The Week

 

News

UC system may drop SAT requirement

By David Scharfenberg, Daily Planet staff
Saturday February 02, 2002

A key University of California academic committee recommended this week that the UC system drop the SAT as an admissions requirement, and develop a test more closely aligned with California’s high school curricula. -more-


Phoebe Hearst was a major benefactress to the university

By Susan Cerny, Special to the Daily Planet
Saturday February 02, 2002

The name Hearst is probably best known because of the fabulous estate at San Simeon, Hearst Castle, which is a state park. However, the name and family has an important relationship to Berkeley as well. Hearst Castle, which was designed by Julia Morgan, was built by William Randolf Hearst (1863-1951) the only son of George and Phoebe Apperson Hearst. -more-


Opinion piece came with an agenda

Paul Hogarth
Saturday February 02, 2002

Editor: -more-


Out & About Calendar

– Compiled by Guy Poole
Saturday February 02, 2002


Saturday, Feb. 2 -more-


Film series presents some ‘Designs for Living’

By Peter Crimmins, Special to the Daily Planet
Saturday February 02, 2002

People have a lot of ways to change their lives when discontent settles upon them. They might get a new job or a new haircut, upgrade their Palm pilots or switch to chai latte. After sitting through a triptych of documentaries being presented at the Fine Arts Cinema as “Designs For Living” a viewer might be tempted to live off the power grid, or become a political anarchist, or grow potatoes on a communal farm in Russia. -more-


Arts & Entertainment Calendar

Staff
Saturday February 02, 2002

Berkeley High gets revenge on Spartans with rebounding, defense and a little bit of luck

By Jared Green, Daily Planet Staff
Saturday February 02, 2002

Burns leads way with 25 points and 14 boards -more-


Citizens submit city redistricting proposals

By Hank Sims, Daily Planet staff
Saturday February 02, 2002

The latest round in the city’s redistricting battle came to a head on Friday, as five “citizens proposals” for new City Council districts were submitted for the council’s consideration. -more-


‘Copwatch leader’ takes the stand

Karla James
Saturday February 02, 2002

Editor, -more-


Panthers tune up for playoffs with easy win

By Jared Green, Daily Planet Staff
Saturday February 02, 2002

Parris Vega scored a hat trick as the St. Mary’s Panthers claimed an easy 6-1 victory over St. Patrick on Friday. -more-


Let Enron’s failure teach about 401K diversity

By Molly Bentley, Special to the Daily Planet
Saturday February 02, 2002

Diversify, whatever you do. That’s the quick lesson from Enron’s collapse. Company employees, whose 401K relied entirely upon the success of Enron earnings, