Berkeley Senior Center 

2939 Ellis St. (at Ashby Ave.) 

Prioritize list of health needs of the City of Berkeley to present to Alta Bates Sutter for consideration during needs assessment process for Community Benefit Plan. 

 

 


2001: killing fields

Marc Sapir Berkeley
Friday January 04, 2002

They attack the human spirit 

with polls and patriotism, 

pols and perfidy, 

anchormen’s war fever 

presidents’ wives 

attorney general princes 

media hypocrisy 

rightists 

who “know” that  

the corporate media 

are leftist spies 

in disguise 

 

They attack the human spirit 

with bombs and tribunals 

court-martials and torture 

torment of 

wars against terrorism 

by usurper presidents and  

hoodless white hoods 

government lies 

media editorials for rights  

while selling stock shlock, 

and censorship as news.. 

 

They manipulate our sadness, 

our anger, our angst, 

with words and deeds 

then bomb us... 

our pain screams out 

from everywhere  

“Dave’s not here” 

to everywhere,  

those seeking holy Palestine 

driven into caves 

of fear and despair 

 

They attack the human spirit 

“to preserve our freedoms” 

with computers  

and the smartest 

technology 

and the most money 

the world has ever known 

and the money even loses 

track of what it’s about,  

this attack on the human spirit 

 

But through it all 

we know 

what it’s about, 

and the spirit floats on the wind  

and is invincible 

And in the end 

will defeat the torment, 

rise from ashes 

and bury the culture of death. 

 

Marc Sapir 

Berkeley 

 


Duck Duck Duck á l’Orange

By Sari Friedman Special to the Daily Planet
Friday January 04, 2002

North Berkeley. 1975. A bunch of poetic, jazz-lovin’, co-op-minded, espresso-drinking beatniks want to start a place to get delicious food in a comfortable setting.  

They name their corporation Ananke, the Greek concept for divine necessity, also the name of one of Jupiter’s moons. Throw in Jack London’s story of the Sea Wolf, and an ex-English professor’s identification with in the old English saga of Beowolf… with Beowolf’s nemesis, the monster Grendel, somehow representing corporate America.  

Fast forward through years of debt and struggle. Years of seeking out the best seasonal foods in the East Bay and transforming them into melismatic (which means a melody runs through it) and sensual creations that earn the BayWolf Restaurant, now located in Oakland, altitudinous marks in the ZagatSurvey. 

Now – thanks to founder-owner Michael Wild, executive chef Lauren Lyle, pastry chef G. Earl Darny, writer Adele Novelli Crady, and photographer Laurie Smith – we get The BayWolf Restaurant Cookbook, a collection of BayWolf Restaurant recipes divided by month, so that the home chef may best use East Bay seasonal and traditional foods in the most exciting of ways. 

The January section of the cookbook is titled “The Wolf at the Door” and includes recipes such as Chioggia Beet and Tangerine Salad with Celery, Walnuts, and Citrus Vinaigrette, and Babas au Rhum with Lime Cream and Caramelized Pineapple. 

As Michael Wild explains: “In January we prepare the sort of heartwarming, nurturing, robust dishes that would get anyone through a gloomy winter.” 

The remaining months’ offerings are rich in duck dishes and include a decidedly citrus-minded influence. Since the BayWolf Restaurant is famous for its duck dishes, I decided to try out several of the January recipes, and I also made March’s Duck á l’ Orange with Turnips and their Greens.  

As an example of technical writing, the directions given in The BayWolf Restaurant Cookbook aren’t ideal, especially if you are – as I am – used to the detailed, easy, comfortably explanatory, and numbered steps found in, say, The Good Housekeeping Cookbook.  

If you’re the type of person who isn’t sure how to reduce a stock or render duck fat; or if you want estimates on how long every recipe is going to take, or totals on your materials – you might want to simply call BayWolf directly and make a reservation.  

But if you’re courageous, know your way around a paring knife, and want to end up with a lusty, luscious, sumptuous, and evocative meal, the BayWolf Restaurant Cookbook profoundly delivers.  

With recipes such as January’s Mushroom Barley Soup with its variegated mushroom tastes and textures and kicky sherry aftertaste, you’re given the means to lavish a memorable meal upon yourself and any super-lucky companions. 

I found myself groaning while licking the completely lascivious Duck á l’ Orange with Turnips and their Greens glaze off my fingers, and if my boyfriend wasn’t watching I would absolutely have licked the plate. The Chioggia Beet and Tangerine Salad with Celery, Walnuts, and Citrus Vinaigrette with its robust flavorful reds, crunchy pomegranate seed subtext, and paper-thin celery shaving and meaty walnut crunch was the very definition of superb.  

In February the recipes turn to the romance of Venice, the April offerings were inspired by Paris, and…. moving right along… in September one reaches famous BayWolf "Double Duck" recipes such as Braised Duck Legs with Pinot Noir and Summer Succotash. 

Yum.


Staff
Friday January 04, 2002

 

924 Gilman Jan. 4: Champion, Carry On, Stay Gold, The First Step, The Damage Done; Jan. 5: Iron Lung, B.G., Crucial Attack, Blown To Bits; Jan. 11: Bananas, Numbers, Lowdown, Doozers, Iron Ass; Jan. 12: Plan 9, The Sick, The Hellbillies, Oppressed Logic, Deltaforce; All shows start a 8 p.m. unless noted; Most are $5; 924 Gilman St. 525-9926 

 

Blake’s Jan. 4: Funk Monsters, $5; Jan. 5: King Harvest, Jomo, $5; Jan. 6: Lunar Heights, $3; Jan. 8: Operation Interstellar, $ 3; Jan. 9: Kid Glove Entertainment Presents, Hebro; Jan. 10: Electronica w/ Ascension, $5; Jan. 11: Five Point Plan, SFunk, $5; Jan. 12: Lavish Green, Stone Cutters, $5; Jan. 13: Alex Dolan & 22 Fillmore, $3; Jan. 14: All Star Jam Featuring The Steve Gannon Band & Mz. Dee, $4; Jan. 15: View From Here, $3; Jan. 16: Zion Rock, Hebro, $3; 2367 Telegraph Ave., 877-488-6533. 

 

Anna’s Bistro Jan.4: Anna & Ellen Hoffman on piano/10 p.m. Bluesman Hideo Date; Jan. 5: Robin Gregory & Sy Perkoff/10 p.m. Duckcan Distones Jazz Sextet; Jan. 6: Gypsy-inspired “Danubius”; Jan. 7: “Renagade Sidemen” w/ Calvin Keyes; Jan. 8: Singers’ Open Mik w/ Trio!!!; Jan.9: Jimmy Ryan Jazz Quartet; Jan.10: Graham Richards Jazz Quartet; Jan.11:Anna sings jazz standards/ 10 p.m. Bluesman Hideo Date; Jan. 12: Robin Gregory & Sy Perkoff/ 10 pm Ducksn Distones Jazz Sextet; Jan. 13: “Choro Time” Brazilian sounds; Jan.14: “Renagade Sidemen” w/ Calvin Keyes 

Jan.15: Mark Murphy’s jazz vocal workshop; Music starts at 8p.m., every night, second band at 10p.m., 1801 University Ave., 849-ANNA 

 

Cal Performances Jan. 18 and 19: 8 p.m., The National Acrobats of Taiwan, R.O.C.; Jan. 20: 3 p.m., Midori and Robert McDonald. $28 -$48. Zellerbach Hall, UC Berkeley, Bancroft Way at Telegraph. 642-9988 

 

Roda Theatre Jan. 22 and 23: both at 8 p.m., The Berkeley Symphony, Music Director Kent Nagano, continues its 31st season with two performances of Schubert’s Symphony No. 5. $21, $32, $45, $10 students. 2015 Addison St. 841-2800, www.berkeleysymphony.org 

 

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

 

Freight & Salvage Coffee House Jan. 4: Peter Apfelbaum Septet; Jan. 5: The Bluegrass Intentions CD Release Party; Jan. 6: Allette Brooks; Jan. 9: Ken Waldman; Jan.10: Silk Road Music; Jan. 11: Alex De Grassi, Franco Morone; Jan. 12: Viviana Guzman & Performers of the World; Jan. 13: Rob Ickes & Slide City; All shows begin 8 p.m., 1111 Addison St. 548-1761, www.freightandsalvage.org.  

 

Julia Morgan Theatre Dec. 31: 8 p.m., New Year’s Eve Gala Concert, Program of classical favorites of the San Francisco Chamber Orchestra; Jan 11: 8 p.m. San Francisco Chamber Orchestra, classical party music; Julia Morgan Theatre, 2640 College Ave., 845-8542, www.juliamorgan.org. 

 

Jupiter Jan. 2: Skye Dee Miles w/Universal Sound; Jan. 3: Chris Shot Group; Jan. 4: Diggsville; Jan. 5 Blue & Tan; Jan.9: Ezra Gale Quartet; Jan. 10: Chris Shot Group; Jan. 11: Hydeus Kiatta Trio; Jan. 12: Barefoot Bride; Jan. 16: Realistic; Jan. 17: Chris Shot Group; Jan. 18: Bigfoot In Paris Trio; Jan. 19: Netwerk: Electric; Jan. 23: Mitch Marcus Quintet; Jan. 24: Chris Shot Group; Jan. 25: The Sardonics; Jan. 26: Berkeley Jazz School Presents: Fourtet; Jan. 30: Joel Harrison Quartet; All shows are free and begin at 8 p.m. unless noted. 2181 Shattuck Ave., 843-7625, www.jupiterbeer.com. 

 

Rose Street House Jan. 17: 7:30 p.m., Allette Brooks. 1839 Rose St. 594-4000 x687, rosestreetmusic@yahoo.com. 

 

Yoshi’s Jazz House Through Dec. 31: New Year’s Fiesta, The Afro-Cuban Jazz Masters; Jan. 2 - 6: Charles Lloyd; Jan. 13: Jacqui Naylor Quartet; All shows at 8 p.m., and 10 p.m., unless noted. 510 Embarcadero West, Jack London Square, Oakland. Check for prices and Sunday Matinees, 238-9200, www.yoshis.com. 

 

First Congregational Church of Berkeley Jan. 6: 3 p.m., Stephen Genz in his West Coast debut; 2345 Channing Way, 527-8175, www.geocities.com/mostlybrahms. 

 

Berkeley Piano Club Jan.11: 8 p.m., Kate Steinbeck and Renee Witon; Berkeley Piano Club, 2724 Haste St., (510) 531-1487. 

 

Trinity Chapel Jan. 19: 8 p.m., Janine Johnson, harpsichord, Bach, Buxtehude and Pachelbel. 2320 Dana St., 549-3864. 

 

Organ Music Jan. 27: 5 p.m., Ron McKean performs Ferscobaldi, Froberger and Bach. $15 - $18. MusicSources, 1000 The Alameda, 528-1685. 

 

First Congregational Church Jan. 19: 8p.m., eight womens voices and continuo, also baritone Hugh Davis will sing priest’s acclamations. $25 general, $18 senior, $12 students., First Congregational Church, Dana & Durant, Berkeley, (415) 979-4500 

 

 

Dance 

 

“Una Noche de Tango ...a media luz” Jan. 1: 8 - 11 p.m., Allegro Ballroom, $15. 5855 Christie Ave., Emeryville. 415-777-3910, info@tangoamedialuz.com. 

 

Julia Morgan Theatre Jan. 12: 8 p.m., “Club Dance,” Teens come together to express their individual personalities and gifts as dancers. $10, Students and Seniors $6, Children ages 5 and under $6; “Julia’s Feast of Dance,” An evening of conemporary dance performed by local dance groups to benefit dance in the East Bay. $15 suggested donation. Julia Morgan Theatre, 2640 College Ave., 845-8542, www.juliamorgan.org. 

 

Berkeley High School Dance Production Jan. 11, 12, 18 &19: 7:30 p.m., Diverse mix of classical and modern ballet to hard-core hip-hop. $5. Florence Schwimley Little Theatre, Allston way and MLK., 644-6120 

 

 

Theater 

“Much Ado About Nothing” Through Jan. 8: Check theater for specific dates and times. Shakespeare’s classic romantic comedy chronicles a handful of soldiers returning from a winning battle to be greeted by a gaggle of giddy maidens. Directed by Brian Kulick. $10 - $54. Berkeley Repertory Theatre, 2025 Addison St. 647-2949 www.berkeleyrep.org 

 

“Every Inch a King” Jan. 11 through Feb. 9: Thur. - Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 5 p.m.; Three sisters have to make a decision as their father approaches death in this comedy presented by the Central Works Theater Ensemble. $8 - $18. LeValls Subterranean, 1834 Euclid Ave. 558-138, www.centralworks.org.  

 

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

 

Film 

 

Pacific Film Archive Jan. 3: 7 p.m., 9 p.m., Unfinished Song; Jan. 4: 7 p.m., 9:15 p.m., Going By; Jan. 5: 7 p.m., 9 p.m., Under the Moonlight; Jan. 6: 1p.m., 3 p.m., Paper Airplanes, 5:30 Shrapnels in Peace; Jan.10: 7 p.m., 9 p.m., ABC Africa; Jan.11: 7:30 p.m., The Girl at the Monceau Bakery and Suzanne’s Career, 9:05 p.m. The Sign of the Lion with Place de l’Etoile; Jan. 12: 7p.m., La Collectionneuse, 8:50 p.m., My Night at Maud’s; Jan.13: 1p.m., 3p.m., Oscar’s Magic Adventure, 5:30 p.m., ABC Africa; 2527 Bancroft Way, 642-1412. 

 

Exhibits  

 

“Images of Innocence and Beauty” Through Jan. 8: An exhibit featuring Kathleen Flannigan’s drawing and furniture - boxes, tables, and mirrors, all embellished with images of the beauty and innocence of the natural world. Addison Street Windows, 2018 Addison St. 

 

“From With These Walls” Jan. 5: Educational studio opening celebration gallery show of student works in steel, bronze, aluminum, cast iron, glass, neon, ceramic, stone and paper; jewelry. The Crucible, 1036 Ashby St. (Entrance is one block south on Murray St.) 843-5511, fran@thecrucible.org. 

 

“The First Five Years” Through Jan.11: Exhibit represents a selection of drawings, paintings, prints and sculpture created by students during their 7th & 8th grade years. 7a.m.-9:30 p.m. Mon-Fri, 5:30- 9:30 p.m. Sat., Bucci’s Restaurant, 6121 Hollis St., Emeryville, 547-4725, www.bucci.com. 

 

“Carving, Canvas, Color: Art of Julio Garcia and Wilbert Griffith” Through Jan.12: Brightly colored wooden figures and colorfully detailed paintings. Gallery is open by appointment and chance, most weekdays 10:30 a.m. - 4 p.m.; The Ames Gallery, 2661 Cedar St., 845-4949, amesgal@home.com. 

 

“Matrix 195” Through Jan. 13: German artist, Thomas Scheibitz’s, first solo museum exhibition in the United States showcases semi-abstract representations of everyday objects and landscapes. Wed., Fri. - Sun. 11 a.m. - 5 p.m., Thur. 11 a.m. - 9 p.m. $3-$6. Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, 2626 Bancroft Way, 642-0808 www.bampfa.berkeley.edu. 

 

“Analogous Biology: Balance and Use,” Mark J. Leavitt, Dec. 20 through Jan. 19; Tue. - Sat., 11 a.m. - 5 p.m., Ardency Gallery, 709 Broadway, Oakland. 836-0831, www.artolio.com. 

 

GTU Exhibit: “Holocaust Series” by Cleve Gray Through Jan. 25: Comprised of 21 works on paper that constitute “a catharsis... for all of humanity.” Mon. - Thurs. 8:30 a.m. - 9:45 p.m., Fri. 8:30 a.m. - 6 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m. - 6 p.m., Sun. noon - 7 p.m.; Free. Flora Lamson Hewlett Library, Graduate Theological Union, 2400 Ridge Rd. 649-2541 www.gtu.edu. 

 

Pro Arts: “Juried Annual 2001-02” Through Feb. 2: An exhibition of painting, sculpture, mixed media, photography and more by Bay Area and  

regional artists. Pro Arts, 461 Ninth St., www.proartsgallery.org. 

 

“Water Media” Jan. 10 through Feb. 8: An exhibit by Christine “Caipirinha” Mulder. Capoeira Arts Cafe Gallery, 2026 Center St., 666-1349 for hours. 

 

Traywick Gallery: “New Work by Dennis Begg and Steve Briscoe” Jan. 5 through Feb. 9: Dennis Begg’s sculpture explores memory as the building block of consciousness, learning and experience. Steve Brisco’s paintings on paper address issues of identity through evocative combinations of text and imagery. Tues. - Sat. 11 a.m. - 6 p.m., 1316 10th St. 527-1214. 

 

“Enduring Wisdom: Artwork and Stories by Homeless and Formerly Homeless Seniors” Through Feb. 15: 18 homeless and formerly homeless elders reveal how they learned and applied wisdom that is timeless. Mon. - Fri. and Sundays 11 a.m. - 2 p.m. Reception and presentation by the elders Thurs. Nov. 15, 4 p.m. - 6 p.m. Free. St. Mary’s Center, 635 22nd St., Oakland, 893-4723 x222. 

 

“The Other 364 Days: A Day in the Life of the Queer Community” Jan. 2 through Feb. 16: An exhibit of black and white photographs by East Bay photographer Limor Inbar-Hansen. Mon. - Fri., 8:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m., Sat., 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., Reception for artist, Jan. 12: 6 - 8 p.m., Photolab Gallery, 2235 Fifth St., 644-1400, limor@indelible-images.com. 

 

“Ansel Adams in the University of California Collections” Through Mar. 10: A selection of photographs and memorabilia presenting a different perspective on Adam’s career as one of the leading figures in American photography. Wed, Fri. - Sun. 11 a.m. - 5 p.m., Thur. 11 a.m. - 9 p.m. $4- $6. The University of California, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, 2626 Bancroft Way, 642-0808, www.bampfa.berkeley.edu. 

 

“Migrations: Photographs by Sebastiao Salgado” Jan. 16 through Mar. 24: Over 300 black-and-white photographs of immigrants and refugees taken by the Brazilian photographer. Wed. - Sun. 11 a.m. - 7 p.m. $4 - $6. The University of California, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, 2626 Bancroft Way. 642-0808, www.bampfa.berkeley.edu. 

 

"Earthly Pleasures" assemblage and photographs by Susan Danis, Jan. 11 through March 30: 10 a.m. - 6 p.m., Mon. - Sat.; Sticks, 1579 B, Solano Ave., 526-6603.  

 

“The Art History Museum of Berkeley” 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., 841-4210, www.atelier9.com. 

 

 

“Domestic Bliss” Collection of abstract paintings and mixed medium by Amy St. George. Her serious of work range from large abstract paintings to intimate boxes with collections of found objects, Jan.13 through Apr. 4th Albany Community Center Foyer Gallery, 1249 Marin Ave., Albany,524-9283 

 

 

 

Readings 

Cody’s on Telegraph Ave. Jan. 8: Theodore Hamm discusses “Rebel and a 

Cause: Caryl Chessman and the Politics of the Death Penalty”; Jan. 9: Karen Kevorkian & Gail Wronsky read their poetry $2; Jan. 10: Joan Frank reads from her new book, “Boys Keep Being Born”;Jan. 11: Christopher Hitchens, “Letters to a Youn Contrarian”;Jan. 13: Phyllis Koestenbaum & Carol Snow read their poetry $2; Jan. 14: Pamela Logan talks about “Tibetan Rescue: A Woman’s Quest to Save the Fabulous Art Treasures of Pewar Monastery”; All events are free and start at 7:30 p.m. unless noted. 2454 Telegraph Ave., 845-7852. 

 

The Humanist Fellowship Hall Jan. 9: 7 p.m., “Our Wings Are Pregnant Seesaws,” Reading performance of a play by H. D. Moe. 390 27th St., Oakland, 528-8713. 

 

Sierra Club books Jan. 5: 3 - 5 p.m., Author/ Photographer Keith S. Walklet will be signing his book, “Yosemite - An Enduring Treasure.” 6014 college Ave., 658-7470, info@sierraclubbookstore.com. 

 

Jewish Community Center Jan. 14: 7:30-9 p.m., Emily Rose interweaves the family chronicle of her ancestors with the political and social events of the 18th and 19th centuries; Jan. 16: 7:30-8:30 p.m., Elizabeth Rosner will read from her debut novel “The Speed of of Light.” 1414 Walnut St. 

 

AK Press Jan. 19: 8 p.m., Joel Schalit dissects the New World Order and the rise of religious fundamentalism in his new book “Jerusalem Calling”. 674-A 23rd St., Oakland, 208-1700, molly@akpress.org 

 

Tours 

 

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

 

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. 

 

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. 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. 

 

Oakland Museum of California “Kwanzaa Community Celebration” Dec. 30: 12-4 p.m., Nia Kwanzaa is an African American holiday that honors black family history; Through Jan. 13: Grand Lyricist: The Art of Elmer Bischoff, featuring paintings and works on paper that trace the evolution of Bischoff’s career. $6 adults, $4 seniors and students, children under 5 free. Wed. - Sat. 10 a.m. - 5 p.m., Sun. noon - 5 p.m.; 1000 Oak St., Oakland, 238-2200, www.museumca.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. - 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 and Pacific Film Archive “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. - Sun. 11 a.m. - 7 p.m.; 2626 Bancroft Way, 642-0808, www.bampfa.berkeley.edu. 

 

Lawrence Hall of Science Dec. 31: 1 p.m., New Year’s Eve Party, special daytime holiday party for kids; Dec. 26 through 31: Free Energy Star compact fluorescent light bulb; Through Jan. 26: Scream Machines: The Science of Roller Coasters; “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; Open daily, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m., $7 for adults; $5 for children 5-18; $3 for children 3-4. Centennial Drive, UC Berkeley, 642-5132, www.lawrencehallofscience.org. 

 

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, www.lhs.berkeley.edu. 

 

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


21-year-old son arrested in murder of teacher

By Hank Sims Daily Planet staff
Friday January 04, 2002

A 21-year-old Berkeley man was charged on Tuesday with the murder of his mother, Charlotte Ortega, also of Berkeley. 

The Berkeley Police Department arrested Lazarus Ortega at 10 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 30 – eight hours after his mother’s body was found floating in the Bay near the Berkeley Pier. The coroner determined that Charlotte Ortega had been strangled.  

A belt was found around Ortega’s throat when her body was recovered, and her body was bruised, police reports said. 

“Right now, we have just concluded our investigation and he has been charged,” Alameda County Deputy District Attorney Jason Sjoberg said Tuesday. 

Sjoberg said he could not comment on the case until Ortega enters his plea at the Alameda County Superior Court on Jan. 16. 

Charlotte Ortega, who lost an arm and a leg in a car accident in 1971 and was an advocate for the disabled, taught severely mentally and physically challenged children at Hawthorne Elementary School in Oakland. 

Sources close to the family, who asked not to be named, say that Charlotte Ortega adopted Lazarus from a Brazilian orphanage when he was 5 years old. The source said she previously adopted a Brazilian girl from another orphanage. 

At the time of the alleged murder, according to Lazarus Ortega’s statement to police, he was living with his mother in her northeast Berkeley house near Solano Avenue. 

Police reports in the case paint a grim picture of Lazarus as an embittered man with a history of poor relations with his mother.  

According to the reports, Charlotte Ortega’s daughter told police that her mother had once asked her: “Do you think Lazarus is going to kill me?” 

Several people interviewed in the case said that Lazarus would often take his mother’s van without her permission. Charlotte Ortega used the van, along with her wheelchair and prosthetic limbs, to get to work and move around town. 

They say Charlotte Ortega had an alarm installed in the van, and that she kept its remote shut-off switch with her at all times, even when she slept.  

A previous police report said the van was reported stolen July 16, 2001 and was returned the next day by a friend of Lazarus Ortega. 

In his written statement to the police, Lazarus Ortega said shortly before midnight on Dec. 29, he asked his mother, who was behind a closed door in her bedroom, if he could use the telephone.  

Ortega told police that Charlotte Ortega said that he could not, and that afterwards he left the home to walk around the neighborhood. He said that he returned between 4 and 5 a.m., Sunday morning, and went to sleep.  

When he awoke – sometime between noon and 1 p.m. on Sunday – he noticed that his mother’s bedroom door was open and she was not there. He told police that he then drove to Oakland to tell his sister that their mother was missing. 

However, when police questioned Lazarus, they said that he had previously told another officer that he had noticed that his mother was gone after he returned to the house from his walk. 

Shortly after this, according to the report, Lazarus told the police, “There are no holes in my story.” 

Charlotte Ortega’s daughter told police that she confronted her brother and asked him why he hadn’t told her about their mother’s disappearance earlier in the day. 

The daughter reports Lazarus as saying, “I didn’t really trip,” and “You know I don’t really care.” 

One of Charlotte Ortega’s neighbors told the police that around 1 a.m., he heard a car alarm. The alarm was turned off and reactivated six times in five minutes. When the neighbor went to look, the van was driving away. 

The neighbor reported that the van had returned by 2 a.m.  

Charlotte Ortega’s wheelchair and prosthetic devices – which she could not drive without, according to friends – were found in the house. 

On Thursday, friends and colleagues remembered Ortega as a selfless person who decided, from an early age, to dedicate her life to public service. 

“Charlotte devoted her life to her kids and her work,” said Ruth Martinez of Alameda, Ortega’s teaching assistant for the last 13 years. “That was pretty much what she did.” 

“She was a special education teacher for 20 years, and she just loved her students. She told me that ever since she was a little girl, she had wanted to be a teacher.” 

Susan Sperber, principal at Hawthorne Elementary, said that Ortega was an excellent teacher as well as a “really nice person.” 

“She was a loving, caring teacher,” she said. “In the 15 or 16 years I worked with her, she never lost her cool.” 

“This is unfair.” 

In 1993, former Gov. Pete Wilson appointed Ortega to serve on the board of directors of Protection and Advocacy, Inc., a federally-funded non-profit group that advocates for people with disabilities.  

She served on the board for five years, during which, according to the organization, “her interest and understanding of people with mental disabilities was instrumental in the development of expanded services to that population.” 

“I just really enjoyed being with her on the board,” said Edith Brandenburger, a former chairperson. “She was just a wonderful person, and she worked so hard.” 

“She was knowledgeable, principled and hard-working,” said Eddie Ytuarte, a current board member. “I liked her and respected her.” 

Martinez said that her friend was a fun-loving person with a great sense of humor with “a way with words.” She couldn’t give examples of Ortega’s jokes, she said, because she knew she could not do justice to them. 

“She was a lovely lady that something horrible happened to,” she said. “It’s a tragedy and it’s very unfair.” 

Ortega is survived by her daughter, Adriana Ortega of Oakland, and three granddaughters – Deijanique Dove and Chardai and Desiree Ortega.


Certified same

George Kauffman Berkeley
Friday January 04, 2002

Editor: 

Nobody is mad anymore. Everybody is certified sane. All our poetry is the same, all our politics is the same, all or art is the same, all our religion is the same, yet the dead are screaming in their graves. Even their tombstones cry out. 

Do you feel safe? Do you feel sane? Madness comes to those who want it. Confront creeping sanity with insane slogans and art. Declare yourself, America – go mad and save the world. 

 

George Kauffman 

Berkeley 

 

 


Public bidding for city projects may be altered

By John Geluardi Daily Planet staff
Friday January 04, 2002

With the Central Library remodeling project coming in late and over budget and the same contractor being awarded another lucrative public contract, some are questioning the City Charter’s requirement to accept the “lowest responsible bid” for capital projects. 

City officials defended the policy saying it is probably the best way to assure fairness in selecting contractors for public projects. The city awards contracts for millions of dollars every year for construction projects, road work and sewer replacement, most of which comes in on time and reasonably close to budget. 

Public Works Director Renee Cardinaux also defended the Central Library contractor, Arntz Builders, saying that the company has a history of quality work, although a reputation for bringing some jobs in late. 

“I’m familiar with two projects they did in Santa Clara County, the juvenile hall and the district attorney’s offices and they were both good jobs,” he said. 

But Councilmember Betty Olds said the charter requirement is not specific enough and some disreputable contractors have become adept at manipulating the bidding process by submitting very low bids. Then, once the bid is accepted, she said, they increase their profits by altering the project through “change orders,” which drag out completion dates. Olds declined to go on the record with the names of those she was speaking about. 

In addition, Olds said the lowest, most responsible bid requirement does not go far enough to protect the city from shoddy work. 

City Attorney Manuela Albuquerque said similar bidding requirements were incorporated into many city charters and state building codes during the early part of the century as a mechanism to prevent government officials from awarding public contracts to business associates and family members. 

But in August, when it became apparent that the Central Library was going to be approximately 17-months late and several million dollars over budget, the City Council asked the Public Works Department to study the situation and recommend possible improvements to the contractor selection process. The report is to be presented to the council in March. 

Cardinaux said the lowest responsible bidder requirement is not perfect, but has worked well for the most part. He added that choosing responsible contractors is a difficult process and that even the best contractors encounter unforeseen problems, especially in large remodeling projects, that can increase budgets and delay completion dates. 

“The pluses of accepting the lowest responsible bid is that it’s the most clear-cut way to award a contract without having favoritism involved. It keeps everybody’s hands clean.” he said. “The bad side is that government clients are perceived to have deep pockets and that sometimes attracts bidders who think they can get more money out of their clients.” 

Cardinaux said that Arntz Builders was not trying to squeeze money out of the city, but rather was not prepared to deal with problems related to a very complex project, which included a major addition, seismic retrofitting and historical restoration. 

“Arntz Builders are not bad builders. They’re not sitting at the Central Library trying to rip the city off,” he said. “The job was very complex and they didn’t manage it very tightly.” 

Cardinaux also pointed to two other major public projects, the retrofitting and remodel of the Martin Luther King, Jr. Civic Center and the construction of the Tsukamoto Public Safety Building, both of which came in close to the bids and on time.  

Arntz was also awarded a $30 million contract by the Berkeley Unified School District to build a series of buildings that will include a food court, gymnasium and administrative offices. BUSD is not bound by the Berkeley City Charter but is required by a similar state law to accept the lowest and most responsible bid. 

BUSD Manager of Facilities and Planning Lou Jones said he was comfortable with Arntz Builders because they carried out a $5 million remodeling project at Washington School in 1996 with very few problems. “I think they were about two months late but that’s about industry standard on large projects,” he said. 

He added that it is very difficult to research a contractor’s background to determine the “responsible” aspect of the bidding requirement. He said construction problems such as weather delays and site conditions are present in almost every moderate-to-large project.  

“When you’re looking into the past work of a contractor, you almost always find problems and everybody is typically blaming everybody else,” he said. “It’s hard to know who is being straight forward when the builder is saying ‘the architect’s drawings are lousy’ and the architect is saying ‘the contractor’s (lazy and) trying to steal money from you.’ 

Deputy City Manager Phil Kamlarz said the city is looking into possible charter amendments that might better protect the city. 

“We’re exploring our options,” he said. “If there is a better way to avoid favoritism and assure more responsible work we want to look at it.” 

He said the city is looking closely at UC Berkeley’s policy of weeding out unscrupulous or incompetent builders by examining their work history before accepting their bids. 

Cardinaux said the university’s policy has advantages but also drawbacks. “You can examine their financial worth, safety record and change order history and that’s still no guarantee that a construction project will go smoothly,” he said. “It’s a very complicated problem and for very many years, very qualified experts have struggled for an answer, including me.”


fields Real issues behind the Afghan war

Jason Scorse Albany
Friday January 04, 2002

Editor: 

A recent letter (See no evil, Touch no Evil, Hear no Evil- Jan. 1) provides an excellent example of how effective the media/government propaganda machine is at using faulty moral arguments and incomplete information to cloud the real issues involved in the Afghanistan War.  

To suggest that the purpose of this war has anything to do with liberating the Afghan people from the oppressive Taliban is patently absurd. The U.S. government was giving tens of millions of dollars in grants to this “evil” regime just months before 9/11for their drug eradication program and if 9/11 hadn’t happened we might be writing checks to them as you read this. In addition, there are dozens of regimes throughout the world which are equally oppressive as the Taliban (most of which the majority of Americans couldn’t find on a map) and no one would even consider risking a single American life to help overthrow since sadly American foreign policy is a manifestation of raw self-interest, and nothing more. 

In the current case “we” have decided to destroy a regime (without negotiating) because they are intimately associated with a group that killed thousands of Americans. Whether or not you agree with the military course we have taken lets look at some of the results so far. Most estimates from groups inside Afghanistan indicate that we have killed at least as many innocent civilians as died in the attacks of 9/11, the human rights record of the people replacing the Taliban are remarkably similar, we still haven’t captured Bin-Laden or Omar, and it is unclear whether what we have done will in the long-run decrease the likelihood of future terrorist strikes against the United States 

 

Jason Scorse 

Albany 


Psychologist, Tatia Malika Oden French, dies in childbirth

Staff
Friday January 04, 2002

Tatia Malika Oden French, Ph.D., died in childbirth Dec. 28. She was married to Joseph Blaine French, teacher at Berkeley High School, the daughter of Madeline Oden, longtime city employee, and Stan Oden, a Sacramento State University instructor. 

Mrs. French attended Berkeley High School and graduated in 1987. She then enrolled at UC Santa Cruz. Tatia’s passion for justice, her compassion and empathy for others and her belief in the ability of an individual to make a difference led her to study psychology. She graduated in 1991 with honors in that field, then went on to pursue her doctorate degree in psychology at Berkeley’s Wright Institute. She earned her degree in 2000 and devoted much of her professional life to the study of the devastating effects of physical battery on African-American women. Her dissertation, “Insult Denied: Traumatic Brain Injury in Battered African-American Women” was awarded the prestigious Richard Alan Smith Scholar’s Award from the Wright Institute. While working on her dissertation, Mrs. French soon realized that the healing of the human mind was related to the healing of the human body and so decided to prepare for medical school. 

Over the last year and a half she completed her pre-requisites for medical school while helping administer Emerson School’s Healthy Start program, maintaining a private practice, and working for Kaiser Permanente dispensing psychological advice to physicians and subscribers. 

Through her friends, Mrs. French met her husband to be, in whom she discovered a kindred spirit. They shared joy, laughter and friendship, and enjoyed camping and traveling together. 

On Aug. 19, 2000, the two married in a ceremony which they created, honoring their values of spirituality, family and love.  

Mrs. French was a devoted and loving daughter, sister, granddaughter and aunt, who took a great deal of pride in both of her brothers’ accomplishments. 

She sought the counsel of her parents in all areas. She and her father, Stan, celebrated the completion of their doctorates in the same year. Through him, Mrs. French gained the love of history and knowledge. Maddie supported her daughter in every area of her life, encouraging her travel and assisting her though all life’s transitions. 

In May of this year Mrs. French announced that she was pregnant. The couple named their daughter Zorah Allie Mae French. The child also died Dec. 28. 

In addition to her husband and parents, Mrs. French leaves behind her husband’s parents, David and Carolyn French, her grandparents George and Phyllis Mintzer and Clyde Oden , Sr., brothers and sisters, Marcus and Natasha Oden, Kofi and Jamilah Rashid, Lynn C. French, MaryAnn French, David French, Jr., Howard and Agnes French, James French, DeeDee and Bernie Boone, Buffa and Guy Harkless and Tania Jackson. 

Mrs. French celebrated her family. She celebrated friendship. She celebrated herself. She celebrated life itself. 

Services were held Thursday at Evergreen Missionary Baptist Church. This obituary was based on the obituary disseminated at the service.


Consider quakes in construction questions

Ken Norwood Berkeley
Friday January 04, 2002

Editor: 

The recent story regarding the use of flexible gas pipe in building construction overlooked a related and critical earth quake safety issue. Gas meters have traditionally been connected to houses and other buildings with conventional ridged steel pipe and inflexible connecting elbows, couplers, etc. This ridged steel pipe system connecting the gas meter can crack or snap under earth quake forces, as has been shown recently in the Loma Preita and North Ridge shakers. By far the greater danger than ground shaking is that of fire storms. 

Many damaged houses can be repaired, but once fires start entire blocks, for miles, will be destroyed by fire (remember 1906), especially because of ruptured water mains. 

The older urban Bay Area communities are more vulnerable to fire storms than in any California earthquake zone due to the number and age of wood frame houses built since the 1906 quake and up to W.W. II. This is especially serious in the East Bay from Albany throughout Oakland, and south to Fremont, as well as older San Francisco neighborhoods. The specific hazard is that there are a large number of pre-W.W. II one and two-story wooden houses sitting up on short pony walls, usually made of 2x4 studs and wood siding. These unreinforced lower areas are very vulnerable to shifting and tilting, thus putting stress on the gas pipe and joints between the gas meter and the house wall. This failure will be one of the major sources for fires after a quake, the other being unstrapped water heaters and other gas appliances. The ridged gas pipes within walls area also vulnerable to cracking, and here again flexible gas pipes could be a valuable safeguard when shifting of the building occurs. It would take only a few inches of movement to snap old and probably rusty gas pipe connections. 

Sounds obvious does it not? Then why does Pacific Gas & Electric, emergency services departments, and building departments balk at instituting a region wide program to make this very inexpensive flexible connections at the gas meter.? (Water heater earth quake strapping and flexible gas pipe are already required, as are flexible pipe connections to kitchen ranges.) 

It appears that PG&E is the major stumbling block – the meters are theirs. And, why is there acquiescence by earthquake engineers and emergency agencies? Maybe this trail runs through the entire political spectrum and involves the real estate, lending, commercial property owners, and developer interests. Some one is benefiting from the above inaction. 

Perhaps there is a city council member, state legislator, or a U.S. Congress person who will investigate the above allegations and how state and federal funds for earthquake preparedness are being spent. 

Lastly, who are the emergency preparedness officials at local and upper levels who have not called our attention to the likelihood for fire storms (remember 06) in old wood frame neighborhoods. Please do not feel safe because you have already retrofitted your foundation walls, if there area any houses in your block not reinforced and without flexible gas pipe connections you are vulnerable.  

 

Ken Norwood 

Berkeley 


Berkeley exults over new tobacco laws

Bay City News Service
Friday January 04, 2002

Berkeley officials are crowing over three new state tobacco-control laws, saying they extend at least some of the protection the city already offers to Californians all over the state. 

One of the new measures prohibits self-service cigarette displays, restricts the distribution of free tobacco product samples and bans the sale of smaller cigarette packs and roll-your-own tobacco packages. 

The measure, which went into force on New Year’s Day, also expands compliance checks to telephone, e-mail and Internet sales and at businesses with a record of selling tobacco to minors. 

“California’s children deserve protection from the dangers of tobacco use and the insidious marketing by the manufacturers of America’s No. 1 killer,” Berkeley Health Officer Poki Namkung said in a statement. “Creating an environment where smoking is not considered the norm and enforcing the state’s tough second-hand smoke and youth access laws are key to protecting the health of our children.” 

City officials couldn’t resist a swipe at what they see as a hole in the state law, however.  

An ordinance passed by the Berkeley City Council already prohibits self-service displays of any tobacco product and requires all tobacco sales to be handled by a clerk.  

But, as Berkeley Tobacco Prevention Program Director dryly noted, Berkeley’s ordinance, unlike the new state law, also prohibits self-service sales of cigars. 

A second law bans smoking and discarding cigarette or cigar butts in children’s “tot lot” play areas to protect youngsters from choking, swallowing or burning themselves with smoking debris. 

Again, Berkeley officials couldn’t resist pointing out, Berkeley was already on the case with one of the state’s first such bans a year and a half ago, and Berkeley’s law is tougher in that it is pointedly specific about enforcement and prohibits smoking within 10 feet of tot lot sandy areas. They acknowledge that the state law also prohibits smoking on any school or public playground, however. 

The third law restricts the sale of hand-rolled, filterless cigarettes called “bidis” to businesses that prohibit minors. Bidis are produced in what Berkeley officials term “candy-like” flavors and sold in packs of less than 20, which they say “makes them more tempting and affordable” to young people.


Bay Area Briefs

Staff
Friday January 04, 2002

City will help homeless according to survey 

 

SAN FRANCISCO — The city will spend more than $100 million helping its homeless population this year, according to the first financial survey of homeless services in nearly a decade. 

The cost of coping with the thousands of people who have no place to sleep has swelled since the last time the city tried to account for such spending, according to a report released Wednesday by the Board of Supervisors’ budget analyst. 

Eight years ago, for example, the price tag of shelters alone was $4.5 million. This fiscal year, it will top $12 million. 

Supervisor Gavin Newsom asked for the report as part of an effort to determine why so many people remain on the streets suffering from poverty, mental illness and drug addiction despite the millions of dollars spent on aid. Newsom said the city needs to know whether the money is well spent. 

San Francisco’s annual homeless census recently found 7,305 people sleeping outside and in shelters, hospitals, jails and treatment programs – 36 percent more than in 2000. 

 

 

City to have Old Mint 

 

SAN FRANCISCO — The city has reached a tentative deal with federal officials that will let them take over the Old Mint, a long-vacant national landmark in the heart of downtown. 

The agreement would let San Francisco get to work on reopening the imposing but rat-infested “Granite Lady” as a museum, shops, offices or some combination. 

“The hope is to start rehabilitating the building this fall,” Hala Hijazi, project manager for Mayor Willie Brown’s Office of Economic Development, said Wednesday 

City officials hope a developer or the federal government will pay for at least part of the project. The city has estimated that the seismic work alone will cost at least $18 million. 

Also, the building has been deteriorating in the seven years since it was last open to the public, and will require additional restoration and lots of maintenance.


Eurkea man indicted for sending threatening anthrax letter and impersonating FBI agent

The Associated Press
Friday January 04, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — A Eureka man was indicted Thursday by a federal grand jury after allegedly sending a letter to the FBI in San Francisco claiming the letter was laced with anthrax, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office. 

Roger Hudnall, 45, allegedly sent the letter on Nov. 24, threatening to kill two people and stated the envelope contained anthrax, according to an affidavit filed by an FBI agent. The letter was wrongly addressed and returned to Hudnall’s former landlord, whose return address was on the envelope. 

When she opened the returned envelope, white powder spilled out. The letter said the powder was anthrax, the same kind that had been sent to Washington, D.C., which killed several postal workers. 

The white powder later tested negative for anthrax. 

Hudnall also was indicted for allegedly impersonating as an FBI agent in July to avoid being evicted. 

Impersonating a federal officer while demanding anything of value carries a fine of $1,000 or three years in prison, or both. Hudnall also faces up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine for mailing a threatening letter. 


Sierra snowpack levels portend wet year

By Don Thompson The Associated Press
Friday January 04, 2002

SACRAMENTO — A series of winter storms has left the Sierra Nevada mountains packed with plenty of snow, easing state hydrologists’ concerns the state could be headed for a drought. 

Poor snow a year ago aggravated the state’s electricity crisis by cutting the water available to hydroelectric plants that produce about a quarter of California’s power. Snowpack was half of normal last January, and the winter stayed dry. 

By contrast, this year the snowpack is 139 percent of normal — the equivalent of 61 percent of an entire average winter, according to the Department of Water Resources’ first snow survey of the year Thursday. 

“If we were to have just average rain and snow the rest of the year, we’d be in good shape,” said department spokesman Jeff Cohen. “There’s a lot of cushion there.” 

The mountain range’s snowpack provides two-thirds of California’s water for cities, farms and recreational uses. 

It’s too soon to tell if the series of wet winter storms will continue, Cohen said, “but we’re on track right now for an above average year, that’s for sure.” Not only have the storms been consistent, he said, but they’ve been spaced far enough apart to allow water to soak in and run off without causing flooding. 

The department took remote readings from 95 automated snowpack sensors, plus conducted snow surveys along Highway 50 throughout the American River watershed. 

The surveys showed 165 percent of normal snowpack at a test site located at 7,600 feet above sea level; 172 percent of normal at 6,800 feet; 176 percent at a site at 6,700 feet; and 179 percent at a test site located at 7,100 feet. 

The 139 percent average snowpack across the Sierra would be enough water to fill a glass 17 inches tall, Cohen said. 

Water projections aren’t yet in from the State Water Project, Cohen said, but are also expected to bring good news for the projects’ urban and agricultural customers in a couple weeks. 

The above average snowfall is good news for state officials who had been worried enough about a possible drought that they started a drought-preparedness Web site and held a series of workshops this fall. They also had begun contemplating starting a water purchasing program — buying water from those who have it and distributing it to those who need it — as the state did during the last drought. 

That drought ran six years from 1987 to 1992, forcing half the state’s counties to declare drought emergencies. 

——— 

On the Net: 

The Department of Water Resources: http://www.water.ca.gov 


Replace a lamp socket

By James and Morris Carey
Friday January 04, 2002

This do-it-yourself project is pretty easy to do and can actually make your home safer a lot safer. We were once paid $55,000 to partially rebuild a fire-damaged condominium that had exploded into flames when a short circuit occurred in a frayed lamp cord. Fortunately, the owner was away at the time and was not injured. But, she lost just about everything she owned, family photos, personal records, memorabilia, her wardrobe, furniture, clothing everything. 

Ensuring that electrical appliances are in good condition is important. And, repairing a frayed appliance cord is a good way of doing your share to ensure home safety. On the other hand, when it comes to working on electrical appliances, there can be dangers especially if you aren’t careful. For example: If you replace a lamp cord with undersized wire, overheating can occur and a fire can result. 

Other simple mistakes can be disastrous too. As you make the electrical repairs that we suggest, be sure that all connections are tight and snug. A loose electrical connection can promote arcing and a fire can result. Lack of proper insulation between the electrical contacts and the surrounding metal socket housing can result in a short circuit that can ultimately cause a fire. 

Doing these kinds of repairs are important, but you should be acutely aware of the importance of being extremely careful when working with electric appliances. It’s easy to prevent an electrical repair from backfiring once you realize what things can go wrong. So, read on and learn another trick or two. 

With a lamp there are two parts that are known to wear out occasionally and which must occasionally be replaced: the cord and the light bulb socket. 

Replacing a light bulb socket and switch is easy. Don’t try to repair just the switch. You won’t save any money, and it may even cost more. Also, it doesn’t make any difference which style switch you select. There are three basic types to choose from: pull chain, push-push, and twist. 

Keep in mind that a switch is a switch is a switch and when it comes to “which type,” we suggest that you be the judge. There is, however, another consideration when selecting a switch.  

That is whether it simply goes on and off or provides low and high intensity on positions.  

Some folks call it a “three-way switch,” probably because it has three positions: off, on low and full on. The wires are connected in exactly the same way regardless of which switch you choose.  

But, the three-way is a little more expensive than the standard type.  

Also, if you select the three-way switch you guessed it you also will have to provide the more expensive three-way bulbs. 

Once you have decided on which switch you will use, the hardest part of the job is over. Now it’s time to begin disassembling the lamp. Most lamps are built pretty much the same way. Quarter-inch threaded tubing travels from the base of the light socket to the bottom of the lamp. The tubing screws into the socket at the top end of the lamp and relies on a nut and washer at the bottom end to hold the entire lamp together kind of like a multi-piece totem pole.  

Often, a layer of felt conceals the connection at the bottom of the lamp.  

During the repair don’t discard the felt. It not only conceals the connection, but also prevents the lamp base from scratching your table. 

There can sometimes be several pieces between the socket and the bottom of the lamp. We sometimes see lamps in as many as a dozen pieces. Although there are usually only one or two sections, it probably wouldn’t be a bad idea to photograph your lamp before you take it apart just in case. 

Caution: Don’t begin until the lamp has been unplugged and the bulb and lampshade have been removed. 

If you intend to replace the cord as well, carefully remove the felt cover from the base of the lamp. Use a razor blade to help peel it off. This will expose a threaded tube with a nut on the end through which the lamp cord travels. If you do not intend on replacing the cord please skip the previous step. 

To replace the socket, remove the setscrew at its base. Then, use a screwdriver to pry the socket shell from the base cap. Simply wedge the screwdriver into the seam between the two pieces and gently pry. With the outer shell out of the way remove the cardboard insulation sleeve to expose the two electrical connections. One will be copper colored (the darker of the two) and one will be silver colored (the lighter of the two). Loosen both screws and release both wires. You can now unscrew the base cap from the threaded rod. At this point, if you are replacing the cord, pull it out of the lamp. Disassembly is now complete. 

To make the repair, all you have to do is reverse the disassembly process. Keep in mind that the wire lamp cord must be carefully reconnected. The wire that attaches to the silver post is the neutral side of the connection. The neutral wire on a lamp cord is identified along its entire length, usually by ribs, indentations or square corners on the insulating jacket. And, that’s all there is to it. 

 

For more home improvement tips and information visit our Web site at www.onthehouse. com.


Violets have much to offer, year-round

By Lee Reich The Associated Press
Friday January 04, 2002

Of all the flowers that linger this late in the season, Johnny-jump-ups are among the best. 

Alyssum’s flowers also last, but begin to look ragged by now. Chrysanthemums have the opposite fault, staring out too bright-eyed and stiff, seeming almost lifeless. 

Johnny-jump-ups, originally from Europe, are a type of wild violet whose small flowers may not be flamboyant, but even now pulse with life. 

In good weather, they look perky; rain, wind, and cold leave them only temporarily ragged. The flowers have the same winsome look as pansies, their cultivated cousins. A thick shock of “hair” — two purple petals — surmounts the three golden petals of the each “face,” on which purple veins wrinkle into a smile. You may get Johnny-jump-ups without even planting them, as offspring of pansies. 

Johnny-jump-ups thrive under a range of conditions. Still, they prefer a soil that has plenty of humus to keep it well-aerated and moist. Shade from hot afternoon sun completes this picture of Johnny-jump-up heaven. 

Once you have Johnny-jump-ups, you’ll notice that they quickly spread. Unlike most flowers, Johnny-jump-ups — along with other violets — do not have to rely on wind or insects for pollination. Besides their showy flowers, violets also produce flowers that self-pollinate without any help. You won’t notice these flowers, even if you look closely, because they grow beneath the surface of the soil, the seed pods poking up through the ground only as their seeds ripen.  

To further aid dispersal, violets can shoot their ripe seeds almost 10 feet away. 

Success with Johnny-jump-ups may very well prompt you to expand your repertoire of wild violets. For instance, for a groundcover, there is the low, spreading Labrador Violet, a native with small, blue flowers and dark, purple leaves. For something frilly, there is the Birdfoot Violet, with deeply cut leaves and, usually, purple and lilac petals. The Woolly Blue Violet comes in an albino form that retains a large blue center — the “Confederate Violet,” once popular in the South. And for your nose, how about the old-fashioned Sweet Violet, once used for fragrant nosegays? 

And of course, do leave some room for some “high-bred” pansies.


Senate leader proposed increasing tax on richest Californians

By Don Thompson The Associated Press
Friday January 04, 2002

SACRAMENTO — The state should temporarily increase personal income taxes on the richest Californians to help offset an expected $12 billion budget shortfall, Senate President John Burton said Thursday. 

By reverting two top income brackets to the levels they were in the mid-1980s, California could raise an additional $2 billion to $3 billion a year, Burton said. The increase would halt once the state built a reserve of 3 percent, he said. 

Taxpayers affected by his proposal will get a federal tax break from the Bush administration, Burton said, so “it really isn’t going to be that much of a hardship on anybody.” 

Californians in the highest income bracket pay 9.3 percent in state taxes. That includes single, heads of households making more than $45,888 and married couples earning more than $67,346. 

Under Burton’s plan, the state would restore two additional brackets — single filers making between $130,000 to $260,000, and married couples earning between $260,000 and $520,000 — which would pay 10 percent. The tax rates increase to 11 percent for a single filer earning more than $260,000 or a couple making more than $520,000. 

“You’re talking about people who got a pretty nice savings out of the Bush administration,” Burton said. “If you’re making $200,000 taxable, which means you’re at $300,000 gross, and you have to come up with less than $500, I don’t think that’s necessarily going to cut into someone’s standard of living.” 

A top Republican budget negotiator quickly labeled Burton’s proposal as a “soak-the-rich idea.” 

“I expected this,” said Assemblyman John Campbell, R-Irvine. “This is just their typical usual response when they spend too much, to try and figure out a way to create class warfare to hide a further dampening of economic activity.” 

Also Thursday, California Treasurer Phil Angelides proposed that the state could save more than $2 billion over the next 2 1/2 years by restructuring its debt. 

Angelides said his plan can help the state with the budget deficit caused by both a sharp economic downturn and a dispute over the state’s ability to recoup money it has spent to buy electricity on behalf of three cash-starved utilities. 

The proposals come a week before Gov. Gray Davis releases his budget proposal. 

“The governor’s been focusing on spending cuts, not raising taxes,” said Davis’ spokesman Steve Maviglio. 

Burton, however, said the solution would have to be half spending cuts and half new taxes. 

“There’s just no way, in my judgment and the judgment of most intelligent people that you can cut your way through such a tremendous deficit,” Burton said. “There’d be no state employees, no highway patrol.” 

The Legislature returns Monday for the final year of its two-year session and a special legislative session devoted to the state’s economy and the budget shortfall. 

“I am very determined that the entire burden of this deficit’s not going to fall on the elderly, blind and disabled. It’s not going to fall on the poor children. It’s not going to fall on the developmentally disabled,” Burton said. 

Larry McCarthy, president of the California Taxpayers Association, said his organization “strenuously disagreed” with Burton’s proposal, adding that the tax brackets were eliminated in the 1980s when the overall tax base was increased. 

His group will oppose any tax increase, McCarthy said, because “to raise rates back up is to ignore history and ignore reality.” 

Officials should know within days whether negotiations between Davis’ administration and the Public Utilities Commission will let the state issue long-term bonds to offset the energy costs, Angelides said. Regardless, he said, it likely is too late to issue those bonds before the next fiscal year begins in July. 

The restructuring pushes principle payments on the state’s general obligation bonds to the end of the decade, but would bring slightly lower overall costs, Angelides said. It must be approved by several committees and commercial bond houses. 

The plan would save a projected $223 million during the last six months of this fiscal year, $923 million in the fiscal year that starts July 1, and $963 million the following year. 

Bond houses and budget negotiators said the plan is merely a piece of the state’s overall response. 

“This is not a panacea ... for the budget,” Angelides agreed. 

However, he said the one-time debt restructuring is suitable to help the state deal with a one-time revenue crunch. In addition, the state should take advantage of the most favorable interest rates in 30 years, Angelides said: “Now is really the time to restructure this debt.” 

——— 

The California Franchise Tax Board: http://www.ftb.ca.gov 


Struggling Providian to fire 800 workers

By Michael Liedtke The Associated Press
Friday January 04, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Providian Financial Corp. said Thursday it is firing 800 workers in California and Kentucky and warned even more layoffs loom as the hobbled credit card issuer struggles to recover from mounting loan losses. 

The firings, affecting 6 percent of Providian’s work force, follow 550 job cuts made after the San Francisco-based company decided in November to close a Nevada office. 

The latest cutbacks will affect Providian employees in four California cities — San Francisco, Oakland, Pleasanton and Sacramento — as well as Louisville, Ky., said spokesman Alan Elias. Providian planned to deliver most of the pink slips Thursday and Friday, Elias said. 

Providian plans to book a first-quarter charge of between $10 million and $15 million to pay for the firings. 

With the company’s growth restricted by federal bank regulators, Providian warned further layoffs are possible later this year. Other employees might be offered new jobs at other companies if Providian succeeds in its effort to sell its international business, as well as other pieces of its $32 billion loan portfolio. 

The mass layoffs reverse years of expansion that swelled Providian’s payroll from 3,000 employees at the start of 1997 to more than 13,000 workers in 2001. Along the way, Providian grew from the nation’s 13th largest issuer of Visa credit cards and Mastercards to the fifth biggest. 

“I deeply regret the need for these reductions,” Providian CEO Joseph Saunders said in a note to employees. “I very much hope that we can go through this process with as much fairness and grace as our circumstance permits.” 

Providian’s purge stems from the company’s deepening loan problems. 

Powered by a sophisticated computer program that emboldened the company to issue credit cards to high-risk borrowers that scared off other lenders, Providian emerged as one of the financial services industry’s biggest success stories of the 1990s. 

But the company’s run of prosperity ended abruptly during the last half of 2001, as more of its 18.5 million accountholders stopped making payments on their balances, saddling the company with crippling problems. As of Nov. 30, Providian’s loan losses stood at 12.8 percent of its managed loan portfolio, up from 7.7 percent at the start of 2001. 

Providian is trying to offset the damage by pruning expenses. The company estimates the job cuts made so far will save the company about $60 million annually. 

The streamlining hasn’t done much for Providian’s ravaged stock, which plunged by 94 percent in 2001, wiping out $15 billion in shareholder wealth. 

Providian’s shares fell 11 cents to close at $3.44 Thursday on the New York Stock Exchange. 

Investors are largely unimpressed with Providian’s recovery efforts so far because the company hasn’t adopted a new system for identifying potential customers or disposed of the troubled loans that sank the company in the first place, said industry analyst Jennifer Scutti of CIBC World Markets. 

“Cutting jobs and closing offices doesn’t really fix the problem,” Scutti said. “They need to sell portions of their portfolio, but they may have too many skeletons in the closet to pull it off.” 

——— 

On The Net: 

http://www.providian.com 


Dozens of vehicles collide on foggy Kern County highway

The Associated Press
Friday January 04, 2002

CALIENTE — Seventy-seven vehicles collided in fog on Highway 58 Thursday, killing one motorist and injuring 15. Two other chain-reaction collisions in Kern County crunched 13 more vehicles on foggy Interstate 5. 

The biggest pileups began shortly after 9 a.m. on Highway 58 about 90 miles northwest of Los Angeles in the foothills of the Tehachapi Mountains, which separate the Mojave Desert from the southern San Joaquin Valley. 

Arriving officers estimated visibility at 100 feet and found jackknifed big-rigs, an overturned cement truck, a person pinned under a pickup truck’s steering wheel, with more collisions continuing to occur, California Highway Patrol Sgt. Ted Eichman said. 

Fifty-five cars and trucks were involved in the first collision; the second occurred east of the original smashup. 

A California Department of Corrections prisoner van was involved but no inmates were injured or escaped, CHP spokesman Tom Marshall said. 

A Kern County firetruck parked on Highway 58 was struck by a private vehicle, which was heavily damaged, fire Capt. Doug Johnston said. The highway was closed by that time and it was unknown how that car got onto the road, he said. 

“The scene looks like a war zone,” Johnston said. 

The county coroner’s office identified the fatality as Carl Ray Woosley, 52, of Bakersfield. Other motorists removed the man from his vehicle and tried to save him with cardiopulmonary resuscitation, Johnston said. 

It took until midafternoon for the CHP to reopen the westbound side of the heavily traveled highway, and the eastbound side was not reopened until nightfall. 

“There’s only so much you can do to unwrap these vehicles,” Eichman said. 

The Highway 58 accidents were followed by two others that had no injuries. Nine vehicles were involved in a southbound Interstate 5 pileup in Tejon Pass, and four vehicles crashed on southbound I-5 at State Route 43 near Buttonwillow, Eichman said. 

Eichman stressed that although fog appeared to be connected to the crashes, “Fog doesn’t cause collisions; unsafe driving does.” 

The National Weather Service had issued dense fog advisories for the central and southern San Joaquin Valley. 

Because the area of the largest crash was bounded to the south by the Tehachapis, to the east by the southern Sierra Nevada and to the west by the coastal range, when fog comes, “that’ll be the last place it burns off,” said forecaster Gary Sanger of the service’s Hanford office. 

The weather service predicted more fog Thursday night and Friday throughout the Central Valley, with potential for dense fog during the morning commute. 


Great white shark more oceangoing than thought

The Associated Press
Friday January 04, 2002

SANTA CRUZ— Great white sharks don’t just troll the cold waters off a select few coasts — they head to warm waters, sometimes hundreds of miles away, and dive deeper than researchers thought, according to a study published Thursday. 

Scientists who tracked six adults tagged off the coast of central California had thought the animals would stick relatively close to shore. Instead, using small data transmitters, they found the creatures spent months in open ocean. 

One shark, named Tipfin, spent 40 days migrating from the Farallon Islands near San Francisco to Hawaii, where it stayed four months. Three others swam hundreds of miles to the warm waters west of Baja California. Only two stayed close to the coast off San Francisco. 

“I was shocked by the results,” said one author, biologist Burney J. Le Boeuf of the University of California, Santa Cruz. “It turns out they’ve got a life at sea.” 

A need for new mates, or even a different diet, could explain the long migrations, Le Boeuf said. 

He and others, including scientists from a joint project of Stanford University and the Monterey Bay Aquarium, reported the results in the Jan. 3 issue of the journal Nature. 

The offshore travel of the sharks lasted at least five months, suggesting it’s important to shark life, the researchers said. They could not pinpoint the exact reason for the migrations. 

The researchers also were surprised by the depths at which some sharks swam. 

“The sharks went straight out across the open ocean, diving to depths of 700 meters,” Le Boeuf said. “In all our observations before, they were never observed below 100 meters.” 

The researchers tracked the animals with tags that continuously recorded water depth, temperature and light levels, and then detached from the animals on a pre-set date. The tags popped up to the surface and transmitted data to satellites. The light levels let scientists track the animals’ movements. 

The data then beamed to servers in France and Maryland, which triggered an e-mail to researchers. 

Previous studies had only tracked great whites for short periods near seal colonies such as the Farallones and Ano Nuevo, according to Barbara Block of the Tuna Research and Conservation Center at Stanford’s Hopkins Marine Station. 

She said her first reaction to the new study was to inform a fisherman friend in Hawaii of the results. 

“I said, ‘Do you know there’s a great white shark swimming off of Maui right now?’ ” she said. 

———— 

On the Net: 

http://www.pelagic.org/ 

http://www.ucsc.edu/ 


Experts trying to save orca despite repeated beachings

The Associated Press
Friday January 04, 2002

SEQUIM, Wash. — A male killer whale repeatedly beached himself Thursday despite efforts by wildlife workers to move him to deeper water off Dungeness Spit, where another whale was found dead the day before. 

The male orca, believed to be 20 years old, was towed out of shallow water several times, but kept returning to shore, said National Marine Fisheries Service spokesman Brian Gorman in Seattle. 

“It’s kind of been frustrating,” he said. “The longer (he) remains stranded, the less likely it is to successfully return him.” 

Gorman said experts would monitor the whale through the night, keeping his skin wet and making sure he didn’t injure himself. Rescue efforts were expected to resume Friday morning, Gorman said. 

Experts took tissue and blood samples and planned to support the whale with a harness during the night, KING-TV reported. 

“We don’t know what he’s thinking or why he’s trying to get out (of the ropes),” said Kelley Balcomb-Bartok of the Center for Whale Research in Friday Harbor. 

The whale, initially found in shallow water Wednesday near the spit on the north coast of Washington’s Olympic Peninsula, was towed to deeper water Wednesday evening but, already disoriented, swam back to shore during an unusually low tide, Gorman said. 

A female killer whale was found dead on the spit Wednesday. A calf had been earlier spotted with the two adults, and a Coast Guard helicopter from Port Angeles was searching for it. 

The male orca “may in fact be in some kind of distress from the fact the female has died,” Steve Jeffries, a state research scientist, told reporters. 

A necropsy was begun Thursday on the female, but results were not immediately known. 

“Certainly, this is a serious setback for killer whales in general,” Balcomb-Bartok said. 

Experts have hypothesized that toxins in Washington’s inland waters may be poisoning the black and white whales. 

“The necropsy should go a long way toward helping us find out,” Gorman said. “It should tell us some other stuff — the levels of toxins that were in the female’s body and it will help us understand what’s going on, her stomach contents — things we normally aren’t able to find out because killer whale strandings are pretty rare in this part of the country.” 

The two whales are thought to be transients in the Strait of Juan de Fuca from a larger Pacific population, Gorman said, and were probably hunting for seals. Scientists believe they could be related. 

“Transients roam through the region and we do get rare sightings,” Balcomb-Bartok said. 

Though most orcas live in family pods with defined territories, some transients wander as far south as Mexico’s Baja Peninsula and north to the Bering Sea. 

Approximately 78 whales in three pods live in the marine waters of Washington state, said Tracie Hornung of the Whale Museum in Friday Harbor. Seven of those whales failed to return to their summer range in Washington’s San Juan Islands after their winter travels last year. 

Environmental groups have petitioned to place the whales on the endangered species list. 

Dave Ellifrit, an expert in orca identification, was examining photos of the whales in hopes of identifying them. Most transients and all resident killer whales have been identified individually, based on their markings, with a number assigned by researchers in Canada and the United States. 

Groups of killer whales have their own dialects, said Rich Osborne of the Whale Museum.  

Transients have fewer variations in their speech and sound more “haunting” than residents. 

Osborne said that on Monday, he heard the sound of transient orcas on hydrophones in the San Juan Islands, about 20 miles across the strait from Dungeness Spit. And on Tuesday, he said, several people at a shoreside restaurant near Sequim reported seeing whales near the beach in Dungeness Bay. 


Coordinator slot left up a creek?

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet staff
Thursday January 03, 2002

Berkeley’s 14 creeks could be the next casualty of the economic downturn. 

The City Council, acknowledging the need for better maintenance of Berkeley’s waterways, unanimously passed a resolution Dec. 11 calling on city officials to explore hiring a creeks coordinator. 

The new employee would pursue grants from county, state, federal and private sources, coordinate among the various departments and agencies in Berkeley with jurisdiction over the creeks and convene a task force to determine the future of the city’s waterways. 

Councilmembers say they hope the city will be able to hire a coordinator, but warn that an uncertain economic picture could affect Berkeley’s ability to bring someone new on board. 

“It will be tough,” said Mayor Shirley Dean. “Nobody knows at this point what the impact of the various economic downturns will be.” 

In February, the council will consider adding the position during a mid-year adjustment to its budget. If the council does not reach a conclusion then, it will postpone the decision until the next fiscal year, which begins July 1. 

Activists have argued that the coordinator should be able to win grant money to fund the position, allaying budgetary concerns. They say the city only needs to provide some initial “seed money.”  

City Councilmember Kriss Worthington said that in the coming months, Berkeley city staff will investigate whether a coordinator could win a quick grant infusion to fund the position. 

“If it doesn’t appear likely that it will generate income anytime soon...it definitely won’t make it in,” said Worthington, raising concerns about an uncertain budget. 

Several activists said they believe the coordinator could begin winning grants in six months to a year. But Tom Kelly, a member of Friends of Strawberry Creek and a grants coordinator at the California Department of Health Services, said city officials should not expect grant money to fund the position in the near term. 

“Because of the lead time on grants,” said Kelly, “you’d need someone in there probably two years before they could start to underwrite the position.” 

Still, activists said that, in the long run, winning millions of dollars in grants would more than make up for the expected $85,000 annual salary of the grants coordinator.  

Berkeley’s creeks make up a significant portion of the city’s storm drainage system. Much of the rain water that flows from local streets drain directly into the city’s underground creeks, then drops into the San Francisco Bay. 

Codornices Creek and Strawberry Creek, the two Berkeley waterways that flow above ground over large swaths of land, also serve as recreation areas and wildlife habitats for everything from newts to steelhead salmon.  

City officials and local environmental activists alike say that Berkeley’s creeks need greater attention. The pipes, or “culverts,” that house the underground creeks are decades old and several are in disrepair. 

Pollutants like motor oil and soap enter the creeks through the storm drain system and eventually pour into the bay.  

In addition, erosion, invasive plant life and human rubbish in the above-ground creeks have disrupted the flow of the waterways and harmed animal habitats.  

A lack of funding has been a major reason for the current decay. Rene Cardinaux, Berkeley’s director of public works, says that storm drain fees, which run at about $50 for the average parcel, allow for only $150,000 to $200,000 in storm drain maintenance and improvements per year. 

“We don’t do enough,” said Cardinaux, who added that he will push for a ballot measure later this year that would increase storm drain fees. 

But activists and City Council members say a creeks czar would also make a difference, not only in winning grant money, but also in improving the profile of creeks within city government. 

“If you ever want an idea in this city to go forward,” saidDean, “you have to have, not only a community support group, but someone on the inside making sure the word is being heard.” 

Activists and city officials add that the coordinator would be helpful in bringing together UC Berkeley, different city departments, private landowners, the Berkeley Unified School District and others that have jurisdiction over various sections of the creeks. 

“There’s all these jurisdictions, and nobody is looking at the entire watershed,” said Janet Byron, founder of a citizens’ group called Friends of Strawberry Creek. 

Carole Schemmerling, East Bay Coordinator for the Urban Creeks Council of California, said she hopes that the coordinator will also aid in the process of “opening” underground creeks, or bringing them to the surface. 

Open creeks with heavy vegetation, she said, does everything from absorbing pollution, to raising the property values of nearby homes. 

The coordinator could be particularly helpful, Schemmerling said, in developing a plan to surface an underground portion of Strawberry Creek in downtown Berkeley, and using that plan to apply for grant money. 

But, the long-sought downtown waterway has its detractors. “I think that’s a pipedream,” said City Councilmember Betty Olds, arguing that it would cost far too much money and disrupt downtown traffic. 

“Everything costs more money than we would like it to, but it can get done,” Schemmerling responded. 

 

 

 


Panthers rout St. Joseph in league opener

By Nathan Fox Special to the Daily Planet
Thursday January 03, 2002

The Saint Mary’s Panthers boys basketball team destroyed Saint Joseph Wednesday night, 90-63, in the Bay Shore Athletic League opener. 

“Saint Joe’s was ranked right behind us,” said Panther guard Tim Fanning. “We knew this was a big game and we had to set a tone for the season.” 

They did that and then some. The hosting Panthers opened the game with an 8-point run, including three-pointers from Terrence Boyd and John Sharper, en route to an 18-3 lead halfway through the first quarter. 

A bad start would only get worse for the Pilots, who struggled desperately against relentless full-court pressure from Saint Mary’s. Adding insult to injury, Boyd banked in a buzzer-beating three-pointer to close the first quarter at 29-9. 

Boyd, who would add another banked three early in the second half amidst cheering laughter from the home crowd, led all scorers with 24 points. Sharper followed closely with 23 for the Panthers, and Chase Moore contributed 18. Meanwhile, Saint Joseph failed to put a single scorer in double-digits. Kevin Neveu led the Pilots with nine points from the bench. 

Berkeley High assistant coach Barry Kleiman, scouting his cross-town rival, was impressed. 

“They’re battle-tested,” Kleiman said. “They’ve been in a lot of big games, and they’ve learned how to take advantage of key situations.” 

Wednesday night’s performance is all the more impressive in the absence of injured point guard DeShawn Freeman, a key component from last years Division 4 state championship Saint Mary’s team. 

Freeman, out early in the season with a stress fracture, had played in the Panthers’ two previous games before reinjuring himself at practice over the weekend. 

“He’ll be back in a couple weeks,” said Saint Mary’s head coach Jose Caraballo. “All my kids are stepping up, especially Terrence Boyd and Tim Fanning. The kids are playing hard and getting more experience while DeShawn’s not playing, so once he gets back we’ll be even better.” 

Wednesday night’s blowout was a perfect opportunity to distribute playing time among Panther reserves. Freshman Larry Gurganions, who had zero first-half minutes, poured in 8 points during his very strong second half. 

“The kids are playing hard and have done everything I’ve asked them to do,” Caraballo said. 

The Panthers next face sophomore standout Tim Pierce and the Fremont Tigers.


Compiled by Guy Poole
Thursday January 03, 2002


Thursday, Jan. 3

 

 

California Desert Hikes 

7 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment, Inc. 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

Steve Tabor will share slides and information on his favorite day hikes in Death Valley, Joshua Tree, Anza Borrego and the Mojave. 527-4140 

 

Puppet Art Theater Company  

with Art Grueneberger 

11 a.m. 

Public Library, West Branch 

1125 University Ave. 

The classic fairytale “Jack and the Beanstalk” will be performed with a “behind the scenes” after the show. Free. Recommended for children ages 3 and up. 649-3913, www.infopeople.org/bpl/. 

 

Puppet Art Theater Company 

with Art Grueneberger 

3 p.m. 

Public Library, North Branch 

1170 The Alameda 

The classic fairytale “Jack and the Beanstalk” will be performed with a “behind the scenes” after the show. Free. Recommended for children ages 3 and up. 649-3913, www.infopeople.org/bpl/. 

 

Public Works Commission 

7 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Avenue 

The Commission will consider Parks and Recreation Commission policies for naming public facilities along with status of liasions with other commissions. 981-6400 

 


Friday, Jan. 4

 

 

Even Stronger Women 

1:30 - 3:30 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

This week’s discussion: Helen Keller and film. 232-1351. 

 


Saturday, Jan. 5

 

 

Marionette Puppets 

10:30 a.m. 

Public Library, Central Branch 

2121 Allston Way 

JoJo La Plume appears with a performance to ethnic music and sounds of nature. Free. Recommended for children ages 3 and up. 649-3913, www.infopeople.org/ bpl/. 

 

Bay Area Poets Coalition  

3 - 5 p.m. 

Public Library, South Branch 

1901 Russell St.  

Open reading. 527-9905, poetalk@aol.com. 

 

Spanish Storytime 

2 p.m. 

Public Library, West Branch 

1125 University Ave.  

Spanish language storytime, books and songs for families with children ages 3 - 8. 981-6270. 

 

Peace-by-Peace Walk Benefit 

5 p.m. - midnight 

Black Box 

1928 Telegraph Ave.  

Fund-raiser and send-off party for the cross-country peace walk. $25 donation. 644-9260. 

 

Peace & Freedom Holiday Potluck 

4 p.m. - 11 p.m. 

Barn in the Back Yard 

2217 1/2 McGee Ave. 

Alameda County Peace & Freedom Party’s Annual Holiday Potluck, Supper and Party will be asking for a donation of $5 with food to share, or $20 without. 

 


Sunday, Jan. 6

 

 

Buddy Club Show 

1 - 2 p.m. 

Berkeley Jewish Community Center Theater 

1414 Walnut St. 

Ace Miles performs magic, juggling, ventriloquism and escape routines. For parents and children ages 2 - 12. $7. 236-7469, www.thebuddyclub.com. 

 

Free Sailboat Rides  

1 - 4 p.m. 

Cal Sailing Club 

Berkeley Marina 

The Cal Sailing Club, a nonprofit sailing and windsurfing cooperative, gives free rides on a first come, first served basis. Wear warm clothes and bring a change of clothes in case you get wet. Children must be at least five years old and accompanied by an adult. 208-5460, www.cal-sailing.org. 

 

 


Wednesday, Jan. 9

 

 

Near-death Experience Support Group 

7-9pm 

Berkeley Fellowship of Unitarian Universalists Church 

1606 Bonita Ave 

International Association for Near-Death Studies offers supportive environment for the exploration of near-death experiences. 428-2442. 

 

Baby Bounce and Toddler Tales 

7 p.m. 

Public Library, West Branch 

1125 University Ave. 

A participatory program for families with children up to age 3. Stories, songs and fingerplays as entertainment and as a way for parents to learn some new material to share with their young ones. 981-6270. 

 

Peace Walk and Vigil 

7:30 p.m. 

North Berkeley BART Station 

A peace walk and vigil to demonstrate opposition to U.S. bombing of Afghanistan. www.globalexchange.org. 

 


Thursday, Jan. 10

 

 

Sking and Snowshoing in Tahoe National Forest 

7 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment, Inc. 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

Catherine Stifter will present a slide show on her favorite ski and snowshoe tours off Highway 49 between Sierra City and Yuba Pass. 527-4140 

 

Grandparent Support Group 

10 - 11:30 a.m. 

Malcolm X School of Arts and Academics 

1731 Prince St. 

Grandparents and relatives raising their grandchildren can express their concerns and needs, plus receive support, information and referrals for Kinship Care. 644-6517. 

 

Community Health Commission 

6:45 - 9:30 p.m. 

South Berkeley Senior Center 

2939 Ellis St. (at Ashby Ave.) 

Prioritize list of health needs of the City of Berkeley to present to Alta Bates Sutter for consideration during needs assessment process for Community Benefit Plan. 

 

Public Works Commission 

7 p.m. - 9 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

Informational Meeting on applicant financed underground utility district for the Spruce/Halkins/ Alamo/Cragmont School proposed district 

 

Winter Holistic Health Groups  

1:15 – 2:30 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave.  

For ages 55 and older. This week’s topic: Creative Aging. 526-0148. 

 


Friday, Jan. 11

 

 

San Francisco Chamber Orchestra 

8 p.m. 

Julia Morgan Center for the Arts 

2640 College Ave. 

A program of classical party music from Mozart to Stravinsky. $15. 845-8542, www.juliamorgan.org 

 

 


Daily Planet story on teacher a cheap shot

Jan M. Goodman Oakland
Thursday January 03, 2002

 

Editor: 

As a Berkeley teacher and former principal in the district (with a B.S. in Journalism), I was outraged to read your sensationalized Dec. 18 article headlined, “District removes Washington teacher.” I have no idea how your newspaper can, in good conscience, publicize an ordeal that helps to destroy the reputation of a tenured teacher who has worked in BUSD for several years. In addition to the insulting summarization of this teacher’s alleged flaws, you violated the teacher’s right to privacy by specifying the instructor’s school, grade level, as well as names of parents in the classroom. From this information, it would be easy for your readers to ascertain who this teacher is.  

I am not here to defend the teacher’s competence; nor am I in a position to question the district’s decision. I strongly believe that Berkeley’s students deserve high quality, well-trained teachers who maintain a safe, respectful, positive, productive learning environment. Teachers who do not meet these standards should be dismissed, after they receive an unsatisfactory performance review, an improvement plan, peer support, and career counseling. However, I question the competence and the motives of a newspaper that, in the name of truth, prints a story that presents an incomplete view of an administrative decision in a matter that has already been resolved. This is irresponsible journalism and public humiliation of a member of our school community. Why is it front page news, or news at all?  

Jan M. Goodman 

Oakland 

 

The editor responds: 

Running the story on the Washington School teacher was not a knee-jerk response to a call from a parent. 

Months of soul searching went into the decision to go ahead with the story. As part of the process, I met personally with three of the 14 parents who signed the complaint. Education reporter David Scharfenberg, who would write the story, was there too. 

I am aware that the article may have hurt the teacher involved and we did not move forward without that thought in mind. We decided, however, that this was an important story for our community, a story of how a group of strong, persistent parents was able to assert their children’s rights in the face of an administration that would have allowed an otherwise untenable, even dangerous situation, to continue for the youngsters. 

The parents in question first brought the case of this teacher to the Daily Planet in October. They were frustrated with what they perceived as an administration unresponsive to complaints as serious as that of a teacher who was oblivious enough of what was going on to ignore the fact a first grader had left the classroom and walked home. 

The head of the teacher’s union called me in October and pleaded the teacher’s case, asking us not to run the story and arguing that the district was moving forward in its evaluation of her.  

After much thought, we decided not to run the story at that time. We would wait to see if the parents received satisfaction – more than 3/4 of the class’ parents had signed the petition asking for the teacher’s removal. 

In November, the Daily Planet was still receiving calls from parents, expressing dissatisfaction with the district which they said was not responding to them. In desperation, they’d planned a very public boycott of the classroom for Dec. 17. We decided that it was time to cover the story. 

By meeting with parents Dec. 13, I took a more “hands-on” approach to a reporter’s story than I usually do. I needed to be convinced that the parents were sincere in their complaints and that they were not carrying a personal grudge against the teacher. I wanted to be sure there was no other agenda in play. 

I listened, read the thorough documentation they gave me and was convinced. 

The day after our meeting with the parents, while attempting to set up interviews with administrators for the day of the proposed boycott – they would not share the process, by the way – our reporter was told that the teacher was to be permanently removed from the classroom starting Dec. 17. Parents were informed the same day, Dec. 14, and called off the boycott. 

Why did we then decide to report the story? It’s because there had been a serious problem – a problem teacher that parents in other years had also tried to remove – and it took this group of very active parents to push the district to resolve the issue in favor of the children and in a timely way. 

Why should the case not be made public? When our police are accused of acting improperly, they go before a very public Police Review Commission. Should poor teachers be shielded from public scrutiny?  

I don’t think so. 

Schools often give only lip service to parents – I know, having been a parent, a teacher and a volunteer in Berkeley schools – inviting parents to join committees where they are expected to behave as rubber stamps for an administration, which, otherwise, ignores their complaints. 

In the end, if citizens want to affect responsible change, we must become actors in our schools, our communities, our world.  

Similarly, we at the Daily Planet owe it to our community to report the actions of citizen-whistle blowers – not to cast blind blame at teachers or others, but to highlight the personal responsibility involved in making change as these parents did. 

 

Judith Scherr 

editor


Staff
Thursday January 03, 2002

 

924 Gilman Jan. 4: Champion, Carry On, Stay Gold, The First Step, The Damage Done; Jan. 5: Iron Lung, B.G., Crucial Attack, Blown To Bits; Jan. 11: Bananas, Numbers, Lowdown, Doozers, Iron Ass; Jan. 12: Plan 9, The Sick, The Hellbillies, Oppressed Logic, Deltaforce; All shows start a 8 p.m. unless noted; Most are $5; 924 Gilman St. 525-9926 

 

Blake’s Jan. 3: Electronica w/ Ascension, $5; Jan. 4: Funk Monsters, $5; Jan. 5: King Harvest, Jomo, $5; Jan. 6: Lunar Heights, $3; Jan. 8: Operation Interstellar, $ 3; Jan. 9: Kid Glove Entertainment Presents, Hebro; Jan. 10: Electronica w/ Ascension, $5; Jan. 11: Five Point Plan, SFunk, $5; Jan. 12: Lavish Green, Stone Cutters, $5; Jan. 13: Alex Dolan & 22 Fillmore, $3; Jan. 14: All Star Jam Featuring The Steve Gannon Band & Mz. Dee, $4; Jan. 15: View From Here, $3; Jan. 16: Zion Rock, Hebro, $3; 2367 Telegraph Ave., 877-488-6533. 

 

Anna’s Bistro Jan. 3: “The Irrationals” soulful a cappella; Jan.4: Anna & Ellen Hoffman on piano/10 p.m. Bluesman Hideo Date; Jan. 5: Robin Gregory & Sy Perkoff/10 p.m. Duckcan Distones Jazz Sextet; Jan. 6: Gypsy-inspired “Danubius”; Jan. 7: “Renagade Sidemen” w/ Calvin Keyes; Jan. 8: Singers’ Open Mik w/ Trio!!!; Jan.9: Jimmy Ryan Jazz Quartet; Jan.10: Graham Richards Jazz Quartet; Jan.11:Anna sings jazz standards/ 10 p.m. Bluesman Hideo Date; Jan. 12: Robin Gregory & Sy Perkoff/ 10 pm Ducksn Distones Jazz Sextet; Jan. 13: “Choro Time” Brazilian sounds; Jan.14: “Renagade Sidemen” w/ Calvin Keyes Jan.15: Mark Murphy’s jazz vocal workshop; Music starts at 8p.m., every night, second band at 10p.m., 1801 University Ave., 849-ANNA 

 

Cal Performances Jan. 18 and 19: 8 p.m., The National Acrobats of Taiwan, R.O.C.; Jan. 20: 3 p.m., Midori and Robert McDonald. $28 -$48. Zellerbach Hall, UC Berkeley, Bancroft Way at Telegraph. 642-9988 

 

Roda Theatre Jan. 22 and 23: both at 8 p.m., The Berkeley Symphony, Music Director Kent Nagano, continues its 31st season with two performances of Schubert’s Symphony No. 5. $21, $32, $45, $10 students. 2015 Addison St. 841-2800, www.berkeleysymphony.org 

 

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

 

Freight & Salvage Coffee House Jan. 5: The Bluegrass Intentions CD Release Party; Jan. 6: Allette Brooks; All shows begin 8 p.m., 1111 Addison St. 548-1761, www.freightandsalvage.org.  

 

Julia Morgan Theatre Jan 11: 8 p.m. San Francisco Chamber Orchestra, classical party music; Julia Morgan Theatre, 2640 College Ave., 845-8542, www.juliamorgan.org. 

 

Jupiter Jan. 3: Chris Shot Group; Jan. 4: Diggsville; Jan. 5 Blue & Tan; Jan.9: Ezra Gale Quartet; Jan. 10: Chris Shot Group; Jan. 11: Hydeus Kiatta Trio; Jan. 12: Barefoot Bride; Jan. 16: Realistic; Jan. 17: Chris Shot Group; Jan. 18: Bigfoot In Paris Trio; Jan. 19: Netwerk: Electric; Jan. 23: Mitch Marcus Quintet; Jan. 24: Chris Shot Group; Jan. 25: The Sardonics; Jan. 26: Berkeley Jazz School Presents: Fourtet; Jan. 30: Joel Harrison Quartet; All shows are free and begin at 8 p.m. unless noted. 2181 Shattuck Ave., 843-7625, www.jupiterbeer.com. 

 

Rose Street House Jan. 17: 7:30 p.m., Allette Brooks. 1839 Rose St. 594-4000 x687, rosestreetmusic@yahoo.com. 

 

Yoshi’s Jazz House Through Dec. 31: New Year’s Fiesta, The Afro-Cuban Jazz Masters; Jan. 2 - 6: Charles Lloyd; Jan. 13: Jacqui Naylor Quartet; All shows at 8 p.m., and 10 p.m., unless noted. 510 Embarcadero West, Jack London Square, Oakland. Check for prices and Sunday Matinees, 238-9200, www.yoshis.com. 

 

First Congregational Church of Berkeley Jan. 6: 3 p.m., Stephen Genz in his West Coast debut; 2345 Channing Way, 527-8175, www.geocities.com/mostlybrahms. 

 

Berkeley Piano Club Jan.11: 8 p.m., Kate Steinbeck and Renee Witon; Berkeley Piano Club, 2724 Haste St., (510) 531-1487. 

 

Trinity Chapel Jan. 19: 8 p.m., Janine Johnson, harpsichord, Bach, Buxtehude and Pachelbel. 2320 Dana St., 549-3864. 

 

Organ Music Jan. 27: 5 p.m., Ron McKean performs Ferscobaldi, Froberger and Bach. $15 - $18. MusicSources, 1000 The Alameda, 528-1685. 

 

First Congregational Church Jan. 19: 8p.m., eight womens voices and continuo, also baritone Hugh Davis will sing priest’s acclamations. $25 general, $18 senior, $12 students., First Congregational Church, Dana & Durant, Berkeley, (415) 979-4500 

 

 

 

“Una Noche de Tango ...a media luz” Jan. 1: 8 - 11 p.m., Allegro Ballroom, $15. 5855 Christie Ave., Emeryville. 415-777-3910, info@tangoamedialuz. com. 

 

Julia Morgan Theatre Jan. 12: 8 p.m., “Club Dance,” Teens come together to express their individual personalities and gifts as dancers. $10, Students and Seniors $6, Children ages 5 and under $6. Julia Morgan Theatre, 2640 College Ave., 845-8542, www.juliamorgan.org. 

 

Berkeley High School Dance Production Jan. 11, 12, 18 &19: 7:30 p.m., Diverse mix of classical and modern ballet to hard-core hip-hop. $5. Florence Schwimley Little Theatre, Allston way and MLK., 644-6120 

 

 

“Much Ado About Nothing” Through Jan. 8: Check theater for specific dates and times. Shakespeare’s classic romantic comedy chronicles a handful of soldiers returning from a winning battle to be greeted by a gaggle of giddy maidens. Directed by Brian Kulick. $10 - $54. Berkeley Repertory Theatre, 2025 Addison St. 647-2949 www.berkeleyrep.org 

 

“Every Inch a King” Jan. 11 through Feb. 9: Thur. - Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 5 p.m.; Three sisters have to make a decision as their father approaches death in this comedy presented by the Central Works Theater Ensemble. $8 - $18. LeValls Subterranean, 1834 Euclid Ave. 558-138, www.centralworks.org.  

 

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

 

 

Pacific Film Archive Jan. 3: 7 p.m., 9 p.m., Unfinished Song; Jan. 4: 7 p.m., 9:15 p.m., Going By; Jan. 5: 7 p.m., 9 p.m., Under the Moonlight; Jan. 6: 1p.m., 3 p.m., Paper Airplanes, 5:30 Shrapnels in Peace; Jan.10: 7 p.m., 9 p.m., ABC Africa; Jan.11: 7:30 p.m., The Girl at the Monceau Bakery and Suzanne’s Career, 9:05 p.m. The Sign of the Lion with Place de l’Etoile; Jan. 12: 7p.m., La Collectionneuse, 8:50 p.m., My Night at Maud’s; Jan.13: 1p.m., 3p.m., Oscar’s Magic Adventure, 5:30 p.m., ABC Africa; 2527 Bancroft Way, 642-1412. 

 

 

“Images of Innocence and Beauty” Through Jan. 8: An exhibit featuring Kathleen Flannigan’s drawing and furniture - boxes, tables, and mirrors, all embellished with images of the beauty and innocence of the natural world. Addison Street Windows, 2018 Addison St. 

 

“From With These Walls” Jan. 5: Educational studio opening celebration gallery show of student works in steel, bronze, aluminum, cast iron, glass, neon, ceramic, stone and paper; jewelry. The Crucible, 1036 Ashby St. (Entrance is one block south on Murray St.) 843-5511, fran@thecrucible.org. 

 

“The First Five Years” Through Jan.11: Exhibit represents a selection of drawings, paintings, prints and sculpture created by students during their 7th & 8th grade years. 7a.m.-9:30 p.m. Mon-Fri, 5:30- 9:30 p.m. Sat., Bucci’s Restaurant, 6121 Hollis St., Emeryville, 547-4725, www.bucci.com. 

 

“Carving, Canvas, Color: Art of Julio Garcia and Wilbert Griffith” Through Jan.12: Brightly colored wooden figures and colorfully detailed paintings. Gallery is open by appointment and chance, most weekdays 10:30 a.m. - 4 p.m.; The Ames Gallery, 2661 Cedar St., 845-4949, amesgal@home.com. 

 

“Matrix 195” Through Jan. 13: German artist, Thomas Scheibitz’s, first solo museum exhibition in the United States showcases semi-abstract representations of everyday objects and landscapes. Wed., Fri. - Sun. 11 a.m. - 5 p.m., Thur. 11 a.m. - 9 p.m. $3-$6. Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, 2626 Bancroft Way, 642-0808 www.bampfa.berkeley.edu. 

 

“Analogous Biology: Balance and Use,” Mark J. Leavitt, Dec. 20 through Jan. 19; Tue. - Sat., 11 a.m. - 5 p.m., Ardency Gallery, 709 Broadway, Oakland. 836-0831, www.artolio.com. 

 

GTU Exhibit: “Holocaust Series” by Cleve Gray Through Jan. 25: Comprised of 21 works on paper that constitute “a catharsis... for all of humanity.” Mon. - Thurs. 8:30 a.m. - 9:45 p.m., Fri. 8:30 a.m. - 6 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m. - 6 p.m., Sun. noon - 7 p.m.; Free. Flora Lamson Hewlett Library, Graduate Theological Union, 2400 Ridge Rd. 649-2541 www.gtu.edu. 

 

Pro Arts: “Juried Annual 2001-02” Through Feb. 2: An exhibition of painting, sculpture, mixed media, photography and more by Bay Area and  

regional artists. Pro Arts, 461 Ninth St., www.proartsgallery.org. 

 

“Water Media” Jan. 10 through Feb. 8: An exhibit by Christine “Caipirinha” Mulder. Capoeira Arts Cafe Gallery, 2026 Center St., 666-1349 for hours. 

 

Traywick Gallery: “New Work by Dennis Begg and Steve Briscoe” Jan. 5 through Feb. 9: Dennis Begg’s sculpture explores memory as the building block of consciousness, learning and experience. Steve Brisco’s paintings on paper address issues of identity through evocative combinations of text and imagery. Tues. - Sat. 11 a.m. - 6 p.m., 1316 10th St. 527-1214. 

 

“Enduring Wisdom: Artwork and Stories by Homeless and Formerly Homeless Seniors” Through Feb. 15: 18 homeless and formerly homeless elders reveal how they learned and applied wisdom that is timeless. Mon. - Fri. and Sundays 11 a.m. - 2 p.m. Reception and presentation by the elders Thurs. Nov. 15, 4 p.m. - 6 p.m. Free. St. Mary’s Center, 635 22nd St., Oakland, 893-4723 x222. 

 

“The Other 364 Days: A Day in the Life of the Queer Community” Jan. 2 through Feb. 16: An exhibit of black and white photographs by East Bay photographer Limor Inbar-Hansen. Mon. - Fri., 8:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m., Sat., 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., Reception for artist, Jan. 12: 6 - 8 p.m., Photolab Gallery, 2235 Fifth St., 644-1400, limor@indelible-images.com. 

 

“Ansel Adams in the University of California Collections” Through Mar. 10: A selection of photographs and memorabilia presenting a different perspective on Adam’s career as one of the leading figures in American photography. Wed, Fri. - Sun. 11 a.m. - 5 p.m., Thur. 11 a.m. - 9 p.m. $4- $6. The University of California, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, 2626 Bancroft Way, 642-0808, www.bampfa.berkeley.edu. 

 

“Migrations: Photographs by Sebastiao Salgado” Jan. 16 through Mar. 24: Over 300 black-and-white photographs of immigrants and refugees taken by the Brazilian photographer. Wed. - Sun. 11 a.m. - 7 p.m. $4 - $6. The University of California, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, 2626 Bancroft Way. 642-0808, www.bampfa.berkeley.edu. 

 

"Earthly Pleasures" assemblage and photographs by Susan Danis, Jan. 11 through March 30: 10 a.m. - 6 p.m., Mon. - Sat.; Sticks, 1579 B, Solano Ave., 526-6603.  

 

“The Art History Museum of Berkeley” 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., 841-4210, www.atelier9.com. 

 

 

“Domestic Bliss” Collection of abstract paintings and mixed medium by Amy St. George. Her serious of work range from large abstract paintings to intimate boxes with collections of found objects, Jan.13 through Apr. 4th Albany Community Center Foyer Gallery, 1249 Marin Ave., Albany,524-9283 

 

 

 

Readings 

Cody’s on Telegraph Ave. Jan. 8: Theodore Hamm discusses “Rebel and a 

Cause: Caryl Chessman and the Politics of the Death Penalty”; Jan. 9: Karen Kevorkian & Gail Wronsky read their poetry $2; Jan. 10: Joan Frank reads from her new book, “Boys Keep Being Born”;Jan. 11: Christopher Hitchens, “Letters to a Youn Contrarian”;Jan. 13: Phyllis Koestenbaum & Carol Snow read their poetry $2; Jan. 14: Pamela Logan talks about “Tibetan Rescue: A Woman’s Quest to Save the Fabulous Art Treasures of Pewar Monastery”; All events are free and start at 7:30 p.m. unless noted. 2454 Telegraph Ave., 845-7852. 

 

The Humanist Fellowship Hall Jan. 9: 7 p.m., “Our Wings Are Pregnant Seesaws,” Reading performance of a play by H. D. Moe. 390 27th St., Oakland, 528-8713. 

 

Sierra Club books Jan. 5: 3 - 5 p.m., Author/ Photographer Keith S. Walklet will be signing his book, “Yosemite - An Enduring Treasure.” 6014 college Ave., 658-7470, info@sierraclubbookstore.com. 

 

Jewish Community Center Jan. 14: 7:30-9 p.m., Emily Rose interweaves the family chronicle of her ancestors with the political and social events of the 18th and 19th centuries; Jan. 16: 7:30-8:30 p.m., Elizabeth Rosner will read from her debut novel “The Speed of of Light.” 1414 Walnut St. 

 

Tours 

 

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

 

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. 

 

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. 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. 

 

Oakland Museum of California “Kwanzaa Community Celebration” Dec. 30: 12-4 p.m., Nia Kwanzaa is an African American holiday that honors black family history; Through Jan. 13: Grand Lyricist: The Art of Elmer Bischoff, featuring paintings and works on paper that trace the evolution of Bischoff’s career. $6 adults, $4 seniors and students, children under 5 free. Wed. - Sat. 10 a.m. - 5 p.m., Sun. noon - 5 p.m.; 1000 Oak St., Oakland, 238-2200, www.museumca.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. - 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 and Pacific Film Archive “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. - Sun. 11 a.m. - 7 p.m.; 2626 Bancroft Way, 642-0808, www.bampfa.berkeley.edu. 

 

Lawrence Hall of Science Dec. 31: 1 p.m., New Year’s Eve Party, special daytime holiday party for kids; Dec. 26 through 31: Free Energy Star compact fluorescent light bulb; Through Jan. 26: Scream Machines: The Science of Roller Coasters; “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; Open daily, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m., $7 for adults; $5 for children 5-18; $3 for children 3-4. Centennial Drive, UC Berkeley, 642-5132, www.lawrencehallofscience.org. 

 

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, www.lhs.berkeley.edu. 

 

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


New bet-from-home law could impact Albany

By Hank Sims Daily Planet staff
Thursday January 03, 2002

The owners of Golden Gate Fields in Albany stand to make large profits off a new state law that will permit them to take bets over the telephone and the Internet. 

But while “home betting” may be a boon for the declining horse racing industry, local jurisdictions like Albany, which depends on the race track for a good portion of its revenue, may suffer. 

Assembly Bill 471, which went into effect on Jan. 1, allows Californians to place bets on horse races from their homes – a previously illegal practice. 

It will also allow companies like Magna Entertainment, owners of Golden Gate Fields, to set up “advance deposit wagering” systems, in which customers set up an account using a check or credit card, then use that account to bet from their homes. 

Twelve other states already allow home betting on horse races. 

The law also sets new, statewide standards for labor relations between race track operators and workers who care for the horses.  

John Reagan, senior managing auditor for the California Horse Racing Board, said that so far, two companies have applied to operate home wagering systems – Magna and the Los Angeles-based Youbet.com. 

Magna also owns “Call-a-Bet,” a home-betting system in Pennsylvania.  

Jim Ghidella, Northern California representative for the Thoroughbred Owners of California, said on Wednesday that the ultimate goal of the legislation was to attract new customers to the industry. 

“Hopefully, this will recruit new fans,” he said, adding that internet betting could help the sport spread into Europe and Asia. 

Attendance has been dropping at race tracks statewide since off-track betting was introduced in 1984. In 1997, attendance at the 10 permanent tracks in the state was 8.5 million. Three years later, it was down to 7.5 million. 

Over the same period, the percentage of total wagers placed at the track as opposed to off-track sites has remained constant – about 22 percent of the total. 

For the city of Albany, that amounts to a decline in the amount of money it can collect from racing operations. The city can only tax wagers placed at the track. 

Beth Pollard, Albany city administrator, said that the city didn’t know yet what impact home gambling would have on its tax base.  

“At this point, we’re taking a concerned look, and waiting to see what the eventual impact will be,” she said. 

Albany receives about $500,000 annually, or 5 percent of its budget, from taxes on bets placed at the track. 

According to Ghidella, though, the idea behind the legislation was not to help race tracks evade local taxes. He said that race track operators get a bigger cut from on-site bets than from those placed at an off-track shop or from home. 

“You definitely don’t want to take bettors away from the track,” he said. 

Golden Gate Fields management did not return calls on Wednesday.


Stanford tops Rutgers, even with bad shots

The Associated Press
Thursday January 03, 2002

PISCATAWAY, N.J. — Stanford coach Tara VanDerveer couldn’t explain her team’s season-low shooting percentage. 

“I thought we took a lot of good shots,” VanDerveer said. “But sometimes shots just don’t fall.” 

Despite shooting just 32 percent, No. 5 Stanford slipped past Rutgers 50-46 Wednesday night. 

Freshman T’Nae Thiel led all scorers with 14 points and grabbed 11 rebounds as the Cardinal improved to 13-1, its best start since the 1996-97 Final Four campaign. 

Rutgers (4-7), with four freshmen and a sophomore in the starting lineup and just seven healthy players, held Stanford to a season-low point total. 

The Cardinal outscored its opposition by an average of 83-64 going into the game, but made just 18-of-57 from the field. 

Sebnem Kimyacioglu hit consecutive 3-pointers to start a 10-1 run and rally Stanford from a 36-35 deficit with 8:25 remaining. Bethany Donaphin’s jumper with 6:17 remaining gave the Cardinal a 45-37 lead, and Rutgers never got within four points the rest of the way. 

“Basketball is a game of runs and spurts,” said Donaphin, who averages 11 points, but finished 1-of-7 from the field with three points. “We knew they were going to have at least one during the game and I think we responded well. 

“Different people had not-so-great games, myself included. We stayed with things and that’s why we won in the end.” 

Stanford took a 22-6 lead nine minutes into the game, but Rutgers rallied with a 20-3 run to close out the first half. Freshman Saona Chapman and sophomore Nikki Jett hit consecutive 3-pointers to cap the run, giving Rutgers a 26-25 lead with 3:26 left in the first half. 

Enjoli Izidor’s layup with 41 seconds left in the first half gave Stanford a 27-26 lead at the break. 

Chapman played all 40 minutes, scoring a season-high 12 points with seven rebounds and seven assists.  

Dawn McCullouch added 12 points for Rutgers. 

Rutgers’ leading scorer Mauri Horton was out with a heel injury and leading rebounder Davalyn Cunningham was sidelined with a sprained ankle. 

“I just told the team that Davalyn’s in dress clothes and Mauri’s not playing so go get it done,” said Rutgers’ coach C. Vivian Stringer. “If you’re in a swimming pool with sharks I bet you can figure how to swim. 

“I think we were fighting for our lives. But we fought extremely hard and I’m proud of their effort.”


We must investigate 9/11

Judith Segard Hunt Berkeley
Thursday January 03, 2002

 

Editor: 

Well before 9/11/01 at least two flight school instructors had warned the FBI that suspicious persons with inadequate flying experience came to them to learn to pilot the “big birds” used by American and United Air Lines. 

Add to this that the volume of 9/11/01’s sales of the stocks of those two airlines was one-fourth greater than to be expected, and although publicly promised and investigation to date we have had no explanation--a disturbing dereliction of which I was reminded by a listener call-in to National Public Radio. 

I am reminded of how when a good German smuggled onto our shores during WWII reported his sabotage mission to the FBI and J. Edgar Hoover’s outfit ignored him so they would have sole credit for capturing the handful of saboteurs, for which Hoover was accorded a medal. 

Only the terrorist pilots of 9/11/01 knew theirs was a suicide mission. May not someone in the FBI, through surveillance acquaintance with one of the other terrorists, had wind of a comparatively innocuous hijacking for 9/11/01 and used or sold the information, causing the suspicious airline stock sales? 

We must pursue the money here, and look for a tortuous trail back to the FBI. And the FBI should not be the investigator! 

 

Judith Segard Hunt 

Berkeley 

 


Tritium facility gets OK to burn radioactive materials

By John Geluardi Daily Planet staff
Thursday January 03, 2002

Despite community concerns, the California Department of Toxic Substance Control has given Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory the green light to treat radioactive hazardous waste in Berkeley. 

Those uneasy with the treatment process point out that the method is the same one that was used in 1998, when an elevated level of tritium was accidentally released. 

Although the City Council asked formally that the treatment not take place in Berkeley, the DTSC issued a written response on Dec. 28 condoning the disposal of five liters of mixed waste that contains tritium – a radioactive isotope commonly used in pharmaceutical research.  

The National Tritium Labeling Facility, overseen by LBNL, created the waste as a byproduct of its primary function of attaching tritium to pharmaceutical products.  

The NTLF closed down last month when, according to lab officials, the National Institutes of Health withdrew its funding. The closure was first announced in September. 

The disposal process, also referred to as a “treatability study” because of its experimental nature, heats the mixed hazardous waste through a process known as catalytic chemical oxidation. The heat burns off the organic hazardous materials leaving the tritium, which is captured in water.  

“As we read the closure plan for the Labeling Facility, the exhaust ventilation system for the oxidation process would remain operational and radiological monitoring of its emissions would continue until the oxidation process study is completed,” wrote Rick Robison, DTSC Unit Chief in the investigations branch, in a Dec. 28 letter to LBNL officials. 

Once the tritium is isolated, it can be shipped to a low-level radioactive storage facility, where it is buried in sealed containers and allowed to decompose naturally. 

City officials and neighbors say they are alarmed by the DTSC approval because of an accidental tritium release in July 1998 during a similar NTLF process. The accident resulted in a release of between 35 and 50 curies of tritium into the atmosphere. Normally the facility released 50 to 100 curries over the course of an entire year.  

But Lab officials downplay the importance of this release. They say the accident was a minor one and the release was far below acceptable federal and state levels.  

Further, DTSC officials reject calls for moving the treatment process to another location. In a Dec. 28 replay to Al Hadithy, Antonette Benita Cordero, chief counsel and deputy director in the Office of Legal Counsel & Criminal Investigations of the DTSC, said the DTSC does not have “the legal authority to order the Laboratory to transfer the treatability study, or even the mixed waste at issue, to another DOE facility, as you and other persons who have communicated with the department have requested.” 

And the disposal process has been improved, said LBNL Environmental Attorney Nancy Shepard, contending there is little chance of another accidental release occurring.  

But members of the Committee to Minimize Toxic Waste, a community group that opposes the treatment of the waste in Berkeley, said they were disappointed in the DTSC’s decision and that they are skeptical of the lab’s claims. 

“The DTSC has ignored the City Council, the community and more importantly the history of this facility,” said CMTW member Pam Shivola. “This process is too experimental and it is not appropriate for it to be carried out next to a children’s science hall and a dense residential neighborhood.” 

Shivola said the stack through which the accidental release was emitted is 500 feet from the Lawrence Hall of Science, visited by an average of 150,000 children each year. 

In addition to CMTW concerns, city Hazardous Materials Supervisor Nabil Al-Hadithy sent a letter to DTSC at the behest of the City Council asking that the disposal process take place elsewhere. The letter requested that the lab “discontinue future treatability testing on mixed waste and (that the lab) ship the remainder of the mixed wastes, equipment and funding to another Department of Energy site that is less dense and seismically more stable.” 

The city and community concerns were taken into consideration, said DTSC Senior Hazardous Substance Engineer Robert Aragon. “We did some investigating, visited the site and ultimately came to the conclusion that the lab met state and federal requirements to conduct the study,” he said. 

After an investigation of the 1998 release, the DTSC halted all mixed-waste treatability studies at the tritium facility. 

Shepard and LBNL Radiological Control Manager Gary Zeman are scheduled to give the CEAC a presentation about the disposal process and the scheduled decommissioning of the tritium facility at a CEAC meeting tonight. 

In a September press release, LBNL spokesperson Ron Kolb said the tritium facility was closing due to the National Institutes of Health withdrawal of $1 million in annual funding because of a lack of tritium-related research. But at least two city councilmembers point to the closure as the direct result of CMTW efforts. The group began advocating for the facility’s closure in 1996. 

Lab officials said dismantling and decontaminating the tritium facility will take over a year and cost at least $1 million. 

The CEAC meeting will take place at 7 p.m. at the first floor conference room of the Planning and Development Department, 2118 Milvia St. 


Spring, a champion for affordable housing

Chris Kavanagh Berkeley
Thursday January 03, 2002

Editor: 

Richard Register’s Dec. 3 letter (”Be Progressive”) critical of Berkeley City Councilmember Dona Spring’s alleged positions on affordable housing was, unfortunately, so far off the mark that I am compelled to respond. 

Regrettably, Mr. Register erroneously states in his letter that Councilmember Spring is “no friend to those needing housing” in Berkeley. As a member of the city’s Housing Advisory Commission, which receives, recommends and monitors all city Housing Trust Fund-connected affordable housing developments, I can attest that Councilmember Spring has directly supported or voted to fund at least 1,400 units of newly constructed, acquired or rehabilitated affordable housing since 1990. 

Of these 1,400 units, approximately 300 units (including units currently in the pipeline) have been constructed directly on – or adjacent to – Berkeley’s major transit corridors, including Shattuck Avenue, University Avenue, Sacramento Street and San Pablo Avenue. 

Among the affordable housing developments Councilmember Spring has voted to fund include Shattuck Senior Homes (27 units) at Shattuck and Haste Street, Maggie Kuhn Apartments (40 units) at Sacramento and Alcatraz, and the future David Brower Building (100 units) on Oxford near Shattuck Avenue. 

If a future development tentatively planned on the Ashby BART station parking lot site successfully moves forward, (the Ed Roberts Campus mixed-use developed above 300 figure will rise to nearly 400 units. 

Almost all of these 300 units are part of multi-storied, mixed use infill developments – the exact kind of sustainable, urban developments that Mr. Register, to his credit, advocates for. 

Given the current realities and market conditions that both non-profit and for-profit housing developers must operate in, Councilmember Spring’s commitment to – and unassailable track record on – affordable housing in Berkeley speaks for itself. 

 

Chris Kavanagh 

Berkeley 


In a break with tradition, new retirement community targets Asians

By Deborah Kong The Associated Press
Thursday January 03, 2002

FREMONT — In the kitchen, the chef wields his wok over a fiery stove, preparing the day’s lunch. Two rice cookers — one with a softer batch of rice for those without teeth — simmer quietly in a corner. 

This is Aegis Gardens, a for-profit assisted-living community for Asians. While about a half-dozen nonprofits have provided housing and services for Asian seniors, experts believe that Aegis Gardens is the first for-profit company to target this ethnic niche. 

Aegis also highlights a growing trend in the past 10 years — a break with the Asian tradition of elders living with their adult children, said Jennie Chin Hansen, executive director of On Lok Senior Health Services in San Francisco. 

According to Confucian teachings, children must follow a filial obligation to care for their aging parents. But as successive generations become more westernized and less observant of old customs, and couples pursue dual careers, some of the ancient traditions are fading, said Clayton Fong, executive director of the National Asian Pacific Center on Aging, a Seattle-based advocacy group. 

“The times are changing. There are very few people that stay at home and just serve their parents,” said Winnie Poon, whose 80-year-old father, Edmond Wong, moved into Aegis a month ago. “There are a lot of second, third-generation Chinese-Americans who can afford to keep their parents in comfort.” 

According to 2000 census data, about 22 percent of Asians and Pacific Islanders 65 and older lived with an adult child who was head of the household. That’s by far the highest of any group (Hispanics were the next largest, at 12 percent), but it’s down from 24 percent in 1990. 

The trend of aging Asians moving into assisted living communities, a middle ground between independent living and nursing homes, rather than with adult children is likely to continue, Fong said. 

“Whereas you have old traditions, the realities of today don’t necessarily allow for it,” Fong said. “With each passing generation, those traditions sort of disappear.” 

The shift reflects changes in the attitudes of both parents and children. 

Living with his adult daughter could have “very bad results,” said Peter Kung, 88, who with his wife Garbo, 87, moved into Aegis about a month ago. “Children have their own thinking, their own life.” 

His daughter, Alice Chang, said she feels “a big burden is lifted from me.” The 53-year-old computer analyst often found herself cooking for and taking her parents shopping, and doing chores at their four-bedroom home. 

Kung, a retired United Nations senior officer who walks with a cane, enjoys the Chinese food, and being around other Chinese seniors. He especially likes the Chinese titles of respect the Mandarin and Cantonese-speaking staff uses. “Old people are always forgotten people,” he said. But at Aegis, “everybody calls us ’uncle,’ ’aunty.’ We feel at home.” 

“You feel like you live in a high-class hotel in China,” said Fay Yee, 84, who said she was glad she declined offers from her daughter and daughter-in-law to come live with them. 

“They have their own life,” Yee said. “I’m not going to depend on nobody, so I decided to live here.” 

Since it opened in November, about 58 percent of Aegis’s 64 rooms have been reserved. Residents in their late 60s to early 90s live in studio and one-bedroom apartments, which range from $1,980 to $3,780 a month per person. All but one are Chinese. 

Redmond, Wash.-based Aegis Assisted Living owns and operates 15 assisted living communities on the West Coast. Assisted living residential communities, which provide seniors help with daily tasks such as bathing, dressing or taking medication, began opening in the United States about 15 years ago. 

The Fremont Aegis Gardens is the first to focus on a specific ethnic culture, a venture the company spent three-and-a-half years researching and planning. Fremont, about 25 miles southeast of San Francisco, is about 37 percent Asian. 

Aegis appointed an eight-member, all-Chinese advisory board. One of the first things to go was the corporate color, blue, because it’s associated with funerals in the Chinese culture. The blue stripe on business cards was changed to maroon, as were the shirts of employees’ uniforms. 

The company also petitioned Fremont’s building department to change its street address because it contained the number four, which is connected with death. 

More than avoiding cultural pitfalls, the company also paid attention to details. It spent about two days looking for dishwasher-friendly, reusable chopsticks, said president and chief executive Dwayne Clark. 

The kitchen has extra prep and storage space for the fresh vegetables and fish favored in Chinese cuisine. 

Signs and name tags are in English and Chinese. Acupuncture is available and activities include mahjong, calligraphy classes and viewing old Chinese-language movies. 

Aegis is waiting to see how the Fremont facility fares before deciding whether it will build others, Clark said. It hopes to fill it within 16 months, he said. “This is certainly a beta test for us.”


Bush administration sued over Gulf War-era alternative fuel law

The Associated Press
Thursday January 03, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Three environmental organizations filed suit Wednesday alleging the Bush administration is violating a Gulf War-era alternative fuels law signed by President Bush’s father. 

The suit filed in federal court in San Francisco accuses 18 federal agencies of failing to follow the 1992 Energy Policy Act, which requires federal agencies to buy vehicles that run on alternative fuels. 

Agencies with vehicle fleets in larger cities were required to phase in purchases of alternative fuel vehicles starting in 1996, with 75 percent of the vehicles to use alternative fuels by 1999 and thereafter. 

However, the environmental groups note that the law allows the agencies to buy vehicles that can use alternative fuel, but does not require the vehicles to actually run on the alternative fuel. They contend some agencies have bought vehicles that will run on either gasoline or ethanol, but then run them on gasoline. 

That, the groups allege, violates both the law’s goal of cutting the use of petroleum and a 2000 Presidential Executive Order. 

Among the alleged violators is the U.S. Department of Energy, which is charged with enforcing the act. Others include the departments of Justice, Transportation, Commerce, Defense, Agriculture, Interior, and the Environmental Protection Agency. 

Officials could not be reached to respond after business hours in Washington, D.C. 

Earthjustice attorney Jay Tutchton accused the agencies of “wholesale noncompliance” with the law. The environmental law firm is representing the Center for Biological Diversity, Bluewater Network and the Sierra Club in this suit. 

For instance, the suit alleges the Department of Commerce purchased only 17 percent alternative fuel vehicles in 2000. The suit alleges the EPA purchased 35 percent alternative fuel vehicles in 1998, well short of the 50 percent then required by the law.


Guardsman accidentally shoots self

The Associated Press
Thursday January 03, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — A National Guardsman accidentally shot himself at San Francisco International Airport Friday night. 

KRON-TV reported that Louis Alvarez, a National Guard Specialist, was going off duty, and having difficulty removing his 9 mm Baretta from its holster when it went off. 

Alvarez was removing his gun to make sure it was clear of ammunition. 

He was hit in the buttocks and taken to San Francisco General Hospital, treated and released. 

“He’s a good soldier who had an accident,” said Lt. Robert Paoletti. 

The shooting happened at a courtyard in the international terminal. The National Guard is investigating the incident. Police were also called to the scene. 


LA man charged with blowing dog’s jaw off with big firecracker

The Associated Press
Thursday January 03, 2002

LOS ANGELES — A man accused of blowing apart a dog’s jaw with a big firecracker pleaded innocent Wednesday to animal cruelty and other charges. 

Gil Raul Delara, 19, allegedly placed a so-called M-80 in the dog’s mouth on Dec. 30 and lit the fuse, police said in a statement. 

The dog’s entire lower jaw was blown off and the animal was put down at a veterinary hospital, according to Officer Eduardo Funes. 

Delara was arrested by detectives from the criminal conspiracy and explosives section, who also found additional M-80s and fireworks. 

County prosecutors charged him with 11 counts of possession of a destructive device and one count of animal cruelty. 

Lynwood Superior Court Judge Xenophon F. Lang Jr. ordered Delara held in lieu of $500,000 bail. Another hearing in the case was set for Jan. 9 in Compton.


Rains cause minor flooding; tree falls on bus in San Francisco

By Paul Glader The Associated Press
Thursday January 03, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Steady rains in the Bay Area caused minor mudslides and flooded roads Wednesday, and the wet weather may have led to a 70-foot tree falling on a bus near the Golden Gate Bridge. 

The bus was traveling north on 19th Avenue past the MacArthur Tunnel in San Francisco when hit by the tree. No one was injured, but the accident blocked afternoon traffic. 

“Apparently, the bus was beat up pretty badly and it’s quite miraculous that no one was injured and everyone’s OK,” said Mary Currie, spokeswoman for the Golden Gate transportation district. 

Several flooded roads in Sonoma County were closed, including Green Valley Road, Todd Road west of Stony Point, Mark West Station Road and Sanford Road near the Russian River, according to the California Highway Patrol. 

“We’ve got other roads that are partially blocked with either small mudslides, trees down and that kind of thing,” said officer Shannon King. “It’s just mostly rainwater overflowing the little creeks and tributaries.” 

The National Weather Service reported at least five inches of rain fell in the mountains of central Sonoma County Tuesday and Wednesday. No additional rain was expected through the end of the week. 

“It is finally going to dry up a bit,” said Steve Anderson, a weather service forecaster in the San Francisco Bay area. 

Businesses along the Russian River, such as Martinelli Vineyards and Winery, said the rain pooling in their vineyard did not pose a threat to business and that the Russian River was not close to flooding. 

In some places along Highway One in southern Sonoma County, roads were washed out Wednesday and traffic was down to one lane. The CHP said Highways 121 and 116 were closed with up to 10 inches of water. 

” We keep having people who are out in the middle of it getting stuck because they think they can get through it,” King said, noting a motorist on Sanford Road was stuck with water up to the doors and pouring into his vehicle. 

“They think they can get through or watch a big four-wheel-drive SUV get through and they try, and end up getting stuck.” 

The weather service on Wednesday issued a snow advisory for Greater Lake Tahoe elevations above 7,000 feet, where 6-12 inches was expected, with higher amounts possible near the Sierra Crest. Up to four inches was expected around Lake Tahoe.


John Walker Lindh’s high school suffers from anti-Taliban anger

By Michael Warren The Associated Press
Thursday January 03, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — The alternative high school John Walker Lindh attended three years before joining up with the Taliban has been the subject of withering rhetoric in America’s opinion pages, on talk radio and on the Internet. 

Weeks have passed since a media onslaught hit the two-classroom school, where 80 full-time students meet with seven full-time teachers as part of an independent studies program. But angry calls, letters and e-mail continue to raise concerns for the safety of students and teachers. 

Some students at the school in Larkspur, a Marin County town populated mainly by commuters to San Francisco, are worried colleges will reject their applications, and one alumnus in the military undergoing a security clearance was concerned the school’s association with Lindh would jeopardize his career. 

Due to an editing error in an article about Lindh’s suburban upbringing, The Associated Press reported erroneously Dec. 13 that Tamiscal High School Principal Marcie Miller said the school remains proud of him as well as its other students. 

Miller, who took the job 2 1/2 years ago — well after Lindh left Tamiscal and took off for the Middle East — had told the AP the school is proud of its students in general. 

The only thing Miller initially had to say about Lindh — who attended Tamiscal for a year and a half before taking an equivalency exam and leaving at the age of 16 — was that teachers had called him “a gifted writer of poetry.” 

“I never met John, so I never would have said that I am proud of him,” she said. 

In fact, Lindh’s decision to volunteer for Osama bin Laden’s cause is “opposed to everything I’ve devoted my life to,” Miller said. “My brother is a Gulf War hero, I come from an extremely patriotic family, my father’s a veteran and I find this appalling, that I’m being cast as a villain who’s proud of anything John Walker Lindh has done since he left our school in January of 1998.” 

Since Lindh, 20, was captured in Afghanistan, many Americans have been captivated by his journey from a wealthy suburb to the battlefields of the Middle East, and repulsed by his decision to take up arms with the Taliban. 

Some have taken out their anger over the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on Tamiscal High and its principal, calling them “despicable” and “idiotic” in e-mails and phoning in threats. Syndicated radio show host Michael Savage called it a “rotting stinking left-wing” place. 

“People are looking for someone to blame,” said her boss, Bill Levinson, the superintendent of the Tamalpais Union High School District. 

“I’m in no way shape or form defending John Walker — he came to the school and left,” Levinson said. “The whole issue of who he is and what happens to him really belongs in the hands of others. I just want the school to be able to operate safely and without disruption.” 

Miller said the last time she made headlines was when she brought a junior Reserve Officer Training Corps program into another alternative school, and was “criticized for being an arch-conservative.” 

“I’m as outraged as all other Americans at the terrorist attack on this country; I mourn for the men and women who lost their lives and I support those who continue to risk their lives to defend our freedom,” Miller said. 

“And I understand that America and the rest of the civilized world is seeking someone to blame for this outrage. However, it’s unfair to point a finger at a school that John Walker Lindh attended for a short time.” 


TV viewers without cable lose NBC programming

The Associated Press
Thursday January 03, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — More than 100,000 San Francisco Bay area households will lose the chance to watch NBC unless they get cable or a satellite dish because the network’s new local affiliate has a transmitter that is out of range of their antennas. 

Station managers say they are working on improving the signal’s reach, but in the meantime, many fans of “Friends” and the “West Wing” in the nation’s fifth largest television market will have to decide whether to spring for cable, or go without their favorite shows. 

As of Jan. 1, NBC dropped its affiliation with San Francisco-based KRON. NBC programming will now be aired on San Jose-based KNTV, which NBC bought in mid-December. KNTV’s signal originates too far south to reach many Bay Area households. 

“We are actively looking to move our tower farther north,” said Richard Swank, KNTV’s vice president of engineering. 

Swank said the station was in talks with the Federal Communications Commission, and a move might come in the next few years. 

More than 2 million of the 2.4 million television households in the San Francisco-Oakland-San Jose market have cable or a satellite dish. 

which will enable them to receive NBC. 

The roughly 400,000 remaining households rely on antennas to catch the signal, according to NBC. 

Even before the switch, about 100,000 Bay Area households couldn’t get NBC programs from KRON because of the Bay Area’s mountains and other obstacles. 

KNTV reaches viewers on AT&T cable Channel 3 and broadcast Channel 11. 

KRON will remain at Channel 4 and plans to focus on local news as well as syndicated shows. 

——— 

On the Net: 

http://www.kron.com 

http://www.nbc3.com 


Bay Area Briefs

Staff
Thursday January 03, 2002

Hospitals vary their menus 

 

SAN JOSE — Bay Area medical centers are going beyond chicken soup and crackers to offer exotic comfort foods to an ever more diverse patient population. 

Hospitals have long offered vegetarian dishes to their patients. Steamed rice and tortillas are available at breakfast, lunch and dinner at the Valley Medical Center in San Jose. Regional Medical Center of San Jose will cook the Vietnamese noodle soup pho upon request. At Salinas Valley Memorial Hospital, menus are printed in Spanish and English. 

Observers say the new trend toward multicultural hospital cuisine is being driven by smart marketing and by a larger effort to be more sensitive to the cultural mores of an increasingly ethnic Bay Area population. 

Nutrition directors at the hospitals note that ethnic dishes make up only a small percentage of the hundreds of meals they serve patients each day. They says that as hospital stays get shorter and shorter, many patients have few opportunities to eat a hospital meal. 

Besides, many patients have their diets restricted before or after an operation, or they may require intravenous feeding. Then, too, many patients of color — particularly children — are thoroughly Americanized. 

 

 

 

 

 

New planters act as bomber barricades 

 

 

SAN FRANCISCO — In most settings, the seven new granite planters along downtown Kearny Street simply would be elegant triangles filled with fresh mulch and stiff hedges. On this block, they’re a sign of the times. 

That’s because they run along the edge of the plaza at the foot of the 52-story Bank of America building. The long, 2-foot-high planters have been designed to keep a truck bomber from ramming into San Francisco’s second tallest tower. 

Shortly after the Sept. 11 attacks barricades were hauled into place around the Transamerica Pyramid and the headquarters of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco. 

Building managers say they’re temporary. For residents they are a reminder of how the threat of terrorism has altered the landscape of San Francisco and cities like it. 


Gov. Davis is fighting to broaden his authority

By David Kravets The Associated Press
Thursday January 03, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — As he enters a tough re-election campaign, Gov. Gray Davis is assuming unprecedented powers that have landed him in court with key legislators and civil libertarians. 

Davis, a Democrat in the final year of his first term, has exercised emergency powers to cope with the electricity crisis, pushed to keep some criminals locked up indefinitely past their release dates, and tangled with the Legislature over his veto authority. 

“He’s certainly flexing political muscle,” Santa Clara Law School scholar Gerald Uelmen said. “The convergence of a number of issues would suggest that at least the governor is not reluctant to test the limits of his power.” 

In some cases, Davis is pushing into areas not faced by earlier governors, primarily those related to extending prison time for murderers and sexual offenders. In others, he has become mired in the usual fights between the executive and legislative branches. 

Last January, Davis declared a state of emergency because of rolling blackouts and rising electricity bills. He seized contracts with energy suppliers, streamlined the application process for new power plants, ordered rebates for consumers who conserve, and directed shopping centers to reduce their outdoor lighting. 

Davis’ aides also negotiated long-term electricity contracts committing the state to pay at least $43 billion over the next decade. Details of the contracts were released only after Davis was sued by Republicans and news organizations including The Associated Press. The governor said the contracts helped stabilize a volatile energy market; critics said they locked the state into paying prices far higher than the current market rates. 

After a summer without blackouts, some lawmakers have called on the governor to lift the state of emergency. State Sen. Debra Bowen, a Democrat who chairs a key energy committee, said: “We shouldn’t be suspending the constitutional checks and balances for any longer than is absolutely necessary.” 

But Garry South, Davis’ top political adviser, cited the recent collapse of Enron Corp. and the financial problems of San Jose-based Calpine Corp. as more signs the crisis continues. 

“Anyone that tells you that the energy crisis is over, and that no more problems will follow us on that front, is living on another planet,” South said. 

The energy crisis — combined with a crumbling economy that hit California’s tech sector particularly hard — has evolved into a budget crisis, and some key legislators are concerned about the power Davis will wield as he decides where to cut spending to make up for a $12 billion shortfall. 

Davis already is in a court fight with Senate President John Burton and Assembly Speaker Robert M. Hertzberg, both Democrats, over the governor’s changes to the state budget. 

Davis, like most governors, has line item veto authority to strike individual appropriations from the budget. But Burton and Hertzberg — along with the American Civil Liberties Union — said Davis overstepped his authority last summer when he struck language on racial profiling from a $3 million appropriation. 

The deleted passage would have required law enforcement agencies to report why they stopped a driver, whether they searched the car and whether they arrested anyone. 

Davis spokesman Byron Tucker said the governor changed the wording because the legislation did not give law enforcement enough money to carry out all the provisions. 

Ultimately, the dispute could go to the California Supreme Court. 

Separately, the governor is locked in a dispute over his authority to reverse the decisions of the state Parole Board. A state judge has ruled that Davis has unlawfully made it his blanket policy to deny parole to nearly all murderers. 

In three years, Davis has reversed the board in 64 of 65 cases in which it paroled a murderer, agreeing only in the case of a battered woman who shot her abusive husband in 1986. 

State lawyers have said the governor reviews each convict on a case-by-case basis but has absolute authority to reverse parole decisions. 

Davis is also pushing for more authority to keep sex offenders locked up past their release dates. In February, the state Supreme Court will hear arguments on whether the director of the Department of Mental Health, who is appointed by Davis, has the authority to keep violent sex offenders locked up as long as the director wants. 

Now, the law allows rapists and molesters to be locked up past their release dates for renewable two-year periods if two independent mental health experts conclude the convict is likely to commit another such crime. About 300 such offenders are locked up in California. 

As Davis moves through the courts on these fronts, three Republicans will compete in the March 5 primary for the right to replace him: Secretary of State Bill Jones, former Los Angeles Mayor Richard Riordan and businessman Bill Simon.


College friends walk across America in honor of attack victims

By Paul Glader The Associated Press
Thursday January 03, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Two college buddies quit their jobs and began hiking across America Tuesday to memorialize the victims of the recent terrorist attacks. 

Bill Faria, 22, and Josh Kampf, 23, plan to walk 3,500 miles and cross 15 states to arrive in New York on Sept. 11, 2002. They are sleeping in a tent, carrying minimal supplies and hoping to meet many people on the way. 

“In places far away from New York, there is not a lot people can do besides fly a flag. This is an opportunity for people to come out and walk with us for a couple miles ... and to show the people of New York how deeply this touched us,” Faria said by cellular telephone while walking in east Los Angeles. 

Faria and Kampf launched their cross-country trek Tuesday morning from the Santa Monica Pier. The recent Johns Hopkins University graduates are hauling about 4,000 small American flags, which they plan to distribute to families of attack victims once they arrive in New York. 

The idea took shape while the two New York Yankees fans watched the World Series crowd sing “God Bless America,” Faria said. 

“We wanted to do something to get us over the funk we were feeling. We wanted to participate,” Faria said. “Being pretty outdoorsy guys, we decided to walk across the country.” 

Formed as a nonprofit corporation, Walk for America, the men have $10,000 in pledges so far and hope to raise the $30,000 to cover costs of the flag displays. Any additional money will go to a scholarship fund. 

Faria of Billerica, Mass., quit his job at a Boulder, Colo., biotech firm to pursue the coast-to-coast hike. Kampf of Cheshire, Conn., had just moved to Boulder to work as a ski instructor. 

“When I told my parents I was quitting my job to walk across America, they had visions of me being a hippie or a nomad or something,” Faria said. “They warmed up to the idea.” 

With extra socks, sleeping bags, and waterproof gear, the men plan to camp along their route and friends will deliver food and supplies. 

“We have taken away all the minutae of daily life,” Faria said. “We have no apartment. No cars. No bills to pay. We simply have to walk.” 

——— 

On the Net: 

www.walk-for-america.org 


California man reports shark attack off Maui

The Associated Press
Thursday January 03, 2002

OLOWALU, Hawaii — Olowalu beaches reopened Wednesday after a one-day closure following a shark attack on a California man about 100 yards offshore, authorities said. 

Thomas Holmes, 35, of Los Angeles suffered a two-inch cut and several scratches on his back side in the Tuesday incident and was expected to recover from his injuries, Maui police Sgt. Don Simpson said. 

The man was able to swim to safety and was in good condition when he came onshore, Simpson said. 

Holmes said he and his girlfriend were snorkeling about 1 p.m. in 40 feet of water when they saw the shark and began swimming toward shore. The shark caught up with him. 

“I pounded his nose. I got two good shots at him,” said Holmes, adding that his injuries required about 35 stitches. 

Holmes and witnesses described what appeared to be a tiger shark about six feet in length, Simpson said. 

Police closed the beach to swimmers after the incident and referred the matter to the state Department of Land and Natural Resources.


Rose Parade 2002 takes on a Fourth of July look

By Leon Drouth-Keith The Associated Press
Thursday January 03, 2002

PASADENA — Revelers at the nation’s premiere New Year’s Day parade decided to let the “Good Times” roll with a patriotic burst of red, white and blue flowers, floats and fireworks that could have easily been mistaken for a Fourth of July celebration. 

Soon after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, organizers of Pasadena’s 113th Tournament of Roses parade pledged to infuse their 2002 theme, “Good Times,” with as much patriotism as possible. 

They delivered on that promise Tuesday, putting on a 2 1/2-hour spectacle that featured an American flag so big it took 32 people to carry it. 

The event, kicked off by a Marine Corps Marching Band performance of “The Star-Spangled Banner,” included dozens of red, white and blue floats from which such wholeheartedly American songs as Neil Diamond’s “America” and Pete Seeger’s “If I Had a Hammer” were broadcast to whoops of approval. 

“We’re all hopeful this is going to be a better year,” said Lisa Kaufman, 28, of Los Angeles, holding her 8-month-old son, Max. 

Her family attended the parade not quite four months after they were stranded in New York City by the airline shutdown that followed the terrorist attacks. It left them with plenty of time to stare out their hotel window at the smoke curling up from the collapsed towers of the World Trade Center. 

The much-happier scene they witnessed Tuesday was one of thousands of people sharing doughnuts, coffee, parade programs and friendly conversation. 

“It’s changed people’s outlook since September 11,” Celeste Knapper, 23, of Lincoln, Neb., said as a float featuring Uncle Sam on a motorcycle swept down Orange Grove Boulevard. 

The parade began with an introduction from grand marshal Regis Philbin, a burst of fireworks and flyovers by fighter jets and a B-2 stealth bomber. 

Its first float, American Honda Motor Co.’s “Born in the USA” entry, awed spectators with its 50-foot robot wearing a red, white and blue helmet and its floral representations of U.S.-developed machinery ranging from a lawnmower engine to rocket boosters. 

The city of Los Angeles’ float, a huge Cadillac convertible covered with pink carnations, carried a handful of New York City police officers. It was greeted with ovations from spectators who stood several rows deep all along the 5 1/2-mile parade route. 

Members of equestrian groups,meanwhile, dressed themselves and their mounts in variations of the red-white-and-blue motif and were as likely to shout “God bless America” as “Happy New Year” to the crowd. 

“Wonderful,” said Mary Pat Haas, who traveled to Pasadena from her New York City home to watch her nephew drive the Eastman Kodak float. 

“I’m glad they’re all out here and the terrorists aren’t keeping them home,” she said of the parade’s spectators. 

Pasadena police said the crowd of hundreds of thousands appeared to be smaller than usual, although specific estimates were not immediately available. Cmdr. Mary Schander said chilly, damp weather left behind by a series of rainstorms that hit the area earlier in the week was likely to blame. 

The day began under cloudy skies that finally gave way to sunshine as the last of the parade’s 107 entries was reaching its destination, Pasadena’s Victory Park. 

Not all the entries reached the finish line without incident. The start of the parade was delayed for several minutes when the pace car conked out and a tow truck was dispatched to jump start the 2002 Honda sports utility vehicle. 

Later, the Royal Court was temporarily stranded after their float broke down along the route. Rose Queen Caroline Hsu and the six princesses kept their poise and waved at the audience as they were towed the rest of the way. 

Brake trouble halted the entry by Guide Dogs for the Blind. A tow truck pulled it past television cameras then parked it along the curb for repairs. 

The entry carried New Jersey resident Michael Hingson, who was led out of the north tower of the World Trade Center by his guide dog Roselle just 20 minutes before it collapsed. 

With police keeping a stepped-up presence along the parade route, there were few serious incidents and only 59 arrests, compared with 78 last year. Thirty-three were for being drunk in public and nine involved felony charges ranging from assault on a police officer to driving drunk. 

The heavier-than-usual law-enforcement presence included agents with the FBI and U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms who were posted at the start of the parade with a bomb-sniffing dog. 

Most parade-goers took the tougher security — including bag searches and new access restrictions — in stride. 

“I appreciate their need to make (increased security) happen,” said Bob Porlier, a 57-year-old Duarte resident who patrolled the parade route years ago as a sheriff’s deputy. “They should do it every year.”


Cyber cafés have recent problems with teen violence

The Associated Press
Thursday January 03, 2002

GARDEN GROVE — Cyber cafes in this Orange County city are attracting an unruly crowd and city officials are worried about the safety of children after a murder over the weekend. 

Cyber cafes are one of the fastest growing businesses in Orange County, where teens and young adults frequently can be found logging onto the Internet and playing video games. Some locations stay open as late as 4 a.m. 

There are 19 cafes in Garden Grove, a city of 151,000 about 30 miles south of Los Angeles. Police said there have been an increasing amount of problems at the businesses. 

On Sunday, Phoung Huu Ly, 20, of Santa Ana was killed after he was stabbed with an 8-inch screwdriver outside the PC Cafe. Police believe the slaying was gang-related, although the victim was not a gang member. 

“We are going to have to do something to curtail this activity,” said Mayor Bruce Broadwater. “It’s got to be a safe environment.” 

In November, four teens wielding baseball bats attacked two boys at the same cafe. The victims had moderate injuries and were taken to the hospital. 

Last month, a 21-year-old man was stabbed in the arm at I-Net PC Cafe, which moved to Garden Grove from nearby Westminster after officials revoked its permit. 

“We’ve seen fights and a stabbing and now a homicide,” said Sgt. Mike Handfield. “There’s an escalation of violence, and there’s nothing to restrict the hours or the age group.” 

But business owners said they have enforced some strict rules on their patrons. At PC Cafe, there is no yelling, no cursing and no racial slurs. The business also has surveillance cameras and may add a security guard after Sunday’s killing. 

“It didn’t happen because of this place,” PC employee John Park said.. “Once in a while, gang-bangers do come to play games, and if they see their rivals, stuff happens. But like other entertainment places - bowling alleys, movie theaters - it’s not like we are the only ones having problems.” 


Nevada joins national court interpreters program

The Associated Press
Thursday January 03, 2002

CARSON CITY, Nev. — Nevada, after more than a decade of trying, will adopt a nationally standardized program this week for testing and certifying courtroom interpreters in foreign languages. 

The move, which will first focus on Spanish interpreters, is designed to give people who appear in court a better understanding of the legal process. 

It also could help avoid mistakes in rulings based on flawed translations — such as an April 2000 case in Ohio, in which a murder conviction was overturned after the court interpreter’s qualifications to translate for a Spanish-speaking defendant were challenged. 

The state program includes membership in the National Consortium for State Court Interpreters, an organization that provides training and tests to certify interpreters, as well as continuing education for certified interpreters. 

Nevada is the 28th state to join the consortium, which was formed in 1995. Clark County currently has the only system in Nevada for testing interpreters. 

“We’ve been trying to get this approved for some time, and see this as a victory for equal access to the justice system,” said Beth Mamman, management analyst at the state Administrative Office of the Courts which will oversee the program. 

Mamman said that various attempts at creating a statewide standard were brought before the Legislature since 1989, but the lack of a national organization to set guidelines on tests and training thwarted the efforts. 

Once the national consortium was founded, it took until the 2001 Legislature to convince lawmakers to commit to the idea. 

“People may not have thought Nevada was big enough to warrant such a step and the money it costs,” Mamman said. 

The program will cost the state $145,000 this year and $112,000 next year. 

The 2000 Census helped make the case for the program, showing a growing population of people who speak other languages, Mamman said. 

“The numbers were so compelling, and we know what risk courts and parties are at in not having this program in place — especially if we don’t want Nevada to be the kind of case everybody cites,” Mamman said.


Water supplies will be ample during 2002 for Los Angeles

The Associated Press
Thursday January 03, 2002

LOS ANGELES — An abundance of snowpack in the Sierra Nevada and reserves in underground storage basins means the city will not have a water shortage in 2002, officials say. 

That’s good news for residents considering that the area has received below-average rainfall totals.  

Since July 1, when rain totals are compiled, downtown Los Angeles has received about 2.8 inches of rain, compared with a normal-to-date of 5 inches. 

“If you look at the rainfall numbers, it’s about 60 percent or so (of normal), but it’s so early in the storm season,” said Dan Lafferty, assistant division engineer for the county’s Water Resources Division. “At this point, it’s nothing that we get overly worried about, being a little dry.” 

The area gets about one-third of its water from local rainfall while the remaining two-thirds comes from snow in the Sierra Nevada mountains and purchases from the Metropolitan Water District.  

The Sierra snowpack is about 30 percent over normal amounts, said Jeff Cohen, a spokesman with the state Department of Water Resources. 

“We have almost as much on the ground now as we had last year for the whole winter,” Cohen said. “If we just get average snowfall for the rest of the winter, we could be seeing 120 percent of average. ... Barring a major dry patch, we should be looking at a pretty good winter.”


Another storm, more road controls in Sierra

The Associated Press
Thursday January 03, 2002

The first Sierra storm of the new year pushed across the mountains Wednesday but failed to live up to expectations after losing much of its punch. 

Moisture that was expected to accompany the storm didn’t materialize and an earlier warning for the mountains was reduced to a snow advisory. The 12-18 inches forecast initially was reduced to 4-6 inches over the higher peaks. 

The storm still snarled traffic over mountains passes. Chains were mandatory on U.S. 50 over Echo Summit west of Meyers, Calif. and most other Sierra roadways had driving restrictions as well. 

Interstate-80 was open with no controls over Donner Summit, where chains or snow tires were required earlier in the day. 

Changing conditions kept forecasters scrambling as temperatures warmed more than expected, reaching the low 40s around Lake Tahoe to near 50 in the valleys of western Nevada. 

Rain that fell most of the day was expected to turn to snow overnight and forecasters were calling for 1-2 inches on the valley floors around Reno and Carson City by early Thursday. 

In the eastern part of the state, fog slowed drivers on I-80 east of Elko, U.S. 50 south of the interstate to Ely and U.S. 93 alternate south of Wendover. 

Snow was expected overnight in Elko and White Pine counties, possibly accumulating 1-3 inches by morning. 

Partial clearing was expected across the state by Thursday followed by partly cloudy skies and seasonal temperatures through the weekend.


California’s minimum wage second highest in the nation

By Jim Wasserman The Associated Press
Thursday January 03, 2002

SACRAMENTO — Thousands of California’s hotel, restaurant and store employees will see a little more money in their first paycheck of the New Year, with an 8 percent increase in the minimum wage. 

California, for the second straight year, hiked its minimum wage by 50 cents per hour, bringing hourly salaries to $6.75. Only Washington State now has higher minimum pay, entering 2002 at $6.90 an hour. 

“This certainly brings us closer to a living wage than we’ve ever been in the past,” said Susan Gard, spokeswoman for the Industrial Welfare Commission. “It offers some relief for some of the most marginalized workers in the state at a time when they really need it.” 

But many employers consider the raise — $1.60 an hour higher than the federal minimum of $5.15 — as another business burden. 

“It’s ludicrous after the year we’ve just had to do such a thing right now,” said Jeff King, co-founder of King’s Seafood Co., which operates 12 restaurants in the state. 

King said the increase leaves him no choice in hiking all his workers’ salaries. He said restaurants are already paying more for electricity and worker’s compensation, while suffering from September’s terrorist attacks and economic doldrums. 

“Marginally profitable restaurants will go out of business,” he said. “Hold off for a while until putting another nail in the coffin of the hospitality industry.” 

In San Diego, Susan Baumann, owner of the Bali Hai and Tom Ham’s restaurants, said she’ll have to raise prices and cut back on staff hours. 

The five-member Industrial Welfare Commission, which voted for the 2001 and 2002 hikes in Oct. 2000, resisted lobbying by the California Restaurant Association to delay the 2002 raise by six months. Officials said labor unions provided counterpressure and are lobbying now for another raise next year. 

Art Pulaski, secretary treasurer of the California Labor Federation, said employers have always complained about the timing of minimum wage increases. In a recession, he said, putting more in the hands of the poorest is actually the best economic stimulus available. Workers, he said, spend the money right away. 

This year’s hike marks the 19th time that California raised its minimum wage since it was established at 45 cents an hour in 1943. 

Pulaski called the 2002 increase a “modest victory,” amounting to about an extra $1,000 a year for a full-time worker. He said a minimum-wage California family of four will still come up short, needing at least $8.49 an hour to stay out of poverty. 

State employment staffers estimate the number of workers affected by the New Year’s raise at somewhere around 600,000 people. Most are under 25 years old.


Feds may end up settling Disney-EchoStar dispute

By Gary Gentile The Associated Press
Thursday January 03, 2002

LOS ANGELES — The battle between The Walt Disney Co. and EchoStar Communications started in the courtroom, but may eventually be settled by federal regulators weighing EchoStar’s proposed merger with rival DirecTV. 

Disney has not yet said whether it will oppose the merger as it did the joining of America Online and Time Warner Inc. 

But as its legal troubles with EchoStar escalate, it becomes more likely that the giant creator of movies and television programs will muster its forces against a combination that could control access to nearly 17 million pay TV subscribers. 

“It is causing us to take a long hard look at the position we will take,” Disney President Robert Iger said Monday, referring to Disney’s lawsuit against EchoStar. “They are two separate issues. But you have to pay heed when a distributor acts in a way we believe is somewhat of a monopolistic manner.” 

Monday, a federal judge issued a temporary restraining order preventing EchoStar from dropping the ABC Family channel from its satellite television service. EchoStar had planned to drop the channel, which is owned by Disney, as early as midnight Monday. 

A hearing is scheduled for Jan. 10. 

EchoStar spokeswoman Judianne Atencio said the company will comply with the ruling, but believes it has the right to drop the channel. 

Earlier this month, a Disney subsidiary, International Family Entertainment Inc., sued EchoStar Satellite Co., operators of the Dish Network, seeking to prevent it from dropping ABC Family. EchoStar reaches 6.4 million subscribers. 

EchoStar said it needed to drop channels with low ratings to make room for hundreds of local stations the satellite service is required to carry under new federal rules. 

The company said it was within its rights to break its contract with IFE because the channel has substantially changed its programming over the years. The channel was begun by television evangelist Pat Robertson, who sold it in several years ago to a partnership formed by Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp. and Saban Entertainment. 

The station was renamed Fox Family and was renamed yet again when Disney bought it earlier this year. 

Disney claimed EchoStar is using the threat to force Disney to lower the fees it charges providers to carry its channels. 

In court papers filed last week, EchoStar shot back, claiming a senior Disney executive threatened to oppose the proposed merger of EchoStar and Hughes Electronics Corp., which operates the DirecTV satellite network. 

Iger said no such threat was made, but that EchoStar’s actions will influence Disney’s final decision. 

“It is definitely a factor. I wouldn’t call it absolute,” Iger said. “It makes me wonder aloud just how indicative this behavior is in terms of the manner they might behave if they became bigger.”


Pakistan to close six-month- old tech office

The Associated Press
Thursday January 03, 2002

LOS ALTOS — The deflated tech bubble and troubles at home are forcing Pakistan to close a 6-month-old Silicon Valley office. 

Pakistan opened its Office for Information Technology Development in June — as waves of layoffs washed over high-profile area firms. 

The word came down from the Pakistani government in October and the consulate is set to close by month’s end, according to the San Jose Mercury News. Its goal was to tie together valley companies and the nascent Pakistani tech industry. 

“We were basically in a pre-start-up phase,” said Toheed Ahmad, consulate general for information technology development. 

Even before the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, the tech downturn here had made “the viability of such a consulate untenable,” according to the Pakistani English-language newspaper Dawn. 


Research ranks Vegas and Nevada high for women-owned businesses

The Associated Press
Thursday January 03, 2002

LAS VEGAS — A research firm is projecting that Nevada will rank fourth among states with the fastest-growing rate of women-owned businesses in a 1997-to-2002 study. 

The Center for Women’s Business Research said the Las Vegas metropolitan area will rank second in women’s business growth in major U.S. cities, behind the Salt Lake City-Ogden, Utah, area, the Las Vegas Review-Journal reported Wednesday. 

The Silver State will have some 45,935 women-owned businesses by the end of the year, employing 78,000 people and generating more than $13.1 billion in sales, according to the study. 

The Washington, D.C.-based center used U.S. Census figures to develop the list. 

It said women own 29 percent of all privately owned companies in the state. That represents a growth rate of 38 percent and sales growth of 120 percent between 1997 and 2002. 

Nationally, the center said the number of majority-owned, privately held women-owned firms will grow by 14 percent by the end of 2002, compared with 7 percent for all U.S. companies. The center puts the number of women-owned companies nationwide at 6.2 million. 

In Las Vegas, 33,011 women-owned businesses account for 30 percent of the metropolitan area’s privately held companies, employing 55,000 people and generating nearly $9 billion in sales. 

Julie Weeks, the center’s research director, told the Review-Journal that states in the West, where populations boomed in the latter half of the 1990s, showed significant growth in women-owned business. 

Weeks said the center found that growth rate exceeded the average growth rate for all business in all states. 

She attributed the growth to women becoming more educated and more experienced in executive-level positions. 

“For many of those women, entrepreneurship, starting a business, is the next logical step,” Weeks said. 

Cynthia Throm started Employers Benefits Design, a Las Vegas insurance company, 10 years ago because she wanted the freedom to follow her convictions. 

“When you work for a corporation, there’s a corporate philosophy,” Throm said. “When I started working for myself, I didn’t have to work with people, or philosophies, I didn’t agree with.” 

She said she learned that some customers take businesswomen less seriously then men, but said success and longevity foster customer faith. 

Lisa Hammond helped run her husband’s construction business before opening her own mail-order firm, Femail Creations, in Las Vegas. 

She said her business, featuring items designed by women artists and women-owned businesses, cleared $5 million in sales last year. It also gained mention in Oprah Winfrey’s magazine, O. 

“A woman may not have a master’s in merchandising,” Hammond said. “Even so, she may have the experience and guts to figure (business) out.” 


New law grants gays more rights

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet
Wednesday January 02, 2002

Adoption was not as joyous as it might have been for Pamela Springer and Terri Giamartino, a lesbian couple in Berkeley who adopted each other’s biological children in the mid-1990s. 

“It was a humiliating process,” said Giamartino, describing how she and 

Springer had to host a social worker in their home, go before a judge for approval, and dish out hundreds of dollars in administrative fees to adopt. 

Tuesday, things got easier for gays, lesbians and heterosexuals registered as domestic partners. 

Assembly Bill 25, authored by Assemblymember Carole Midgen, D-San Francisco, and signed by Governor Gray Davis in October, officially went into effect Jan. 1, 

providing domestic partners in Berkeley and across the state with a whole host of parenting, medical and legal rights already enjoyed by heterosexual, married couples. 

The adoption provision of the new law provides domestic partners with “step-parent” status, allowing for speedier, less intrusive and less expensive adoptions of their partners’ biological children. 

“I think it’s a great step because it puts the partner in a position where they’re acknowledged as a parent and caretaker,” said Giamartino. 

The law will also allow domestic partners to file for disability benefits on behalf of an incapacitated partner, make medical decisions for a hospitalized mate and sue for the wrongful death of a partner, among other things. 

“I think it’s a landmark,” said Assemblymember Dion Aroner, D-Berkeley, 

who co-authored the bill, arguing that the law represents an important recognition of the validity of gay and lesbian relationships. 

Conservative opponents, in the legislature and in the public policy world, have argued that gay couples do not form legitimate family units, and that the law was 

meant to circumvent Proposition 22, passed by voters in 2000, which banned gay marriage in California. 

“We see AB25 as nothing less than a first step toward legalizing homosexual marriage,” said Karen Holgate, director of policy for Capitol Resource Group, Inc. a 

conservative think tank in Sacramento. Holgate says that gay marriage would undermine traditional, heterosexual marriage.  

But local advocates say domestic partners’ relationships are just as meaningful as those of married couples, and that gays and lesbians deserve the same rights as heterosexuals, particularly in times of crisis. 

“If you’re dealing with a partner being hospitalized or dying,” said Kriss Worthington, a gay Berkeley City Council member who advocated for passage of the bill, “it’s the worst time to be facing legal technicalities.” 

Kevin James, a gay Berkeley resident who works as a lawyer for the State of California, said the provision allowing a domestic partner to sue for wrongful death is the most radical section of the law. 

“This is a great step forward in recognizing that gay people really do have emotions,” said James, “in recognizing both the economic and emotional depth of gay relationships.” 

But, if local gay rights advocates are pleased with the new rights provided in the bill, they said they will not be fully satisfied until the state and federal governments allow gay and lesbian couples to marry, and enjoy the literally hundreds of rights accorded to heterosexual, married couples. 

The passage of Proposition 22 means that gay marriage will probably not 

be a reality in California any time soon, but advocates are still attempting to beef up domestic partners’ rights. 

Assemblyman Paul Koretz, D-West Hollywood, introduced Assembly Bill 1338 earlier this year. If passed, it would provide domestic partners with all the rights of married couples the state is able to furnish. 

However, some federal rights including those involving income and inheritance taxes and veterans benefits would remain beyond domestic partners’ reach. 

Scott Svonkin, Koretz’s chief of staff, hails AB 1338 as a dramatic step toward granting gays and lesbians important civil rights. 

But, Holgate said Koretz and his allies are overstepping their bounds by forwarding the bill. “The will of California’s voters was clearly stated when they passed Proposition 22,” she said. “This whole movement for AB 1138 is an affront to California voters by a group of arrogant legislators.” 

Svonkin said he expects the Assembly’s judiciary committee to release the bill for a vote in January. 

But, he admits that Gov. Gray Davis and moderate Democrats in the legislature may be unwilling to support the measure. 

“The reality is, it’s an election year for assemblymembers and the 

governor,” he said, suggesting that the bill might be too controversial 

to touch. 

The governor’s office had no comment on AB 1338 Monday. 

If Davis and moderates in the legislature combine with conservatives to block the bill, it will likely fail.  

Whatever the fate of AB 1338, local gays and lesbians say they have made great strides with the passage of AB 25, both practically and symbolically. 

“This reflects a huge social change over the past 20 years,” said James. “I live in a much more tolerant state today.”


Clogged drains cause apartment building's ceiling to collapse

By Judith Scherr Daily Planet
Wednesday January 02, 2002

First there was a “big boom.” 

Then a “wall of water came through the front door and went like a stream out the back door,” said Jon Renata Monday morning as he stood outside his ground-floor apartment at 2012 Channing Way.  

At 7:10 p.m. on Sunday, the roof on the two-story apartment collapsed from the weight of “a large accumulation of water on the roof,” according to Deputy Fire Chief Debra Pryor. 

“There were plugged drains on the roof,” she added.  

Firefighters deemed the building unsafe and occupants spent the night elsewhere. On Monday, city inspectors took a closer look at the building and, according to Deputy Planning Director Wendy Cosin, said no one could re-enter the building until the roof was safely shored up. After the initial work was done, the building would be “yellow tagged,” which means that tenants could go back in to retrieve their belongings, but not reside there. 

Renata, who had spent the night on the couch of a neighbor in a neighboring apartment building, said it’s the first time in his 17 years living in the building that something quite this dramatic has happened. However, he said that people in the front two ground-level units get flooded every year. “You have to beg (the manager) to do anything,” he said. 

A person who works for owner Andrew Lipnosky, who declined to give his name, did not deny the flooding of the front apartments. He pointed to a downspout in front of one of these and noted that the pipe often gets clogged with leaves.  

The cause of the roof collapse had not yet been determined, he said. 

During the rainy weekend “maintenance crews had tried to keep things working,” but there was a lot to be done, he said. “We can’t keep up.” 

He said he had offered an empty unit in another building to Renata who had not yet decided what to do. 

Property owner Lipnosky could not be reached for comment.


City's mural may go on national tour

By John Geluardi Daily Planet staff
Wednesday January 02, 2002

City’s mural may go on tour 

City’s image of itself may go on national tour 

 

The mural that some say has become an intrinsic part of Berkeley’s identity may soon be going on tour with the National Gallery of Art as part of a retrospective of one of the country’s leading African American artists. 

The city commissioned New York artist Romare Bearden to create the 10.5 by 16 foot mural in 1972. The large collage can be found in the City Council Chambers immediately behind the dais from which the mayor, vice mayor and councilmembers guide city government. 

The work was commissioned for $16,000, mostly raised by the Civic Arts Commission and is owned by the city as part of its public art collection. 

Beardens’ mural is a collage of enlarged photographs, paintings and drawings. 

“The work represents the Berkeley community,” said Civic Arts Coordinator Mary Ann Merker. “If you look closely you can see the campanile, the Bay, the bridges and images of the people and things that make Berkeley a very unique place.” 

Along with artists Hale Woodruff, Charles Alston and Norman Lewis, Bearden is considered to be among the African American vanguard of Abstract Expressionists in New York during the 1940s and 1950s.  

Bearden, who died in 1988 at the age of 77, is now considered to be among the most important American artists, according to “African American Art, 1998,” a historical art review complied by Sharon S Patton.  

The National Gallery of Art, in Washington, D.C., is in the planning stages of a retrospective of Bearden’s work, tentatively scheduled for 2004. Though the details, are not yet confirmed, the retrospective would likely open at the National Gallery, then travel to two other cities, one of which would be San Francisco. In August, NGA Curator of Modern Prints and Drawings Ruth Fine and three other curators visited the City Council Chambers to inspect the mural.  

Merker said Monday it has not yet been confirmed that the mural will be part of the retrospective, but the curators seemed very interested. 

“They are interested because of the quality of the work and because the painting has become so intertwined with the city’s image and because it is displayed is such a public place where it is viewed by so many people,” Merker said. 

In fact, one particular image in the collage, the profile of four men of different races, was selected to be the city’s logo in 1970s. The image, meant to reflect the city’s diversity, appears on Berkeley’s police and fire vehicles, business cards, pamphlets, Web site and on nearly all of the city’s letterhead. 

According to City Center Coordinator Stephanie Lopez, the image has gained such high esteem as the city’s logo, that one of City Manager Weldon Rucker’s first official actions after being confirmed by the City Council in February, was to enhance the image so the colors are more distinctive. 

Deputy City Manager Phil Kamlarz said Berkeley “would be very honored if this piece is displayed in Washington DC and other cities.” 

In 1972 Bearden brought his camera to Berkeley and spent many days recording the images he thought best exemplified the city and its inhabitants. 

“He incorporated the photos into his work and he was really quite successful in capturing the essence of Berkeley,” said Civic Arts Commissioner Brenda Prager. “It’s a very important piece. It’s the second largest work that Bearden ever did.” The fact that he’s an important African American artist is also significant, she said.  

Bearden first attended New York University with the intent of becoming a doctor. He received a degree in science in 1936 but later studied at the New York Arts Student League where he found his true calling. 

In 1963 Bearden co-founded the Spiral Group, African American artists who limited the colors in their works to only black and white as a symbol of racial conflict. 

Mayor Shirley Dean said the mural is an excellent representation of the city’s diversity although she does find one thing missing. 

“My only concern is that there could be more diversity of gender among the images especially considering the gender make up of the council that sits in front of it,” she said referring to the fact that eight of city’s nine councilmembers are women.


By Judith Scherr Daily Planet

City may not end 2001 free from homicide
Wednesday January 02, 2002

Berkeley police are investigating what could be the first homicide in the city for 2001.  

Lt. Cynthia Harris, chief of detectives and public information officer for the Berkeley police, said that Sunday a female body was found floating in the Bay near the Berkeley pier.  

The death is “suspicious,” Harris said. “It’s being investigated as a homicide.” Police declined to release the name of the deceased or her city of residence, because of the nature of the investigation. Harris would only say: “It involves acquaintances.” 

 

 


Insulate your home and finances

By Alice La Pierre City of Berkeley Energy Office
Wednesday January 02, 2002

The holidays are over, and the bills are rolling in. While gas prices are currently lower than last year, there is no guarantee that they will remain that way. Unlike electricity, gas prices are unregulated, and as we experienced a year ago, prices can swing wildly out of control. 

 

What can you do to protect yourself from these price increases, and make your home more comfortable to live in at the same time? Insulate! Many older homes in the Bay area were built with little or no insulation in the basement, walls and ceiling, making them drafty and cold in winter, and hot in the summer. According to the US Department of Energy, "Each year the amount of energy lost through uninsulated homes in the United States is equivalent to the amount of oil delivered annually through the Alaskan Pipeline." Insulation and weatherstripping are the best way to save money, energy and even out the temperatures. 

 

Insulation comes in several forms and materials. In existing homes, many people use a loose, blown-in insulation to avoid having to tear out walls. Loose insulation can be made of fiberglass, vermiculite (gray or brown granules) recycled newspaper that has been fire-treated, or even denim and cotton fibers that have been treated. When loose insulation is used in walls, small round holes are cut into the upper wall and the insulation is blown in through a tube. Care should be taken that additional holes are cut beneath the fire stops (horizontal boards set into the stud wall to prevent a fire from climbing through the wall) and beneath windows so the wall will be completely insulated. In an attic, the material is blown evenly to a thickness of about 9 inches. 

 

For new homes or remodels, batts of insulation are also available, and are generally made of fiberglass. Batts can have a vapor barrier on them that reduces or prevents excess water molecules from passing through the wall. An aluminum vapor barrier will have the additional bonus of reflecting heat (or coolness) back into a room, keeping it far warmer than any other type of barrier. Care should be taken that the vapor barrier is placed on the surface closest to the interior of the room; i.e., in an attic, it should be placed on the bottom, against the ceiling. 

 

Rigid foam insulation can also be used, although it is less common in the Bay area. Rigid foam has the advantage of being easy to install, and far less messy than other types. It may also have a vapor barrier. It is more expensive, and less commonly available than other types of insulation. 

 

Never block the eaves and ventilation holes at the edges of the house. An attic must be vented to exhaust moisture and heat build up in summer. Blocking these vents will trap moisture, creating mold or mildew, and make an attractive habitat for termites and powder-post beetles. Also keep insulation away from recessed light fixtures, electrical fixtures, motors, bare stove or ventilation pipes, such as from a hot water heater. However, if you clear a space of insulation to install light fixtures or other things in the attic, be sure to go back and re-insulate. A gap in the insulation will act as a conduit, drawing heat rapidly out of your house. 

 

Homeowners should check their attics, and look for a couple of things: 1) what type of wiring is there, and 2) is there any insulation? If your home has older knob-and-tube insulation, it should be checked first by a licensed electrician (with a C-10 class license.) Knob-and-tube wiring needs air around it to release its heat; loose insulation may cover splices in the wiring and create a build-up of heat, making a potential fire hazard. If there are splices, have batts installed, and trim them around the wire so it can breathe. Be sure the vapor barrier is placed on the bottom. It is fine to increase layers of material to obtain the desired or required level of insulation. 

 

If your home has an accessible basement or crawlspace, insulation can be placed underneath and held in place with special wires made for this. This time, the vapor barrier should be placed facing up against the bottom of the floor. If your home has a garage with living space above it, insulation should also be placed on the ceiling of the garage, and a double-sided or encased batt used. 

 

Insulation comes in different thicknesses. They are classified by their rate of resistance to allow heat energy to transfer through, called an R-value. What R-value* of insulation should you use? Berkeley’s Residential Energy Conservation Ordinance (RECO) calls for a minimum of R-30 in the ceiling, between 8 and 13-1/2 inches of blown-in, depending on the type of material. Batts have labels on them indicating their R-value. If your home already has some insulation, you can always add more to bring it up to the minimum standard. If the ceiling has enough space, it is even better to increase the insulation to R-30 or greater, as long as there is enough space.  

 

Never pack insulation tightly into a space. Air pockets are what make insulation work. The more dense a material is, the less it insulates—think about how cold stone or tile is to the touch! It would take many feet of stone to create the same insulating value as a few inches of fiberglass. 

 

Once you have insulated your ceiling, walls and basement, you can concentrate on the rest of the places where energy is lost. Hot water pipes can easily be insulated with self-sealing material available from the BC&E Program*. Be sure to also insulate the first five feet of the cold-water inlet pipe to your hot water heater, as heat is also lost there. While you’re at it, insulate your gas hot water heater, and reduce the temperature to 115 F. degrees. Once you’ve done these steps, you should notice an immediate drop in your gas use. 

 

Furnace hot air ducts should be insulated; older furnace ducts should be checked to insure that there are no leaks. Don’t block the air return vents; air must be exhausted from the house to allow the warm air from the furnace in.  

 

Outlets and switches can easily be insulated with inexpensive foam gaskets. These take just a few minutes, and will immediately make your home less drafty. Window moldings should be caulked, and if there are gaps around the window sashes, they can be insulated with weatherstripping foam tape. 

 

Entry doors should have a raised threshold and a good weather-strip at the bottom to prevent air leaks. Installing a new threshold can be tricky; hire a contractor if you do not have the skills or equipment. Thresholds and weather-strip are also available through the BC&E Program. 

 

If you don’t use your fireplace, the flue should be permanently blocked and insulated, or removed completely. If you do use it, you may want to read an earlier PowerPlay column on heating with a fireplace. Visit the Energy Office Website at www.ci.berkeley.ca.us/ENERGY for  

online articles. 

 

Once your home is properly insulated and weatherized, the energy drain will be permanently stopped. Your home will feel much more comfortable with those drafts blocked, and better still, you will be better protected from fluctuating energy prices. For more information on insulating, the City Energy Office provides a home energy insulation guide, which is available at the Permit Service Center, 2120 Milvia Street. 

 

The BC&E Program (Berkeley Conservation and Energy) makes insulating and energy conservation equipment available at wholesale prices to the public. It is a partnership between the City of Berkeley, the Ecology Center, and Community Energy Services Corporation (CESC). Products are available at the Berkeley Farmers’ Markets and various local retailers in Berkeley. Visit the Energy Office website at www.ci.berkeley.ca.us/ENERGY for more information. 

 

* R-Value, or "resistance", is a measure of the amount of thermal resistance that a material has. The reciprocal of this is thermal conductance. The greater the R-value a material has, the greater its insulating value.


Domestic partners, unemployed among beneficiaries of new laws

By STEVE LAWRENCE Associated Press Writer
Wednesday January 02, 2002

SACRAMENTO (AP) — Domestic partners, the unemployed, nursing mothers, janitors, hat-loving students — even sheepherders — will have something extra to celebrate on New Year’s Day. 

They are among the beneficiaries of hundreds of new California laws that take effect Jan. 1. 

Gov. Gray Davis signed 948 bills in 2001 and the overwhelming majority of them become law with the arrival of the new year. 

There will be new laws to discourage gender price discrimination, protect spouses who sign prenuptial agreements, clean up polluted urban sites and provide telephone service to thousands of isolated Californians. 

There will also be statutes raising unemployment benefits, tying construction of large housing developments to the availability of water and allowing betting on horse races by telephone or Internet. 

Another new law will allow consumers to avoid most calls from telemarketers by getting on a do-not-call list the attorney general must have available by Jan. 1, 2003. 

Domestic partners will get more of the rights of married couples in the new year, including the ability to make health care decisions for an incapacitated partner, adopt a partner’s child and use sick leave to care for an ill partner. 

Domestic partners are same-sex couples or unmarried heterosexual couples who, at least in the case of one partner, are over age 62. 

Spouses who are pressured to sign prenuptial agreements will benefit from another new law. It will bar a court from upholding a premarital agreement unless the affected party was represented by an attorney or had waived that representation in writing. 

The law will also give a prospective spouse at least seven days to consider signing the agreement and will require that the rights the spouse is giving up must be spelled out in writing. 

California’s unemployment benefits, now lower than those offered by 45 other states, will begin a series of increases Jan. 1, with maximum payments reaching $450 a week in 2005. They’re now $230. 

Developers planning to build 500 or more homes will first have to show there is enough water available to supply the project. Another law will limit their ability to use 19th century plot maps to skirt current zoning restrictions. 

Other new laws will: 

— Require employers to make a reasonable effort to provide a time and adequate place for employees who are nursing to pump breast milk. 

— Allow janitors who work for companies with 25 or more employees to keep their jobs for at least 60 days when their employers lose janitorial contracts. 

— Allow students to wear sun-protective clothing, including hats, although school officials can ban gang garb. 

— Require minimum wage increases for sheepherders and make other improvements in their working conditions, including requiring meal and rest breaks whenever feasible. 

— Require tailors, hair salons and dry cleaners to post their prices, a step supporters say will discourage them from charging higher prices to women for virtually the same services they provide men. 

— Permit local governments to order landowners to clean up polluted parcels known as brown fields. 

— Create an annual $10 million grant program to provide telephone service to isolated, low-income communities. 

— Exempt undocumented immigrants who meet long-term California residency requirements from paying the higher fees charged out-of-state students at community colleges and the California State University. 

— Make it a misdemeanor to sell candy-flavored cigarettes known as bidis in businesses that allow access to minors. 

— Put restrictions on high-interest “predatory lending,” including requiring lenders to determine if a borrower has the ability to pay. 

— Create a presumption that state and local-government lifeguards who develop skin cancer are eligible for workers compensation benefits. 

— Require, with some exceptions, that all firearms made or sold in California come with a state-approved trigger lock to try to reduce the number of accidental shootings. Davis signed this bill in 1999 but it doesn’t take effect until 2002. 

— Allow fines of up to $100 for leaving a child under the age of six unattended in a motor vehicle. 

— Make it a crime to threaten people using or working in a clinic offering abortions. 

— Bar employers from requiring workers to speak only English unless an English-only policy is justified by a business necessity. 

— Prohibit employers from discriminating against employees and job applicants because of their lawful conduct outside the workplace. 

— Allow pharmacists to sell morning-after contraceptives without a doctor’s prescription. 

— Require local government housing plans to include facilities for the disabled. 

— Bar “political cyberfraud,” which includes intentionally diverting access to a political Web site by using a similar domain name. 

— Prohibit both cable and satellite television companies from selling information about a customer’s viewing habits unless the customer approves. 

— Require the state Department of Education to develop model policies that schools can use to combat schoolyard bullying. 

— Set up a state organ- and tissue-donor registry to keep track of people willing to donate organs when they die. 

— Prohibit insurers from canceling polices of churches, schools or nonprofit organizations that file claims to cover damages caused by hate crimes. 

———— 

On the Web: www.sen.ca.gov/sor


Bay Briefs

Wednesday January 02, 2002

ANTIOCH, Calif. (AP) — A body found floating in the Delta on Sunday afternoon was identified as Mark Osborn, a 17-year-old Oakley youth who apparently drowned in an accident while duck hunting with his father and a friend. 

Sgt. John King of the East Bay Regional Parks police said three fishermen found the body near the Antioch Bridge. 

The Contra Costa Sheriff’s Department and East Bay parks police recovered the body. The county coroner’s office later made a positive identification. 

Osborn was duck hunting with his father, Kent Osborn, and his friend Michael Valin, 15, on Dec. 2 when their boat capsized in rough waters on the Delta. 

Kent Osborn was rescued about eight hours later, floating with the help of a pair of duck decoys and suffering from hypothermia. The two boys could not be found. 

Valin’s body was found Dec. 21 near the site of the accident. 

——— 

BELMONT, Calif. (AP) — A man driving a motor home led police on a two-day odyssey this weekend that began with a series of crank 911 calls and ended in a decidedly low-speed chase on Peninsula highways. 

The motor home was “not exactly a choice vehicle when you’re trying to outrun a police officer,” said Belmont Police Department Sgt. Dan Desmidt. 

Twice on Saturday, officers responded to 911 reports of a disturbance at a home on Christian Drive. But each call was found to be a prank, said Desmidt. 

Police discovered that Tom Lovecchio, 52, was allegedly making phony 911 calls regarding his estranged wife. 

Lovecchio’s wife, who was not identified, told police her husband was drunk and repeatedly called her throughout the day. 

A patrol officer spotted Lovecchio around midnight on U.S. Highway 101, in San Carlos. Lovecchio refused to pull over his motor home, starting a pursuit — reaching speeds no greater than 55 mph — along northbound 101, west on Highway 92 and ending in Half Moon Bay. 

Less than half an hour later, Lovecchio was taken into custody without further incident. 

He was booked into San Mateo County Jail in Redwood City on numerous charges including driving under the influence, evading a police officer, making false emergency reports and violating a restraining order. 

——— 

UNION CITY, Calif. (AP) — Tony Schollar picked a tough way to earn a merit badge for his Eagle Scout project. 

Schollar agreed to repaint and refurbish 200 of the city’s more than 1,500 fire hydrants. 

The 17-year-old scout is repainting the fireplugs in the city’s preferred bright yellow, as well as cleaning inside the hose connection, checking water pressure, cleaning up brush and trash and loosening frozen caps. 

Since he got to work in September, Schollar has completed about 25 percent of his project. He has to finish before August, when he turns 18. An Eagle Scout must be 17 when he earns the honor. 

Fire officials say the hydrants, which are supposed to be serviced annually, have not been touched since 1994. 

Fortunately, Schollar has some help. He’s now supervising a crew of nine Boy Scouts — and his father — who are helping out with the project. 

——— 

SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) — More than a quarter of the 1,800 teachers in Santa Clara County’s largest district are eligible to leave classrooms with a generous retirement package thanks to a deal crafted in a spring 1999 contract. 

The prospect of an unprecedented exodus of experienced San Jose teachers has left some wondering how the school district will cope with the loss of so many veterans at a time when the state is pressuring schools to show academic improvement every year. 

School officials and teachers’ union officials viewed the package as a way to pay tribute to instructors who have given years to the students of San Jose. And they say putting the deal together three years ago to take effect this spring bought them time to plan for mass retirements and the ensuing hiring push. 

No one will know for sure how many teachers are leaving until April, when teachers must notify the school district if they plan to return next year. 

So far, 24 administrators — about a third of those eligible — have taken the package. And 500 San Jose teachers could choose to cash in, too. The deal offers a $40,000 annuity, paid over several years, and seven years of medical coverage to teachers who are eligible to retire under the state retirement system. 

The district expects 200 to 250 experienced instructors to leave, in addition to the 100 to 125 teachers who normally depart in a given year. 


New Majority seeks to revive GOP

The Associated Press
Wednesday January 02, 2002

LOS ANGELES (AP) — A group of wealthy Republicans in Orange County has created the state’s largest GOP political action committee in an attempt to broaden the party’s appeal. 

The New Majority was formed in early 2000 in Orange County, the historic center of the state’s Republican Party. 

Membership has more than doubled since its inception, from 44 to 110, and 14 members have joined Team 100, which requires a donation of $100,000 or more to the national Republican party. 

The group has riled some established Republicans who contend that its wealthy members are out of touch with working-class Republicans. 

New Majority members include: George Argyros, the U.S. Ambassador to Spain; Henry Samueli, founder of technology heavyweight Broadcom and Donald Bren, billionaire chairman of The Irvine Co., a real estate development firm. 

Each member pays $10,000 to join the New Majority, which hopes to expand to Los Angeles and San Diego counties. The group’s goal is to promote more mainstream Republicans in key GOP primaries, believing they stand a better chance of winning against Democrats. 

Members raised $3 million for the President George W. Bush’s campaign in 2000, gaining most of that during two high-profile fund-raisers in Orange County. 

The group last month also formally endorsed former Los Angeles Mayor Richard Riordan as its Republican candidate for governor. Riordan supports abortion rights and gun control, which sets him apart from the two more conservative GOP candidates — businessman Bill Simon Jr. and Secretary of State Bill Jones. 

The endorsement for Riordan came with $100,000 and individual members contributed another $400,000. 

New Majority leadership also helped lead an internal coup of the state GOP apparatus organized by Bush’s California political strategist, Gerry Parsky. Changes adopted in October transferred party power from a group of conservatives to a professional manager accountable to a board of directors, including a representative of the party’s major donors. 

“They’re a vital new element in the Republican party,” said California Republican Party Chairman Shawn Steel, a lawyer from Palos Verdes. “They represent a new generation of entrepreneurs who will help make the Republican Party the major party in California in the next 10 years. Their timing was exquisite.” 

Of the state’s 15.3 million voters, 45 percent are Democrats and 35 percent are Republicans, while 14.5 percent decline to state a party affiliation. 


Oakland man plans to run marathon in South Pole

The Associated Press
Wednesday January 02, 2002

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — An Oakland businessman is part of a pioneering extreme sports group that plans to run a marathon around the South Pole next month. 

Dean Karmazes, 39, hopes to run the 26.2 mile route from a base camp at 11,000 feet through the subzero temperatures to the South Pole in five hours. 

But he’s not even sure running is possible — the deep snow may not support heavy footfalls. 

“No one has ever done this before,” he said. “Maybe it’s not even possible.” 

Karmazes is part of a group of 15 people doing the run, most of whom are paying $35,000 for the opportunity. 

As an accomplished marathon runner — he once ran 135 miles across Death Valley — Karmazes has been invited to go for free. 

He will be insulated by a down jump suit, the type climbers wear when scaling Mount Everest. And one other fear has been put to rest. 

“I’ve learned that there are no polar bears in Antarctica,” he said, “so as far as the fear of being eaten by something, I don’t anticipate that being an issue.” 


Underwater Yosemite

By PAUL ROGERS San Jose Mercury News
Wednesday January 02, 2002

MONTEREY, Calif. (AP) — With thick kelp forests and exotic wildlife, Monterey Bay has been described more than once as an underwater Yosemite. Now, the ocean expanse will get one of the true trappings of a national park, a visitor center. 

Fulfilling a decade-long dream of former Congressman Leon Panetta and other bay supporters, the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary — America’s largest protected ocean area — secured preliminary funding from Congress in December. 

The funding came Nov. 28, when President Bush signed the Department of Commerce budget bill, which included $1.25 million for planning and other work on the project. 

Next month, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) plans to award a contract for a feasibility study. Construction could start in 2003. 

“This is great,” said Panetta, now chairman of the Pew Oceans Commission, a non-profit group studying ocean issues nationwide. 

“The problem with the ocean is that we tend to take it for granted. In Monterey Bay, you’ve got a canyon that is twice as deep as the Grand Canyon, for example. So few people really know about the sea life there. A center like this will give us a chance to see what lies beneath.” 

While in Congress representing Monterey and Santa Cruz, Panetta blocked efforts by the Reagan administration to allow offshore oil drilling off Big Sur and the San Mateo County coast. He wrote the bill that established the sanctuary boundaries along 276 miles of coastline from the Marin Headlands to Hearst Castle, banning oil drilling forever in the area. The bill was signed into law in 1992. 

During that era, Panetta repeatedly said he hoped the public would have a place similar to a national park visitor center to learn about the marine environment, central coast history and the extensive underwater research in Monterey Bay. 

A location hasn’t been chosen yet, said William Douros, superintendent of the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary, headquartered in Monterey. 

But Douros said the three leading sites so far are Santa Cruz, possibly on the Municipal Wharf or at the old Depot site near the wharf; Monterey, in the Custom House Plaza area at the foot of Fisherman’s Wharf; or in Aptos, on state park property on the bluffs above Seacliff State Beach. 

“We’ll want to describe what a marine sanctuary is, why it is there, what is out there and what people can do to protect it,” Douros said. 

Douros said he envisions a building of about 8,000 to 12,000 square feet. There would be exhibits on wildlife and history, along with information telling people where they could fish, boat, walk along the beach or find other activities. 

There also probably will be a children’s classroom for field trips, a small gift shop and a screening room for a sanctuary video, similar to national park visitor centers, or the Elkhorn Slough visitor center, he said. In addition, the center could have exhibits on all 12 of the nation’s marine sanctuaries. 

“You might have a panel of monitors, and you could say ’Let’s go to the coral reef in the Florida Keys, let’s go to a bird colony in the Farallon Islands,”’ he said. “That’s one of the exciting things we are looking at.” 

Douros said if the eventual site is at Seacliff State Beach, it could be jointly run by state park employees, local volunteers or NOAA staff. Because of its location, that site also could allow the building to have a deck with telescopes looking out onto the ocean, he said. 

After the feasibility study is finished next summer, there will be public meetings, Douros said. The eventual total cost could be $5 million to $8 million, he said. 

Seacliff State Beach already receives more than 1 million visitors a year and has a small visitor center near the Palo Alto, an abandoned ship made of cement and moored offshore. 

Dave Vincent, superintendent of the Santa Cruz state parks region, said he likes the idea, and that the 5-acre site atop the bluffs now is used only as an occasional overflow parking lot. Money could come from private donations and future state parks bonds, he said. 

“It would have panoramic views,” Vincent said. “There are just sweeping vistas there. We could also use it as a hub to refer people to Long Marine Lab and the Monterey Aquarium and other places.” 

There is plenty to study. The sanctuary is home to 26 species of marine mammals, 94 species of seabirds, at least 345 different kinds of fish and 1,276 known shipwrecks. 


2002 economic outlook is dim

By SIMON AVERY AP Business Writer
Wednesday January 02, 2002

LOS ANGELES — A power crisis that cost the state billions. A dot-com bust that was far worse than expected. Finally, the devastating economic impact of a terrorist attack no one could have anticipated. 

“This year there have been a succession of challenges and blows that have not been expected and that have taken their toll on the economy,” said Sunne Wright McPeak, president and chief executive of the Bay Area Council, which represents business interests in the San Francisco Bay area. 

Looking ahead to 2002, experts warn Californians not to expect things to get better anytime soon. 

At the start of the new year, California’s unemployment rate has reached its highest level in five years. The state government, having spent $9 billion just to keep the lights on, finds itself burdened with a budget deficit expected to swell to $12.4 billion. 

Economists, meanwhile, predict that personal incomes will shrink in 2002 while unemployment continues to rise and the state budget deficit continues to grow. 

The problems began in 2001 when the tech boom that had raised Silicon Valley home prices to record levels finally ended. 

State employment peaked in June, and since then California has shed 101,600 jobs. In November, the state’s jobless figure reached 6 percent, topping 1 million for the first time in five years. 

Northern California’s Silicon Valley, which had fueled much of the state’s economic expansion through the 1990s, was particularly hard hit. In Santa Clara County, the heart of the technology haven, the unemployment rate rose to 6.6 percent in November from just 1.5 percent a year earlier. 

“We’ve been through a searing experience,” said Jim Cunneen, president and chief executive of the San Jose Chamber of Commerce. 

Parts of Southern California did manage to avoid last year’s downturn, however, and economists believe some areas will continue to thrive, thanks to their diversified economies. In Orange County, for example, unemployment actually dropped a fraction in November to 3.4 percent. 

But even in the South there is pain. The manufacturing, services and airline industries are scrambling to contain costs in light of falling revenue. 

Small businesses are also feeling the pain. 

“It’s been up and down, up and down,” said William Ho, general manager of Top Hat Cleaners in West Hollywood. 

The energy crisis doubled his monthly electricity to bill to $1,200, forcing him to consider raising prices just as he saw business slowing. The Sept. 11 attacks on New York also added uncertainty. But then a sudden drop in gasoline prices, along with electricity conservation, helped Ho control costs. 

“Things are starting to come back. The whole picture is looking a bit better since the Thanksgiving holiday,” he said. 

But optimism is flowing in dribs and drabs. Across the state, retailers added only sparingly to their part-time ranks for the holiday shopping season. In the movie production business, employment is at its lowest level since the summer of 1997. 

Falling corporate profits and the weakening employment picture mean Californians won’t see wages, salaries and bonuses jump as they have in recent years. In fact, economists predict there will be an overall net decrease in personal income next year. 

An expected gain of 1.3 percent will amount to a net loss of 1.4 percent after inflation is factored in, said Tom Leiser, senior economist of the UCLA Anderson Forecast. 

The figure represents a dramatic falloff from 2000, when personal income across the state increased by an average of nearly 10 percent before inflation. 

“There are more job seekers now. The pressure has gone out of wages,” Leiser said. 

Before the economy bounces back, experts say the effects of California’s energy crisis, the tech bust and the terrorist attacks must play out. 

Although the energy shortage caused less damage than anticipated, due mostly to mild summer weather and widespread energy conservation, aftereffects remain. The state government, for example, is still trying to find a way to finance billions of dollars in payments made to secure long-term power contracts. 

That liability, on top of a massive decrease in tax dollars that occurred when stock market gains flattened out and general merchandise sales fell off, is turning what was an anticipated $2.6 billion reserve for fiscal 2001-2002 into a state budget deficit of $4.5 billion. For the 2002-2003 budget year, that shortfall is expected to swell to at least $12.4 billion, according to the California Legislative Analyst’s Office. 

The net result: expect big cuts in the state budget and the amount of money the government injects into the economy. California’s budget has already become a drag on the economy and will slow the recovery that is expected to begin by the middle of next year, Leiser said. 

The travel industry, meanwhile, continues to exhibit aftershocks from the terrorist attacks. The transportation and utilities industry dumped 9,800 more jobs in November, mostly in the state’s airline industry. 

In the technology sector, companies have been positioning themselves to ride the eventual recovery wave by streamlining their payrolls, products and services, and maintaining research and development. 

Although there’s still no firm sign that the tech sector has hit bottom, a survey by the Bay Area Council reported that 38 percent of residents and businesses in the region expect the economy to improve through 2002. Just under one-third thought it would get worse in the next six months. 

“There is cautious optimism. There is resilience here,” said McPeak. 


Farmers greet the new year with less land, more funding

By JIM WASSERMAN Associated Press Writer
Wednesday January 02, 2002

SACRAMENTO (AP) — California’s 89,000 farm owners enter 2002 with 50,000 fewer acres to farm, thanks to urban growth. But they’re also finding more money than ever to save their farms for future generations. 

In a state that leads the nation in 79 farm commodities, authorities say 2001’s losses continue a trend in which an estimated 500,000 acres — equivalent of three Modestos — yield to city pavement every decade. 

“The Inland Empire is tops on the list,” said Erik Vink, who heads the state Department of Conservation’s land protection division. 

Riverside County — still the state’s ninth most productive farm county for its milk, citrus and vegetables — paved more than 15,000 acres of farmland between 1998 and 2000, Vink said. He said Inland Empire cities — Corona, Moreno Valley, Temecula, Chino and Ontario — are fast filling rural spaces with suburban commuter housing. 

Vink cited similar-scale farmland conversions in San Francisco’s East Bay and Sacramento County. Indeed, as California’s farm economy struggles with low commodity prices, suburban roof lines are more common in old farm towns such as Los Banos, Clovis and Tracy. On former vineyards along the Central Valley’s Highway 99, Turlock, Selma and Manteca grow auto malls and regional shopping centers. 

Though 2001’s 50,000 acres represents a bare fraction of California’s 9 million irrigated acres, experts warn that one-third of those being paved are the state’s best soils. And some warn that the state needs a far-reaching growth plan, possibly to steer development into foothills and away from the Central, Salinas and Santa Maria valleys and Oxnard Plain. 

The four regions grow most of the nation’s fresh produce. 

“Currently, the state doesn’t have much of a role,” said Alvin Sokolow, public policy analyst at the University of California, Davis. “It has no role.” 

Nonetheless, an old California industry that accounts for 13 percent of the nation’s farm receipts on 4 percent of its land, finds itself with new allies. Increasingly, farmers, cities and counties are tapping state and federal programs, even the David and Lucile Packard Foundation, for millions of dollars to save farms from the state’s relentless growth. 

Statistics show most of California’s 35 million residents live on 5.5 million acres of urban land. 

But as the state adds 600,000 people a year, government and private grant makers have begun something relatively new: buying development rights to thousands of acres of crop land. It’s an idea largely pioneered in small eastern states: Maryland, Delaware, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts and New Jersey, said Chuck Tyson, who heads the California Farmland Conservancy Program. 

California’s five-year-old program has already put 13,500 acres off limits to urban development. It offers farm owners a one-time cash payment: the difference between the land’s farming value and the price a developer would pay. 

In return, owners must farm the land in perpetuity. 

In a 2001 report on farmland conversion, UC Davis specialists said typical farmland is worth $5,500 an acre. But the same land may be worth $40,000 an acre to a developer — or much higher if the area has sewers. 

“The idea isn’t about stopping growth, but hopefully, at the local level, defining areas that have the greatest strategic ag value,” Tyson said. Typically, local governments link farms with prime soils and form a wall steering growth elsewhere. 

“Some of the best examples are in Marin County,” he said, “and we’re increasingly seeing in it Monterey County, in the Salinas Valley.” 

Near Salinas, the state and the Packard Foundation, funded by profits from Silicon Valley’s Hewlett-Packard Corp., each paid $600,000 to preserve the 180-acre Dolan Ranch. In Livermore, the state bought development rights to 100 acres of Beyer’s Ranch owned by the winemaking Wente Family. The cost: $741,000. 

Now, Lake County is considering the idea to save pear orchards being lost to large-lot housing. 

Tyson said the state program received $25 million from Proposition 12, the $2.1 billion park and open space bond passed by voters in 2000. The Packard Foundation committed $175 million to conserve landscapes statewide, including farms. The foundation gave the Modesto-based Great Valley Center $5.7 million in 2000 to save strategic farmland. It scattered millions more among other groups with the same intent. 

Yet as housing shortages in job-rich areas push commuter housing deeper into rural areas, some say giving tax breaks and buying development rights is a small vision. Sokolow noted that California’s farmers are again starting a new year with no prospects for a statewide growth plan. 

“In political and policy terms, this state, the state government, has dropped the ball,” he said. 

“Clearly it’s a case where you can’t just depend on local control,” said Sokolow. “Ultimately, I hope, sooner than later, the state will have to stop in and develop a statewide sense of what the future should be. This has not been on any governor’s agenda in recent years,” he said. 

—————: 

On the Net: 

California Farmland Conservancy Program: www.consrv.ca.gov/dlrp. 

University of California Agricultural Issues Center: www.aic.ucdavis.edu. 


On the Fourth Day of Kwanzaa

By Hank SimsDaily Planet staff
Monday December 31, 2001

The south branch of the Berkeley Public Library overflowed with holiday cheer on Saturday as around 50 celebrants came to mark Ujamaa, the fourth day of Kwanzaa. 

Kwanzaa – Swahili for “first fruits” – is not a religious holiday but rather a cultural one that celebrates Pan-African culture. It was first celebrated in 1966, and is practiced by millions today. 

The holiday was invented by Dr. Maulana Karenga, an academic, during the great period of social change in the 1960s. 

“Some people look at that – that it’s an invented holiday – as implying something that’s not true,” said Paris Williams, the master of ceremonies at Saturday’s event. 

So much was lost when Africans were brought to the Americas, Williams said – religion, family names and history. Critics of Kwanzaa sometimes suspect that because the holiday is invented, everything it celebrates is also made up. 

Nothing could be further from the truth, Williams said. 

“Kwanzaa is not a reinvention but a reaffirmation of our history,” she said. 

Williams lit the red, black and green candles on the kinara, the ceremonial candleholder – one for each day of Kwanzaa leading up to Ujamaa. 

Young Samora Piderhughes explained the symbolism of the candle-lighting ceremony, and later led the room in singing the Black National Anthem — “Lift Every Voice,” by James Weldon Johnson. 

Later, storyteller Marijo entertained and educated children and adults alike with a spirited tale that illustrated the theme of the day – Ujamaa, or cooperative economics.  

A Ghanaian youth, bored by pastoral life in his small, hardworking village, sets off for Accra – a shining city full of great wealth where he hopes to make his fortune. 

The boy suffers a number of misadventures, and eventually realizes the error of his ways. He sees that his envy had blinded him to the values he learned in his village, and he returns to work together with his countrymen. Eventually, cooperative labor brings great wealth to their own village. 

Today, New Year’s Eve, is also Kuumba, the sixth and last day of Kwanzaa. Kuumba means “creativity,” and Kwanzaa practitioners will spend the day reflecting on the legacy of African contributions to the arts and sciences.  

As Kwanzaa is also a forward-looking holiday, though, they will also consider how to best use their own creativity to contribute to future generations. 

Speaking of the first generations of Africans in America, whose suffering may seem so purposeless, Williams pointed out that it was their hard work, as well as their fight for freedom, that made everyone present possible. 

“Who were they?” she asked. “They were the people who dreamed us, the lives we lead today. 

“Now, it is our responsibility to dream the lives our children will lead tomorrow.” 


Easy offense nets consolation prize for ’Jackets

By Nathan Fox Daily Planet Correspondent
Monday December 31, 2001

After opening the Leo LaRocca Sand Dune Classic boys basketball tournament with a heartbreaking loss to Acalanes, Berkeley High was eliminated from contention in the holiday tournament and placed in the consolation bracket. It would have been very tempting for the Yellowjackets to phone in the tournament’s remaining two games and begin looking forward to a fresh start in 2002. 

Instead the ‘Jackets rebounded, beating Fremont handily Friday night, then capping their 2001 on Saturday night with a 64-56 victory over Cardinal Newman to claim the tournament’s consolation bracket championship. 

Berkeley now enters 2002, and league play, with a head of steam. The ’Jackets went undefeated in ACCAL play last season before losing to De La Salle in the North Coast Section playoffs. 

“We open up with Richmond in league,” Berkeley head coach Mike Gragnani said. “We’re going to take some time off, then go back to work next week, get three or four good days of practice in, and try to defend our crown.” 

The Yellowjackets wasted no time Saturday night, opening up a 10-3 lead in the first few minutes on five layups, three of them by center Damien Burns. 

“We had a great start,” Gragnani said. “We really executed well offensively. I think we shot 81 percent in the first five minutes... [the players] executed our system.” 

It isn’t hard to shoot 81 percent on a steady diet of layups, which is exactly what Berkeley’s well-spaced offensive system provided in Saturday night’s first half. Yellowjackets, most frequently forward Robert-Hunter Ford, repeatedly snuck behind Cardinal defenders for uncontested shots. 

Burns had 11 of his game-high 19 points, and Hunter-Ford 10 of his 14, in the first half as Berkeley opened up a 37-20 halftime lead. 

“They really did good reading the defender tonight,” Gragnani said. “When the defender lost vision, we made the back-cuts... it means we’re learning how to play.” 

The 17-point halftime lead stretched to 22 early in the third period on consecutive 3-point plays by senior Jesse Alter. Gragnani was complimentary of Alter’s play in the tournament after the game, calling the back-to-back driving buckets and their ensuing foul conversions “huge.” 

But the Cardinals weren’t quite done yet. They promptly answered with a 10-point run, cutting the lead to 12 and precipitating a Berkeley timeout. They would further whittle away during the remainder of the third quarter, finally drawing within nine, 49-40, at the start of the fourth quarter. 

The ‘Jackets immediately turned to their big man to stem the Cardinal tide. Burns responded with two quick buckets that lifted the Berkeley lead back into double digits, where it would stay until the final two minutes. 

Cardinal Newman would make the final score look closer than it actually was by making four desperation three-pointers as time expired. 

Senior guard Nate Walker, who poured in three of those last-minute three-pointers, matched Burns’ game-high 19 points. Teammate Dave Robb, who led all scorers with 26 in Friday’s Cardinal victory over Saint Ignatius, was held to only 10. 

Gragnani smiled as he shuffled out of the empty Saint Ignatius gym, where he used to be an assistant coach before taking over at Berkeley High. 

“I’m tired,” he said. “We’re taking three days off now. They earned it, and I’m looking forward to it.” 

 


Compiled by Guy Poole
Monday December 31, 2001


Thursday, Jan. 3

 

 

California Desert Hikes 

7 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment, Inc. 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

Steve Tabor will share slides and information on his favorite day hikes in Death Valley, Joshua Tree, Anza Borrego and the Mojave. 527-4140 

 

Puppet Art Theater Company  

with Art Grueneberger 

11 a.m. 

Public Library, West Branch 

1125 University Ave. 

The classic fairytale “Jack and the Beanstalk” will be performed with a “behind the scenes” after the show. Free. Recommended for children ages 3 and up. 649-3913, www.infopeople.org/bpl/. 

 

Puppet Art Theater Company 

with Art Grueneberger 

3 p.m. 

Public Library, North Branch 

1170 The Alameda 

The classic fairytale “Jack and the Beanstalk” will be performed with a “behind the scenes” after the show. Free. Recommended for children ages 3 and up. 649-3913, www.infopeople.org/bpl/. 

 


Friday, Jan. 4

 

 

Even Stronger Women 

1:30 - 3:30 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

This week’s discussion: Helen Keller and film. 232-1351. 

 


Saturday, Jan. 5

 

 

Marionette Puppets 

10:30 a.m. 

Public Library, Central Branch 

2121 Allston Way 

JoJo La Plume appears with a performance to ethnic music and sounds of nature. Free. Recommended for children ages 3 and up. 649-3913, www.infopeople.org/bpl/. 

 

Bay Area Poets Coalition  

3 - 5 p.m. 

Public Library, South Branch 

1901 Russell St.  

Open reading. 527-9905, poetalk@aol.com. 

 

Spanish Storytime 

2 p.m. 

Public Library, West Branch 

1125 University Ave.  

Spanish language storytime, books and songs for families with children ages 3 - 8. 981-6270. 

 

Peace-by-Peace Walk Benefit 

5 p.m. - midnight 

Black Box 

1928 Telegraph Ave.  

Fund-raiser and send-off party for the cross-country peace walk. $25 donation. 644-9260. 

 


Sunday, Jan. 6

 

 

Buddy Club Show 

1 - 2 p.m. 

Berkeley Jewish Community Center Theater 

1414 Walnut St. 

Ace Miles performs magic, juggling, ventriloquism and escape routines. For parents and children ages 2 - 12. $7. 236-7469, www.thebuddyclub.com. 

 

Free Sailboat Rides  

1 - 4 p.m. 

Cal Sailing Club 

Berkeley Marina 

The Cal Sailing Club, a nonprofit sailing and windsurfing cooperative, gives free rides on a first come, first served basis. Wear warm clothes and bring a change of clothes in case you get wet. Children must be at least five years old and accompanied by an adult. 208-5460, www.cal-sailing.org. 


We need to look at all of bin Laden’s tape

Ted Vincent Berkeley
Monday December 31, 2001

Editor:  

 

The United States should be throwing words rather than bombs at Middle Eastern regions that seem to house terrorists. And the United States public needs to be involved in choosing the words our government throws. It is the American way that an informed public contributes to the political discourse.  

The American way is thwarted by the press censorship of terrorist arguments, in particular, the censorship of the recent 33 minute long Osama bin Laden video. We in the United States public received a only isolated sentences while many millions of TV viewers in the Arab world received the entire video. The Mexico City daily La Jornada proved to have more of the 33 minutes of bin Laden discourse than anything I could find scanning US press sources on the Internet.  

The segments provided in La Jornada show that bin Laden twists facts with fiction. If we the public can’t read his little twists, how can we help our political leaders provide cogent answers to his calls for war?  

One argument with a twist is bin Laden’s comment that — and I apologize for any errors that might come from retranslating a translation — The United States aided all those who fought against the Russians in Afghanistan, but when those Arab combatants realigned themselves into the ranks of the displaced innocent Palestinian children, then the United States turned against those combatants in Afghanistan. Bin Laden makes it look like a slew of the Arab militants that he represents are off in Palestine fighting shoulder to shoulder with their brothers in the Infatada. There is much evidence of an absence of outsiders fighting with the Palestinians. The people of the Middle East know this for they have that Qatar TV outlet that provides far more comprehensive news than does our media.  

A comprehensive knowledge of bin Laden arguments is essential for those who would build a peace movement to replace the war on terrorism with an international legal assault, or, if not that, then with a shift from the present hot war into a cold one.  

 

Ted Vincent 

Berkeley 


Staff
Monday December 31, 2001

 

924 Gilman Jan. 4: Champion, Carry On, Stay Gold, The First Step, The Damage Done; Jan. 5: Iron Lung, B.G., Crucial Attack, Blown To Bits; Jan. 11: Bananas, Numbers, Lowdown, Doozers, Iron Ass; Jan. 12: Plan 9, The Sick, The Hellbillies, Oppressed Logic, Deltaforce; All shows start a 8 p.m. unless noted; Most are $5; 924 Gilman St. 525-9926 

 

Ashkenaz Dec. 31: 8 p.m., Balkan New Year’s Eve with Edessa and Anoush, $15; 1317 San Pablo Ave., 525-5054, www.ashkenaz.com.  

 

Blake’s Dec. 31: Planting Seeds, $12; Jan. 2: Hebro; Jan. 3: Electronica w/ Ascension, $5; Jan. 4: Funk Monsters, $5; Jan. 5: King Harvest, Jomo, $5; Jan. 6: Lunar Heights, $3; Jan. 8: Operation Interstellar, $ 3; Jan. 9: Kid Glove Entertainment Presents, Hebro; Jan. 10: Electronica w/ Ascension, $5; Jan. 11: Five Point Plan, SFunk, $5; Jan. 12: Lavish Green, Stone Cutters, $5; Jan. 13: Alex Dolan & 22 Fillmore, $3; Jan. 14: All Star Jam Featuring The Steve Gannon Band & Mz. Dee, $4; Jan. 15: View From Here, $3; Jan. 16: Zion Rock, Hebro, $3; 2367 Telegraph Ave., 877-488-6533. 

 

Cal Performances Jan. 18 and 19: 8 p.m., The National Acrobats of Taiwan, R.O.C.; Jan. 20: 3 p.m., Midori and Robert McDonald. $28 -$48. Zellerbach Hall, UC Berkeley, Bancroft Way at Telegraph. 642-9988 

 

Roda Theatre Jan. 22 and 23: both at 8 p.m., The Berkeley Symphony, Music Director Kent Nagano, continues its 31st season with two performances of Schubert’s Symphony No. 5. $21, $32, $45, $10 students. 2015 Addison St. 841-2800, www.berkeleysymphony.org 

 

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

 

Freight & Salvage Coffee House Jan. 5: The Bluegrass Intentions CD Release Party; Jan. 6: Allette Brooks; All shows begin 8 p.m., 1111 Addison St. 548-1761, www.freightandsalvage.org.  

 

Julia Morgan Theatre Dec. 31: 8 p.m., New Year’s Eve Gala Concert, Program of classical favorites of the San Francisco Chamber Orchestra; Jan 11: 8 p.m. San Francisco Chamber Orchestra, classical party music; Julia Morgan Theatre, 2640 College Ave., 845-8542, www.juliamorgan.org. 

 

Jupiter Jan. 2: Skye Dee Miles w/Universal Sound; Jan. 3: Chris Shot Group; Jan. 4: Diggsville; Jan. 5 Blue & Tan; Jan.9: Ezra Gale Quartet; Jan. 10: Chris Shot Group; Jan. 11: Hydeus Kiatta Trio; Jan. 12: Barefoot Bride; Jan. 16: Realistic; Jan. 17: Chris Shot Group; Jan. 18: Bigfoot In Paris Trio; Jan. 19: Netwerk: Electric; Jan. 23: Mitch Marcus Quintet; Jan. 24: Chris Shot Group; Jan. 25: The Sardonics; Jan. 26: Berkeley Jazz School Presents: Fourtet; Jan. 30: Joel Harrison Quartet; All shows are free and begin at 8 p.m. unless noted. 2181 Shattuck Ave., 843-7625, www.jupiterbeer.com. 

 

Rose Street House Jan. 17: 7:30 p.m., Allette Brooks. 1839 Rose St. 594-4000 x687, rosestreetmusic@yahoo.com. 

 

Yoshi’s Jazz House Through Dec. 31: New Year’s Fiesta, The Afro-Cuban Jazz Masters; Jan. 2 - 6: Charles Lloyd; Jan. 13: Jacqui Naylor Quartet; All shows at 8 p.m., and 10 p.m., unless noted. 510 Embarcadero West, Jack London Square, Oakland. Check for prices and Sunday Matinees, 238-9200, www.yoshis.com. 

 

First Congregational Church of Berkeley Jan. 6: 3 p.m., Stephen Genz in his West Coast debut; 2345 Channing Way, 527-8175, www.geocities.com/mostlybrahms. 

 

Berkeley Piano Club Jan.11: 8 p.m., Kate Steinbeck and Renee Witon; Berkeley Piano Club, 2724 Haste St., (510) 531-1487. 

 

Trinity Chapel Jan. 19: 8 p.m., Janine Johnson, harpsichord, Bach, Buxtehude and Pachelbel. 2320 Dana St., 549-3864. 

 

Organ Music Jan. 27: 5 p.m., Ron McKean performs Ferscobaldi, Froberger and Bach. $15 - $18. MusicSources, 1000 The Alameda, 528-1685. 

 

 

 

 

“Una Noche de Tango ...a media luz” Jan. 1: 8 - 11 p.m., Allegro Ballroom, $15. 5855 Christie Ave., Emeryville. 415-777-3910, info@tangoamedialuz.com. 

 

Julia Morgan Theatre Jan. 12: 8 p.m., “Club Dance,” Teens come together to express their individual personalities and gifts as dancers. $10, Students and Seniors $6, Children ages 5 and under $6. Julia Morgan Theatre, 2640 College Ave., 845-8542, www.juliamorgan.org. 

 

Berkeley High School Dance Production Jan. 11, 12, 18 &19: 7:30 p.m., Diverse mix of classical and modern ballet to hard-core hip-hop. $5. Florence Schwimley Little Theatre, Allston way and MLK., 644-6120 

 

 

 

“Much Ado About Nothing” Through Jan. 8: Check theater for specific dates and times. Shakespeare’s classic romantic comedy chronicles a handful of soldiers returning from a winning battle to be greeted by a gaggle of giddy maidens. Directed by Brian Kulick. $10 - $54. Berkeley Repertory Theatre, 2025 Addison St. 647-2949 www.berkeleyrep.org 

 

“Every Inch a King” Jan. 11 through Feb. 9: Thur. - Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 5 p.m.; Three sisters have to make a decision as their father approaches death in this comedy presented by the Central Works Theater Ensemble. $8 - $18. LeValls Subterranean, 1834 Euclid Ave. 558-138, www.centralworks.org.  

 

 

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

 

 

Pacific Film Archive Jan. 3: 7 p.m., 9 p.m., Unfinished Song; Jan. 4: 7 p.m., 9:15 p.m., Going By; Jan. 5: 7 p.m., 9 p.m., Under the Moonlight; Jan. 6: 1p.m., 3 p.m., Paper Airplanes, 5:30 Shrapnels in Peace; Jan.10: 7 p.m., 9 p.m., ABC Africa; Jan.11: 7:30 p.m., The Girl at the Monceau Bakery and Suzanne’s Career, 9:05 p.m. The Sign of the Lion with Place de l’Etoile; Jan. 12: 7p.m., La Collectionneuse, 8:50 p.m., My Night at Maud’s; Jan.13: 1p.m., 3p.m., Oscar’s Magic Adventure, 5:30 p.m., ABC Africa; 2527 Bancroft Way, 642-1412. 

 

 

“Images of Innocence and Beauty” Through Jan. 8: An exhibit featuring Kathleen Flannigan’s drawing and furniture - boxes, tables, and mirrors, all embellished with images of the beauty and innocence of the natural world. Addison Street Windows, 2018 Addison St. 

 

“From With These Walls” Jan. 5: Educational studio opening celebration gallery show of student works in steel, bronze, aluminum, cast iron, glass, neon, ceramic, stone and paper; jewelry. The Crucible, 1036 Ashby St. (Entrance is one block south on Murray St.) 843-5511, fran@thecrucible.org. 

 

“The First Five Years” Through Jan.11: Exhibit represents a selection of drawings, paintings, prints and sculpture created by students during their 7th & 8th grade years. 7a.m.-9:30 p.m. Mon-Fri, 5:30- 9:30 p.m. Sat., Bucci’s Restaurant, 6121 Hollis St., Emeryville, 547-4725, www.bucci.com. 

 

“Carving, Canvas, Color: Art of Julio Garcia and Wilbert Griffith” Through Jan.12: Brightly colored wooden figures and colorfully detailed paintings. Gallery is open by appointment and chance, most weekdays 10:30 a.m. - 4 p.m.; The Ames Gallery, 2661 Cedar St., 845-4949, amesgal@home.com. 

 

“Matrix 195” Through Jan. 13: German artist, Thomas Scheibitz’s, first solo museum exhibition in the United States showcases semi-abstract representations of everyday objects and landscapes. Wed., Fri. - Sun. 11 a.m. - 5 p.m., Thur. 11 a.m. - 9 p.m. $3-$6. Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, 2626 Bancroft Way, 642-0808 www.bampfa.berkeley.edu. 

 

“Analogous Biology: Balance and Use,” Mark J. Leavitt, Dec. 20 through Jan. 19; Tue. - Sat., 11 a.m. - 5 p.m., Ardency Gallery, 709 Broadway, Oakland. 836-0831, www.artolio.com. 

 

GTU Exhibit: “Holocaust Series” by Cleve Gray Through Jan. 25: Comprised of 21 works on paper that constitute “a catharsis... for all of humanity.” Mon. - Thurs. 8:30 a.m. - 9:45 p.m., Fri. 8:30 a.m. - 6 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m. - 6 p.m., Sun. noon - 7 p.m.; Free. Flora Lamson Hewlett Library, Graduate Theological Union, 2400 Ridge Rd. 649-2541 www.gtu.edu. 

 

Pro Arts: “Juried Annual 2001-02” Through Feb. 2: An exhibition of painting, sculpture, mixed media, photography and more by Bay Area and  

regional artists. Pro Arts, 461 Ninth St., www.proartsgallery.org. 

 

“Water Media” Jan. 10 through Feb. 8: An exhibit by Christine “Caipirinha” Mulder. Capoeira Arts Cafe Gallery, 2026 Center St., 666-1349 for hours. 

 

Traywick Gallery: “New Work by Dennis Begg and Steve Briscoe” Jan. 5 through Feb. 9: Dennis Begg’s sculpture explores memory as the building block of consciousness, learning and experience. Steve Brisco’s paintings on paper address issues of identity through evocative combinations of text and imagery. Tues. - Sat. 11 a.m. - 6 p.m., 1316 10th St. 527-1214. 

 

“Enduring Wisdom: Artwork and Stories by Homeless and Formerly Homeless Seniors” Through Feb. 15: 18 homeless and formerly homeless elders reveal how they learned and applied wisdom that is timeless. Mon. - Fri. and Sundays 11 a.m. - 2 p.m. Reception and presentation by the elders Thurs. Nov. 15, 4 p.m. - 6 p.m. Free. St. Mary’s Center, 635 22nd St., Oakland, 893-4723 x222. 

 

“The Other 364 Days: A Day in the Life of the Queer Community” Jan. 2 through Feb. 16: An exhibit of black and white photographs by East Bay photographer Limor Inbar-Hansen. Mon. - Fri., 8:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m., Sat., 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., Reception for artist, Jan. 12: 6 - 8 p.m., Photolab Gallery, 2235 Fifth St., 644-1400, limor@indelible-images.com. 

 

“Ansel Adams in the University of California Collections” Through Mar. 10: A selection of photographs and memorabilia presenting a different perspective on Adam’s career as one of the leading figures in American photography. Wed, Fri. - Sun. 11 a.m. - 5 p.m., Thur. 11 a.m. - 9 p.m. $4- $6. The University of California, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, 2626 Bancroft Way, 642-0808, www.bampfa.berkeley.edu. 

 

“Migrations: Photographs by Sebastiao Salgado” Jan. 16 through Mar. 24: Over 300 black-and-white photographs of immigrants and refugees taken by the Brazilian photographer. Wed. - Sun. 11 a.m. - 7 p.m. $4 - $6. The University of California, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, 2626 Bancroft Way. 642-0808, www.bampfa.berkeley.edu. 

 

"Earthly Pleasures" assemblage and photographs by Susan Danis, Jan. 11 through March 30: 10 a.m. - 6 p.m., Mon. - Sat.; Sticks, 1579 B, Solano Ave., 526-6603.  

 

“The Art History Museum of Berkeley” 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., 841-4210, www.atelier9.com. 

 

Readings 

 

Cody’s on Telegraph Ave. Jan. 8: Theodore Hamm discusses “Rebel and a Cause: Caryl Chessman and the Politics of the Death Penalty”; Jan. 10: Joan Frank reads from her new book, “Boys Keep Being Born”; Jan. 11: Christopher Hitchens, “Letters to a Youn Contrarian”; Jan. 14: Pamela Logan talks about “Tibetan Rescue: A Woman’s Quest to Save the Fabulous Art Treasures of Pewar Monastery”; All events are free and start at 7:30 p.m. unless noted. 2454 Telegraph Ave., 845-7852. 

 

The Humanist Fellowship Hall Jan. 9: 7 p.m., “Our Wings Are Pregnant Seesaws,” Reading performance of a play by H. D. Moe. 390 27th St., Oakland, 528-8713. 

 

Sierra Club books Jan. 5: 3 - 5 p.m., Author/ Photographer Keith S. Walklet will be signing his book, “Yosemite - An Enduring Treasure.” 6014 college Ave., 658-7470, info@sierraclubbookstore.com. 

 

Jewish Community Center Jan. 14: 7:30-9 p.m., Emily Rose interweaves the family chronicle of her ancestors with the political and social events of the 18th and 19th centuries; Jan. 16: 7:30-8:30 p.m., Elizabeth Rosner will read from her debut novel “The Speed of of Light.” 1414 Walnut St. 

 

Tours 

 

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

 

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. 

 

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. 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. 

 

Oakland Museum of California “Kwanzaa Community Celebration” Dec. 30: 12-4 p.m., Nia Kwanzaa is an African American holiday that honors black family history; Through Jan. 13: Grand Lyricist: The Art of Elmer Bischoff, featuring paintings and works on paper that trace the evolution of Bischoff’s career. $6 adults, $4 seniors and students, children under 5 free. Wed. - Sat. 10 a.m. - 5 p.m., Sun. noon - 5 p.m.; 1000 Oak St., Oakland, 238-2200, www.museumca.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. - 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 and Pacific Film Archive “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. - Sun. 11 a.m. - 7 p.m.; 2626 Bancroft Way, 642-0808, www.bampfa.berkeley.edu. 

 

Lawrence Hall of Science Dec. 31: 1 p.m., New Year’s Eve Party, special daytime holiday party for kids; Dec. 26 through 31: Free Energy Star compact fluorescent light bulb; Through Jan. 26: Scream Machines: The Science of Roller Coasters; “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; Open daily, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m., $7 for adults; $5 for children 5-18; $3 for children 3-4. Centennial Drive, UC Berkeley, 642-5132, www.lawrencehallofscience.org. 

 

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, www.lhs.berkeley.edu. 

 

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


Food vendor licenses on the back burner

By John GeluardiDaily Planet staff
Monday December 31, 2001

A applicant for a food cart license, who has invested $20,000 and waited over five years for an opportunity to start a business, is becoming impatient with the city’s apparent inability to clarify its licensing policy. 

The applicant, who asked that his name not be used for this story, said the city is in violation of its own ordinance, which requires the licenses of city’s three mobile food carts, located just outside UC Berkeley on Bancroft Way at Telegraph Avenue, to be turned over to new vendors every four years. 

According to the applicant, hundreds of potential entrepreneurs have put their names on the city’s waiting list for an opportunity to open a food cart business. But no new licenses have been issued for years. 

“The idea of the ordinance is to allow vendors four years to develop a business that would hopefully grow into a restaurant,” he said. “But now all three of the vendors have been there for much longer than four years and some have also opened restaurants.” 

The three food carts, Veggie Heaven, Chinese Kitchen and Musashi, are currently operating without a license said Director of Finance Fran David. However, the City Council approved a recommendation to not take any action on the mobile food cart vendors until the city’s policy has been clarified, David added. 

Councilmember Kriss Worthington sponsored the resolution on behalf of Shihadeh Kitami, the owner of Veggie Heaven who was about to lose his vendor license. At the time, Worthington said the issue should be studied further before shutting down the food cart. Worthington said he was concerned because Veggie Heaven, which uses organically grown produce, was especially popular because it is one of the few places near campus where inexpensive and healthy food was available. 

The resolution was approved unanimously by the council on September 25 along with a request for a report on the licensing policy from the Finance Department, which oversees food cart licensing, by Oct. 9. However David has not yet submitted the report. 

“We anticipate the report going to council some time in January,” David said. 

Meanwhile the applicant, who has waited years for a license, said the city led him to believe his license was finally about to be approved.  

He said he quit his job and spent $20,000 for a trailer, a van and kitchen equipment including an oven but has not been able to get a response from the Finance Department about the status of his application. 

“They keep saying the same thing, ‘we’re looking into this, we’re checking on that’ and now it’s been over five years,” he said. 

David said she did not know what action the council was likely to take.  

“They could do just about anything, keep things the way they are, restructure the ordinance or just get rid of the carts altogether,” she said. 

Food carts have been a tradition at the busy intersection since the 1960s. At one time there were as many as eight small businesses selling affordable meals primarily to students. However, over the years, the city has scaled back food cart licenses to where there are now only three operating.


Gates lifts Cal men to Classic championship with late 3-pointer

Staff Report
Monday December 31, 2001

Dennis Gates, known mostly for his defensive prowess, came through with the biggest shot of his career, nailing a 3-pointer with four seconds left in regulation to lift Cal to a 76-73 win over Penn State in the championship game of the Golden Bear Classic on Saturday at Haas Pavilion.  

Cal (9-1) built as much as a 10-point lead in the second half, but Penn State (4-7) kept the game close on outside shooting from guards Brandon Watkins and Sharif Chambliss. Still, the Bears managed to keep an advantage down the stretch until the Nittany Lions tied it at 73-73 on a Chambliss 3-pointer with 1:27 left.  

Neither team scored on its next possession and Penn State rebounded an Amit Tamir miss with 25 seconds left to try to set up a final shot. However, Tamir pressured Nittany Lion forward Jan Jagla into a traveling call, giving the Bears a last chance with 13 seconds to go.  

Shantay Legans faked penetrating into the key and dished out to Gates, who was waiting just outside the top of the circle. Gates, who finished with 15 points, sank the bucket to put Cal ahead. Penn State then tried to drive back down the court, but Gates drew a charge from Watkins with 1.4 seconds on the clock.  

“Give Dennis credit. Dennis is a winner and he’s not afraid to take that shot,” Cal head coach Ben Braun said. “He was a part of two huge plays at the end of the game... one of which will probably go unnoticed.” 

Cal center Solomon Hughes made 8-of-10 shots from the floor to finish with a career-high 19 points and earn tournament Most Valuable Player honors. Gates also gained a spot on the all-tournament team, which also included Watkins (19 points) and Chambliss (18) as well as Harvard’s Patrick Harvey.  

Freshman forward Tamir, playing in only his second game for the Bears, added 12 points and nine rebounds, while Joe Shipp chipped in with 12 points. Braun seemed enthused about his new frontcourt rotation of Hughes, Tamir and freshman Jamal Sampson. 

“Solomon was outstanding. He’s a hard worker with a great attitude. He’s a guy that wants the ball and he showed that tonight with a career-high 19 points,” Braun said. “Amit complemented Solomon real well tonight. In only his second game, we are excited about what we saw out of Amit. He really makes the people around him better.”  

With the win, Cal finished its non-conference record with a perfect 9-0 mark at home. The Bears begin Pac-10 action Jan. 4 at Stanford. The Cardinal then returns the trip to Berkeley Jan. 6 at 7 p.m. in Haas Pavilion.


See No Evil, Touch No Evil, Hear No Evil

Steven Donaldson Berkeley
Monday December 31, 2001

Editor: 

 

How come so many people responding to Mr. Steinbergs’ excellent humorous and well stated letter of Dec. 24 do not see what is before their eyes? Gee whiz did none of those things he mentioned happen? No, I think they did, but some folks just can’t bring themselves to admitting reality. 

For the first time in nearly 20 years Afghanistan has an opportunity to recreate itself as a nation. How come the critics have ignored the deals that have been hammered out between the different tribal groups within Afghanistan — with no direct U.S. government involvement? That the interim leader, Hamid Karzai, is  

Pashtoon — the same tribe that the Taliban is mostly made up from. The creation of this government was difficult and a whole series of compromises and it has been inclusive and balanced. But the Afghans did it, not us. They are just beginning to rebuild what they lost and the U.N., Europe and the U.S. need to support this effort. And guess what, they sure appreciated our help. 

It would be wonderful if the bombing campaign, war and battles, the unfortunate deaths of civilians did not have to happen. It would also be nice to see no more blood shed any where in the world to resolve political  

problems, but it just isn't so at this time. War is an extension of political motivations and when opportunists can take charge over the weak they do it. I think the Taliban knew this well. 

How come the critics of the bombing ignore the incredible suffering of the Afghan people over the last 20 years? How come no one wants to see the liberation of Kabul and the hear the joy of people able to express their culture again? How come no one wants to talk about the horrible abuses the Taliban committed against women and average citizens over the last five years? 

War is war and sometimes it has to happen to create freedom. A painful truth. A blissfully uneducated and ignorant stance based on political ideology does nothing but create more ignorance as people continue to suffer. Unfortunately Barbara Lee reflects this uniformed “politically correct” point of view and as with the Emperor’s new clothes no one can admit it. 

 

Steven Donaldson 

Berkeley 

 


Board reviews most important 2001 school decisions

Staff
Monday December 31, 2001

With 2001 drawing to a close, the Daily Planet asked members of the Board of Education to recall their most significant decisions from the past year. 

The clear winner: the hiring of new Superintendent Michele Lawrence last spring. 

“The most important decision a school board can make is getting an educational leader,” said Terry Doran, a school board member. “In getting Michele Lawrence, we really felt we got someone who had the necessary skills to confront the issues we face.” 

“The new superintendent really is bringing to us a clear track record of success,” added Shirley Issel, president of the school board, referring to Lawrence’s ten-year run as superintendent of the Paramount United School District in Los Angeles County. 

School board members said Lawrence has been particularly helpful, thus far, in focusing attention on the need to improve the district’s struggling business, data, food services and maintenance systems. 

“There were slippages over several years and at some point it gets critical,” said John Selawsky, a school board member, referring to the decline of district systems. “We’ve reached that stage.” 

Selawsky says Lawrence has helped to clarify the connection between these systems and the day-to-day realities of the classroom. But, he credits Steve Gladstone, who served as interim superintendent before Lawrence took over in July, with laying the groundwork on business and maintenance issues.  

Indeed, Selawsky said the board’s January decision to hire an interim superintendent who did more than just tread water was one of the board’s most important moves of the year. 

Ted Schultz, a school board member, said the board’s ongoing efforts to reorganize the faltering business department also deserve top billing. 

The board attempted to lend some stability to the department, roiled by the departure of key administrators this year, and hampered by an old data processing system, when it hired a new business chief, Jerry Kurr, in December. 

Kurr had served as a business consultant for the district for several months before applying for the full-time position. 

“We were just thrilled that we could get a person of this quality so rapidly, and someone who knows the district so well,” said Doran. 

Schultz said he hoped the business department will now be in a position to make the transition to a new data processing system that will help with budget decisions. The transition, planned since 2000, has been slowed dramatically by significant turnover in the business department, board members said. 

Selawsky and Schultz said the decision to institute the ninth grade Critical Pathways program at Berkeley High School this fall was also a key decision. 

The program, which seeks to stem the tide of ninth and 10th grade dropouts, identifies “at-risk” students, monitors their school attendance and provides extra help in reading and math. 

Selawsky said the board has not passed final judgment on what may be the most controversial issue it has faced this year: small schools. 

The board did decide, in its Dec. 19 meeting, to reject a proposal by the Coalition for Excellence and Equity, a community group, to divide Berkeley High School into a series of small, themed schools in the fall of 2003. 

Instead, the board called for greater research into small schools models across the country.  

Still, Selawsky said the eventual fate of small schools at Berkeley High is still very much up for debate. 

Board Vice President Joaquin Rivera was out of town and unavailable for comment. 


Bears lose to Bruins; losing streak at seven

Daily Planet Wire Services
Monday December 31, 2001

California matched its season low for points in a 64-48 loss to UCLA at Haas Pavilion, extending its losing streak to seven games.  

On Dec. 2, Georgia defeated Cal, 54-48.  

The loss dropped Cal’s record to 4-7 and 0-4 in the Pac-10 Conference. UCLA’s record improved to 4-8 (1-3).  

Ami Forney led the Bears with 18 points and 10 rebounds for her 10th career double-double and third of the season. But the senior center had just three points and three boards at halftime.  

Cal, which struggled against UCLA’s 2-3 zone, particularly in the first half, had just three points until the 7:27 mark, when Forney hit one of two free throws. Cal struggled from the perimeter all afternoon, making just 1-of-13 shots from three-point range. That one make, by LaTasha O’Keith, who scored 15 points, came with 3:09 left in the first half.  

On a positive note, Cal outrebounded UCLA, 44-36. The Bears had been outrebounded by their last four opponents by an average of 13 per game. Cal also held UCLA to just 33.3 percent shooting from the field but itself shot just 30.4 percent for the game.  

UCLA also forced the Bears into season-high 33 turnovers, to just 18 for the Bruins.  

“UCLA came out and had a very good game plan against us,” Cal head coach Caren Horstmeyer said. “They basically out-hustled us and beat us to balls. It was like, ‘Welcome to the Pac-10,’ in terms of their physicalness. They out-physicaled us, they out-hustled us, they out-played us and they deserved to win the game.”  

Whitney Jones led UCLA with 13 points. Point guard Natalie Nakase led the Bruins with six assists and chipped in eight points, four steals and six turnovers.  

UCLA led 19-4 at the 4:41 mark, only to see Cal storm back with a 14-4 run to end the first half, with UCLA leading 23-18. Cal’s O’Keith scored 10 points, including five from the free-throw line, during that run.  

O’Keith added two more free throws as Cal crept back even more in the early moments of the second half to cut UCLA’s lead to 24-20. But the Bruins went on a run of their own, pouring in 21 points to eight for the home team to make the score 45-28.  

The Bears recovered somewhat with seven-straight points to make the score 45-35 but could never get closer than 10 points the rest of the way.  

“My team did not give up, and I think that’s important,” Horstmeyer said. “We have to find a way to get back to the winning track. Rebounding was an issue [Friday] against USC. We outrebounded UCLA. We really worked on trying to fix that problem. We obviously have a turnover issue, and that’s the next problem that we need to fix.”  

Cal takes a break from Pac-10 action as it journeys to the Bahamas for the New Year to compete in the Nassau Knockout. Cal plays Lipscomb on Jan. 4 and plays again on Jan. 5 against either IUPUI-Ft. Wayne or Bucknell. The Bears offense will get some help at the tournament with the expected return of freshman starting forward Leigh Gregory, who averaged 10.9 ppg through the first seven games of the season but missed the last four games with a knee injury.


Is it worth it to get rid of the mosquitoes?

Aftim Saba Berkeley
Monday December 31, 2001

Editor: 

I was interested in the Mosquito abatement article on Dec. 28. I have always wondered how come, here in Berkeley, we have so few mosquitoes in the summer and suspected the use of some heavy-handed abatement activities. While the article had some good information, it did disappoint me however. No where does it mention the procedures and chemicals (if any) used in the MAD activities except to mention the fish that eats the larvae in ponds. It also does not mention the most likely breeding sites in the city or its surrounding areas. I think the reporter should have addressed these issues in order for the public to be informed. We need to know how are we — over these many years — getting rid of the mosquitoes, and is the price worth it from an environmental and a public health aspect. A follow-up article would be much appreciated. 

 

Aftim Saba 

Berkeley 

 

 


Dui arrests up this year, crashes are down

Bay City News Service
Monday December 31, 2001

Law enforcement personnel in Alameda, Contra Costa, Monterey and San Mateo counties are gearing up for the final days of their campaign to combat drunken driving during the holiday season. 

Since Dec. 14, officers in the four counties have arrested 1,457 people for driving under the influence. 

The number of arrests in Alameda, Contra Costa and San Mateo is up 2 percent but the total number of drunken driving crashes has dropped from 36 last year to 25 this year. In Monterey County, officers have arrested 45 more people this year compared to last year, but there were 12 DUI-related crashes, up from eight in 2000. 

The anti-drunken driving campaigns in each of the counties finish at midnight New Year’s Day. Three-fourths of the total California Highway Patrol officers in those counties are on patrol until New Year’s Day. 


Let’s do away with the KKK

Pamela A. Hairston Washington, DC
Monday December 31, 2001

Editor:  

 

For many reasons, 2001 will go down in history. For most of the year, David Horowitz campaigned on prominent college campuses, across America, against reparations for slavery. I believe Berkeley was one of the campuses he hit. Please, allow me one last word on this often-heated and controversial issue.  

Since Sept. 11, not much has been written or said about reparations. When 

the country was talking about it, most white Americans were vehemently against reparations of any sort. Hell, you mention a mere apology for slavery and their shorts got all knotted. In my opinion, I truly believe that if the U.S. government ever considers reparations, there would be another civil war.  

Alas, since Sept. 11, this idea is even more far-fetched. I have a better idea. Instead of monetary reparations, lets do away with the Ku Klux Klan. For almost 150 years, the Klan has been known throughout the world for terrorizing and killing innocent black Americans. And since our president, George W. Bush, has declared a war on terrorism, the Klan should be at the top of his list. I wonder how many white Americans would object to this type of reparation? 

Peace and love my fellow Americans, finally and perhaps forever, we are all in this together.  

 

 

Pamela A. Hairston 

Washington, DC  


Family washes up on Oregon coast

By Andrew Kramer The Associated Press
Monday December 31, 2001

PORTLAND, Ore. – Police say a man burdened with debt and a history of petty crime killed his wife and three young children, ditched their bodies in the Pacific Ocean and then fled south to California. 

Christian Longo, 27, is sought on four counts of aggravated murder related to the slaying of his entire family. 

Longo was last seen in San Francisco on Dec. 26, according to District Attorney Bernice Barnett in Lincoln County on the Oregon coast, where the bodies were found. San Francisco police said they are aware Longo might be in the area, and citizens have called saying they might have seen the car authorities said he drove, but have no hard leads. 

Barnett said she decided to issue the warrant Friday after police divers on Thursday pulled the corpses of Longo’s wife, Mary Jane Longo, 35, and 2-year-old daughter, Madison, from a marina near an apartment Longo had rented in Newport. 

A week earlier, the bodies of his other two children were retrieved from a coastal inlet 14 miles south of Newport. 

Barnett said Longo is still believed to be in the Bay Area in California and is considered dangerous. 

“If in fact what we believe is true about what happened to his family, anyone has to be threatened by him,” she said. 

The FBI has placed Longo on its wanted list because he is thought to have crossed state lines. 

Longo, about six feet tall and blond, had a clean cut appearance and typically dressed in slacks, a dress shirt and leather jacket, according to neighbors in Newport. 

At first blush a successful young man, police say in fact he faced a multitude of legal and financial problems. 

Neighbors said Longo told them he held a high paying job with the Qwest telephone company, surveying for clients for high-speed DSL lines on the coast. 

In fact, he worked at a Starbucks shop inside a Newport Fred Meyer grocery store. 

Christian Longo lived alone in an upscale one-bedroom condominium overlooking the ocean in Newport and was visited by his children and wife, according to condominium employees. 

“I heard his wife and kids walking in and out of the place,” said Todd Hecht, maintenance manager at The Landing. 

“It was a normal, happy-go-lucky group. That’s why this whole thing is so baffling.” 

The murders first came to light as when the unidentified body of a boy drifted ashore in Alsea Bay on Dec. 19. 

Residents of a trailer park spotted the boy’s body, small and pale, floating about two feet from shore. 

Police divers retrieved a second body three days later in the shallow bay, and the pair was identified by relatives as Zachary Longo, 5, and Sadie Longo, 3, on Christmas Eve. 

The bodies of Longo’s wife and youngest daughter were taken from Yaquina Bay directly near The Landing condominium. 

Longo, who owned a construction cleaning company in Michigan, has been named in six lawsuits seeking more than $30,000 and is wanted on two warrants in Michigan for probation violation and a charge of larceny by conversion. 

He was convicted in October 2000 for forging $30,000 in checks from builders in Saline, Mich. 

Longo also is wanted on a warrant in Washtenaw County, Mich., for missing meetings with his probation officer following that conviction, police said Friday. 

The Longos also reportedly left $60,000 in debts in Washtenaw County.


Gov. Davis taps donors outside state for millions

The Associated Press
Monday December 31, 2001

LOS ANGELES – Gov. Gray Davis has successfully raised millions of dollars across the country for his re-election campaign, using the power of the nation’s most populous state like few politicians before him. 

Davis, who has set a first-term fund-raising target of $50 million, has already raised $7.6 million from donors outside California who either have political or economic stakes in the Golden State, according to a report Sunday in the Los Angeles Times. 

“That’s one of the differences between the governor of California and the governor of Wyoming,” said Garry South, the chief architect of Davis’ re-election strategy. “Nearly everyone is vested in California in some fashion or another.” 

Among the largest donors, CitiGroup Inc. has given Davis at least $250,000. The New York-based company’s interests in California range from insurance regulation to privacy rights. 

Telecommunications firm Verizon, also of New York, has donated more than $200,000. 

“One thing that’s important to us is . . . maintaining a reasonable and good business climate in California,” said Peter Bear, head of state government affairs for 3M, the Minnesota-based firm that has given Davis $26,500. 

The strategic importance of the California governor’s office extends beyond corporate interests. 

“Raising money for governors has taken on a whole new importance after what happened in Florida,” said David Rosen, a Democratic fund-raiser in Chicago. 

Republican Gov. Jeb Bush of Florida marshaled key support for his brother George W. Bush’s presidential campaign and the extended battle to declare a victor in the deadlocked state, he said. 

“People understand what it means to be the governor of a state and how it can impact a presidential election in terms of political infrastructure, get out the vote and the communications process up and down a state,” Rosen said. 

Of the nine most populous states in the nation, only California has a Democratic governor. 

California is considered a crucial state for any Democratic candidate hoping to win the White House, which means the national party has a special interest in seeing Davis win re-election. 

Davis also is benefiting from California’s reputation for setting trends and trying new policies, such as the patients’ bill of rights law Davis signed in 1999. 

“As California goes, so goes the nation,” said Dennis Rivera, head of the Service Employees International Union in New York, which has raised more than $200,000 for Davis. 

“He can do absolutely nothing for us,” Rivera said. “But he can set an example.” 

Three Republicans are vying to take on the governor: Secretary of State Bill Jones, former Los Angeles Mayor Richard Riordan and Los Angeles businessman Bill Simon. The primary is in March and the general election is in November. 

Davis has taken advantage of California’s leadership position to a much greater degree than his predecessor. 

Republican Pete Wilson was considered one of the best fund-raisers of his day. In eight years, however, he collected only about $6.3 million from other states. 

Unlike federal candidates who face campaign finance restrictions, candidates for state offices can accept unlimited amounts. 

But some of Davis’ tactics have come under fire from Republicans, who say he’s using tax dollars to raise funds. 

In December, for instance, Davis traveled to Washington, D.C., for roughly 24 hours. He met with Homeland Security Chief Tom Ridge and also attended a union-hosted fund-raiser, collecting $421,602. 

“It is disingenuous,” said Rob Stutzman, a spokesman for the state GOP. “If you’re going to raise money, tell people why you’re going. Don’t use your office as a ruse to go on fund-raising trips.” 

South, however, said all of Davis’ travel outside the state is financed by his campaign committee, not taxpayers, although his staff does travel at state expense.


Bomb threat prompts plane evacuation at LAX

The Associated Press
Monday December 31, 2001

LOS ANGELES – An airplane preparing for takeoff from Los Angeles International Airport was evacuated Sunday morning after the airline received a phoned bomb threat, authorities said. 

A bomb squad searched the plane and found no explosives, said Los Angeles Police Department spokesman Officer Jack Richter. 

The bomb squad and federal authorities were dispatched to LAX after the threat was called in at 6:52 a.m., said Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Jerry Snyder. 

ATA Flight 214 was bound for Chicago Midway with 184 passengers and seven crew members on board, Snyder said. It had been scheduled to depart at 6:35 a.m., but had not taken off when the threat was called in. 

Snyder said the threat, made directly to the airline, did not refer to any specific flight. 

“Apparently a male caller had called in a rather ambiguous question of whether or not there was a bomb aboard an aircraft,” Snyder said. It was not clear who the caller was or where he was calling from. 

Flight 214 was grounded and evacuated as a precaution because it was the only ATA flight departing LAX at the time, Snyder said. “Without any further information, there won’t be any further expansion to check other flights,” he added. 

Lisa Jacobson, public relations manager for American Trans Air Inc. in Indianapolis, said the airline would have no comment on the incident.


Latino-oriented funds hoping to help communities long-term

The Associated Press
Monday December 31, 2001

CAMARILLO – The 5-year-old Destino 2000 fund is nearing its goal of building a $400,000 endowment to assist Ventura County charities that serve the Hispanic community. 

It is also leading the way as Latino-oriented funds attempt to establish long-term money sources, instead of immediately distributing the funds they raise. 

Destino 2000 is one of just three funds in California established to aid nonprofit organizations that perform social work in Latino communities. The other two are the United Latino Fund in Los Angeles and the Hispanic Community Foundation in San Francisco. 

The Hispanic Community Foundation has an endowment of $200,000, while the United Latino Fund aims to establish one. 

Destino 2000 “has developed something like a model of what might happen in other communities,” said Henry Ramos, principal in New York-based Mauer Kunst Consulting, who has studied the emerging Latino funds. 

The Ventura County Community Foundation, based in Camarillo, helped create and administers the fund, formally called Destino 2000: The Hispanic Legacy Fund. 

Destino has distributed $187,000 to community groups that have served 9,000 children and adults, according to the organization. Reaching the $400,000 goal – a year earlier than expected – will guarantee that the fund grants at least $20,000 a year.


Interest increase in ROTC on college campuses after Sept. 11

The Associated Press
Monday December 31, 2001

SAN JOSE – Throughout top San Francisco Bay area campuses, interest the Army Reserve Officer Training Corps is on the rise, according to cadets and recruiters. 

Some involved with the program point to the events of Sept. 11 as galvanizing support for the Army ROTC as increased patriotism has brought with it a newfound respect for the military minded. 

David Lavalle, a Stanford political science major and Army ROTC cadet, said the events of Sept. 11th have “given even more justification to what I’m doing.” Lavelle hopes his training and leadership skills honed during his time in the military program will help him the in the business world once he graduates. 

“You are put in charge of people and you are held responsible,” Lavelle told the San Jose Mercury News. “The people under you and above you depend on you.” 

Enrollment in the Army ROTC is at about 30,000 nationwide. That’s up nearly 5 percent from last year’s total. The Army ROTC program that serves students at Santa Clara University, Stanford and San Jose State University has 30 freshman cadets this year, the largest new enrollment in recent years. 

Gary Hernandez Jr. turned down an appointment to the U.S. Naval Academy for a chance to attend Stanford, but he didn’t lose the military bug entirely. He signed up for the Army ROTC. 

Bay Area college campuses that once were less than welcoming to the military-in-training presence of the Army ROTC may have softened their stance a bit. Hernandez says his Cardinal classmates are no longer amazed that he plans to join the Army following his graduation. 

“Some people still have the ‘ROTC-Nazi’ mentality, which is crazy. That couldn’t be further from the truth,” Hernandez said. He said he hadn’t expected the new respect he’s received for the program in the days and weeks following the Sept. 11 attacks. 

Col. Gus Anderson, who runs the Army ROTC program, attributes the some of the bump in enrollment to incentive packages that help students pay for college.


Burning Man organizers hot over rising federal fees

The Associated Press
Monday December 31, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO – It’s shaping up to be a bad day at Black Rock for Burning Man. 

The organizers of the counterculture extravaganza contend they are being fleeced by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management – and the dust-up shows no signs of abating. 

The BLM oversees the Black Rock Desert, a sprawling tract of parched land in western Nevada that annually hosts Burning Man, an eight-day event culminating with the immolation of a 40-foot-tall stylized wooden figure. 

To Larry Harvey, one of its founders, Burning Man is an attempt to create an urban culture based on the exchange of gifts rather than the circulation of hard currency. 

Some call it a neo-pagan rite, others an extreme exercise in cooperative living. Still others simply consider it an excellent excuse to get naked and roll in the dust and mud with like-minded fellows. 

No matter how you view it, it’s big. More than 25,000 people showed up last September, purchasing tickets for $135 to $250. 

Not surprisingly, Burning Man is now a major business – albeit a nonprofit one – and that’s where the conflict begins. 

Black Rock City LLC, the event’s administrative entity based in San Francisco, operates on an annual budget of $5 million, has a full-time staff of 11 and employs up to 300 people during the Burning Man event. 

Black Rock City also annually endows about $250,000 to artist collectives for the exhibitions and “theme camps” that bloom on the alkali playa where the event is held each September. 

But the organizers don’t get all the gate receipts. They have to pay hefty fees to the BLM – too hefty, they complain. 

“We’re now assessed $4 per person per day,” said Harvey, the director and co-founder of Black Rock City. “Before 1999, we paid $2 – then it doubled. That’s a gross inequity.” 

This year, the BLM took in $502,000 from Burning Man assessments. Under a special federal program, virtually all of the money goes back to the BLM district that manages the Black Rock Desert. 

Harvey said the organizers could simply jack up Burning Man’s entrance fees to accommodate BLM’s higher assessments. 

“But we’ve reached a point where we’re unwilling to raise prices because it would skew the demographic,” said Harvey. 

Higher fees would assure that only wealthy people could attend Burning Man, said Harvey, and “that would be horrible. If anything, we want to broaden access, not restrict it.” 

Harvey said BLM’s relationship to Burning Man “is parasitic. They siphon off any superfluity of cash that exists. BLM is supposed to facilitate recreational use of its lands, but their policies are impeding, not helping us. Burning Man is the biggest event on BLM land in the country. They should be proud of us – instead, they’re acting like they’re suzerains and we’re serfs.” 

Yet Harvey said he understands what may be driving BLM to charge high fees. 

“They’re a desperately under-funded agency, and I understand the dilemma they’re in,” he said. “Under a demonstration fee program set up by Congress, certain BLM districts get to keep all the money generated by special events held in their jurisdictions – and the Winnemucca district (which manages the Black Rock Desert) is one of them.” 

Terry Reed, the field manager for the BLM’s Winnemucca Field Office, acknowledged that Burning Man has been a boon. 

“It has definitely helped us financially,” said Reed, whose district covers 9 million acres and is managed by about 80 staffers. For the last event, “our receipts were around $500,000. After expenses – mainly processing and law enforcement – we had net revenues of about $250,000.” 

Still, said Reed, BLM isn’t out to mulct Burning Man. The agency is required by law to use a set of specific criteria to assess fees, he said. 

“Our fee structure is set nationally and applied throughout the West,” Reed said. “We can’t negotiate it. We can use either cost recovery or a fee schedule – but we have to use whichever is higher.” 

Harvey isn’t satisfied with that argument. 

“When they use regulations to raise revenues, they’re perverting the purpose they’re supposed to serve,” he said. “Basically, they now see us as a profit center. That being the case, they should be trying to encourage rather than throttle us.” 

Reed observed that the Winnemucca office must address many constituencies – not just Burning Man attendees. 

“Campers, hunters, rock hounds, hot air balloonists, even amateur rocketeers – a lot of people use the Black Rock Desert,” he said. “Some groups have criticized us for even allowing Burning Man. In fact, we’re involved in litigation involving a group that has appealed our decision to issue a permit (for Burning Man).” 

No other group, however, can match Burning Man in revenues. If the event folds its tents and migrates to another site, the BLM’s Winnemucca office will feel a significant pinch come budget time. 

“We realize we would have to go through some adjustment if Burning Man goes away,” said Reed. “But we need to stay neutral. We don’t try to promote the event. That’s not what we’re supposed to do.” 

And leaving Black Rock doesn’t seem like much of an option to Harvey – no matter how hard Burning Man is squeezed. 

The playa, he says, is essential to the event. The heat, the dust, the lack of water and amenities – all form a crucible where great art is created, deep connections are made and people undergo genuine spiritual transformations. 

“Burning Man can’t exist without the playa,” he said. “We just need to make BLM understand we can’t sustain these fees. They’re crippling us.”


Blackouts aren’t rolling, but state still has bills to pay

By Karen Gaudette The Associated Press
Monday December 31, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO – A few months ago, California was a megawatt wasteland. As it finishes a tumultuous year, the state now has electricity in such abundance that fallen power giant Enron Corp. has come asking for leftovers. 

The year began with rolling blackouts and concluded with state officials debating how to package $12.5 billion in bonds needed to cover power costs. In between, customers had their rates increase to among the highest in the nation. 

“It’s been one helluva year, hasn’t it?” asked S. David Freeman, chairman of the state public power authority. “But I think if you can resurrect the situation in January and then look at it in December, you have to conclude that we’ve made a lot of progress.” 

The state’s monthly electricity bill, which soared to nearly $2 billion in May, was down to $415 million in October. Efforts are underway to fix transmission glitches that plunged some parts of the state into darkness. 

After analysts warned of frequent rolling blackouts, there were only six such episodes in 2001. And with natural gas prices falling, surveys show Californians have relegated energy issues to the back burner. 

But California’s power problems are far from finished. 

The state owes its general fund $6.1 billion for electricity it bought for three cash-strapped utilities. The largest of those utilities, Pacific Gas and Electric, went bankrupt in April. It took a secret settlement with the state to keep another, Southern California Edison, from following a similar path. 

Meanwhile, claims that power companies unfairly drove up prices in 2000 and 2001 remain stalled before federal regulators. 

And months after they first tried to agree, the state Public Utilities Commission, Gov. Gray Davis, Treasurer Phil Angelides and the Department of Water Resources still are discussing how they’ll persuade Wall Street to buy $12.5 billion in bonds to settle the power tab. 

The delay costs the state $250,000 in interest each day, according to Davis spokesman Steve Maviglio. 

The power crunch has become a budget crunch. 

Power expenses, combined with the cost of defending airports and bridges against terrorist attacks and lost revenue from the stumbling high-tech economy, could mean painful cuts in state programs — including ones that reduce energy bills for the poor and elderly. 

“No one is claiming victory over this thing,” Freeman said. “I think it’s 2003 before we start thinking we have the kind of surplus we need to have and we can relax.” 

Whether prices soared because of market manipulation or old-fashioned capitalism remains a subject of debate, though federal regulators found one out-of-state power seller charged $3,880 per megawatt hour when entitled to only $273. 

Yet, against all odds, the state generally managed to keep lights on — and the outlook for the future is brighter. 

Electricity the state has bought since January for customers of those three utilities now costs $15 million a day, Freeman said, rather than the $100 million a day it cost earlier in the year. 

Ten new power plants that together can generate enough electricity to power nearly 1.5 million homes are on line, according to the California Energy Commission. 

And there’s a new appreciation of conservation. 

By unplugging hot tubs, sweating through the summer with less air conditioning and buying hundreds of thousands of energy-efficient refrigerators, washing machines and lightbulbs, Californians conserved energy beyond anyone’s expectations. 

“The biggest impact we’ve seen in the last year is just the conservation spirit in working together, reducing demand,” said Stephanie McCorkle, a spokeswoman for the state’s power grid manager. 

Davis praises the more than 2 million Californians who reduced demand by slashing energy use by 20 percent this summer. Temperate weather and price caps on electricity ordered by federal energy regulators in June also helped. 

The governor also is claiming credit, lauding his decision to sign long-term deals locking in prices for electricity. Those controversial deals will cost the state about $40 billion over the next two decades. 

A variety of factors got California into its mess: 

— Dry weather in the Northwest left hydroelectric dams with less water spilling through to create electricity, which California imports. 

— Power companies unsure of California’s efforts to deregulate its electricity markets had stopped building power plants, while the population continued to grow. 

— Transmission bottlenecks prevented the grid manager from sending electricity to the corners of the state when they needed it. 

All these factors caused California to come up short during the busiest times of day, triggering dangerous power alerts last winter and spring. When the lights went out, they triggered fender benders, melted ice cream and stalled computer chip factories. 

Faced with the prospect of more blackouts, lawmakers had little time to consider the big picture, said Sen. Debra Bowen, chair of the Senate Energy Committee. 

“We never got a chance actually to look at what we wanted the electricity delivery system to look like,” she said. “Most of that had been determined for the next few years in the manner in which the state lurched from crisis to crisis.” 

Critics say electricity never should have been deregulated under California’s flawed plan. 

“Electricity is not a commodity,” said Pat Lavin, business manager and financial secretary for the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers No. 47. “It’s a staple of life.” 

Nevada halted its deregulation plans after California’s misadventure. Texas, home to some of deregulation’s most vocal backers, including the now-bankrupt Enron, is marching onward. 

“I think it’s dead as a doornail in California,” Maviglio said. “The lesson learned from California is to go slow, not to deregulate as quickly as we did and make sure you have adequate supplies so you don’t have to depend on out-of-state owners.” 


California’s auto design centers earn nickname “Detroit West”

By Gary Gentile The Associated Press
Monday December 31, 2001

LOS ANGELES – Cars may be born in Detroit, but more and more these days they are conceived in California. 

Increasingly, models manufactured in the United States, Japan, Sweden, Germany and elsewhere are springing from drawing boards under the golden California sun. The proliferation has earned the state the nickname “Detroit West.” 

Ford, General Motors, BMW, Toyota, Honda, Daimler Chrysler, Porsche and other car companies all have major design centers here. 

They have spawned cars including the Toyota Celica and several Volvo and BMW models. New concepts, such as the Chevy Borrego car/truck introduced at last year’s Los Angeles Auto Show, came from design teams working in the state. 

Auto makers cite various reasons for maintaining design centers in Southern California, ranging from the quality of the light to inspiration drawn from California’s car culture to the state’s importance as a major auto market. 

In addition, many of the world’s top designers study at the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, a major school for auto design. 

“The people in Southern California have always shown a tendency to accept new things, new ways of looking at things,” said George Peterson, president of AutoPacific Inc., an automotive marketing research and product consulting company. “A less risk averse consumer, great climate, a booming economy, great roads, access to talent — check all the boxes and this is a great place to be.” 

Frank Saucedo, director of design at General Motors’ Los Angeles Advanced Design Center, takes his staff to hot rod meets at the parking lot of the Bob’s Big Boy restaurant in Toluca Lake to keep in touch with California’s rich car culture. He also visits furniture design centers in Los Angeles and soaks up new trends on the boardwalk in Santa Monica. 

“The environment the designers are working in every day is very important,” Saucedo said. “It’s going to feed into what people do. Designers absorb a certain amount daily from their environment and put it into their designs.” 

General Motors designers returned to California two years ago after leaving in 1996. Their new design center is located in an old bakery in an industrial-residential area of North Hollywood. Two turntables are being installed so designers can push cars outside to see how their work looks in natural light. 

“When the sun just goes down, you get a couple of hours of California pinks, reds and blues you can’t get anywhere else,” Saucedo said. “It’s just a great light to design by.” 

The Volvo Monitoring and Concept Center opened in Camarillo in 1986 and is responsible for radically altering the look of the Swedish car, rounding the traditionally boxy corners. 

The center designed all the current large Volvo cars on the market, as well as a car that will make its debut next month at the Detroit Auto Show. Other vehicles with California influence will appear at the Los Angeles Auto Show, which opens to the public later this week. 

BMW DesignworksUSA sits in a modern complex in an office park in Newbury Park, about 45 miles north of Los Angeles in Ventura County. Christopher Chapman, design director for the BMW Automotive Group, said the main contribution his design center makes is to give decision makers in Germany another way of thinking about car design. 

“Every company should have an outside viewpoint, something that’s going to give them a bigger, broader perspective,” Chapman said. “If you work at the mother ship, especially BMW, you can get really narrowly focused on what you’re doing. A lot of times there are holes that can be filled by satellite studios out there.” 

Chapman said it’s difficult to precisely trace the influence California has had on car design. 

“The mystery is best left a mystery,” he said. “You accept the idea that this is a great place. Be very grateful that it’s Dec. 18 and it’s 70 degrees outside and that’s the kind of stuff that can make people happy and do great work.” 

California continues to grow in importance as an auto design center. The Hyundai Group, which owns the Hyundai Motor Co. and Kia Motors Corp., recently broke ground on a new design center in Irvine. 

Earlier this year, Ford’s Premier Automotive Group opened its North American headquarters in Irvine. The complex includes a new design center for its Lincoln Mercury brands. 

Designers say they are most inspired by the diversity of the car market in California, the fact that Rolls Royces and Jaguars cruise side by side on freeway with 40-year-old Volkswagen Beetles and jacked-up pickup trucks. 

“You don’t hear ’why’ so much here,” Saucedo said. “You hear, ’why not? Let’s do that.”’


Opinion

Editorials

One left dead in an accident involving bus, big rig and car

The Associated Press
Friday January 04, 2002

FAIRFIELD — One person was killed Thursday following a crash that involved a transit bus, a car and a big rig on Interstate 80 in Fairfield, police said. 

The accident occurred about 3 p.m. on westbound I-80 at Red Top Road.  

One overturned vehicle blocked the road, shutting down lanes and backing up rush-hour traffic, said California Highway Patrol Officer Byron Tiamson. 

A woman driving a white Honda Civic rear-ended a black BMW, spun out, and was hit from behind by the small bus, which was transporting disabled people, the Daily Republic in Fairfield reported. 

After that, the woman’s car hit a big rig and another big rig slammed on its brakes to avoid a collision and jackknifed. 

The woman driving the car was killed.  

Her name has not been released. 

Four other minor injuries have been reported. 

The accident closed two lanes and backed up traffic about seven miles to Travis Air Force Base.


Jakks Pacific plans European expansion

By Gary Gentile The Associated Press
Thursday January 03, 2002

LOS ANGELES — Jakks Pacific Inc. is taking “The Rock” to Europe. 

The toy company, which produces dolls based on World Wrestling Federation personalities, has bought Kidz Biz Ltd., a toy distributor based in the United Kingdom, for an undisclosed price. The Malibu-based company, said the purchase is the first step in a planned international expansion. 

“With Kidz Biz as the cornerstone, and with products in virtually every toy, art, activity, stationary and writing instrument category, we will now be well positioned to rapidly expand our sales throughout continental Europe,” Stephen Berman, Jakks Pacific president, said Wednesday. 

Jakks has distributed its products in the United Kingdom through Kidz Biz since 1999. 

Jakks, which has the crafts and activities license for the Warner Bros. “Harry Potter” movies, has seen its stock price soar since last year’s release of the first Potter movie. It also has a new license for “Barney & Friends” products and recently introduced new WWF-themed video games in a joint venture with THQ. 

The company’s third quarter earnings rose 17 percent, and Banc of America Securities analyst William Gibson recently forecast an increase of 14 percent for 2002. 

Shares of Jakks Pacific were up 36 cents to $19.31 on the Nasdaq Stock Market Wednesday.


Pacifica board appoints new members, vows to reinstate Democracy Now! to the airwaves

Daily Planet wire services
Wednesday January 02, 2002

The interim Pacifica National Board held its first meeting by telephone Saturday and elected three officers. 

Leslie Cagan of New York, who represents the former minority board – those working to democratize the station – was elected chair. Carol Spooner of the Berkeley local advisory board was named secretary and Jabari Zakiya of the Washington, D.c. station local advisory board was named treasurer.  

The board voted to hold a face-to-face meeting in New York City Jan. 11-13.  

And it also agreed to return Democracy Now! to the Pacifica airwaves “as soon as possible.” The plan is for the weekday news magazine, aired for several months on only one Pacifica station – KPFA in Berkeley – to become an independent nonprofit entity and to contract with Pacifica for its programs. 

The board appointed a committee to search for new executive director, and passed a resolution requiring station managers to attend the New York meeting and present financial data on their stations.  

The board split along partisan lines (old majority and its supporters vs. new majority and its supporters) on three issues that will now require decisions by Alameda Superior Court Judge Ronald A. Sabraw:  

One was the question of whether to investigate issues at the New York station regarding persons who were fired and barred from the station. Another was around the question of suspending gag rules that are in place at all the Pacifica stations except KPFA. A third question the judge will decide is around firing the board’s current attorneys. 

Spooner said she expects a decision within two business days.  

 

 


Bay Area charities and non-profits brace for layoffs

The Associated Press
Monday December 31, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO – Several San Francisco Bay area charities and nonprofit organizations are bracing for layoffs and budget cutbacks with the coming new year, citing lagging donations during the holiday season. 

The economic belt-tightening will affect shelters, counseling services, domestic violence prevention programs and more, heads of many agencies say. 

“It’s the ‘Perfect Storm’ — the combination of the economic downturn, increased caseloads and the impact of Sept. 11,” said Jan Masaoka, chief executive of San Francisco-based CompassPoint Nonprofit Services. “Everybody I know is laying off.” 

Shelter Against Violent Environments, a domestic violence organization in Fremont, experienced a $30,000 drop in donations this season, according to the organization’s director Rodney Clark. He said he may be forced to cut four or five staff positions. 

CityTeam Ministries, a San Jose-based service providing shelter, food and youth programs, has seen its donations lag $1.4 million behind last year’s total of $4.7 million. CityTeam’s director of marketing, Carol Patterson, said the organization has put on a hiring freeze and may conduct layoffs and program cuts next year. 

“It’s a different world,” Patterson told the San Jose Mercury News. “At some locations, twice as many people are asking for assistance.” 

Many nonprofits point to donations steered toward Sept. 11 funds as the cause for a dent in their budgets. 

Since Sept. 11, Concord-based STAND! Against Domestic Violence had a nearly 70 percent drop in donations. That meant an 8 percent pay cut for the agency’s staff of 130 and the need to reduce its operating budget by about $1 million, according to Devorah Levine, deputy director of programs. 

“We’ve been hit really hard since Sept. 11,” Levine said. 

The United Way of the Bay Area is $2 million behind its campaign goal of $55 million. That regional hub of the United Way serves San Francisco, San Mateo, Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, Napa and Sonoma counties. 

Even smaller arms of the United Way are cash strapped. United Way Silicon Valley cut its funding to health and human service non-profits by 15 percent this year after donations fell $1.3 million short of last year’s totals, according to interim chief operations officer Michelle Martin. 

The hope for many of these organizations is the tried and true method of solicitation to companies that may have weathered the economic downturns of 2001. 

“I don’t care if we know them or not. We are picking up the phone and cold-calling them,” Martin said.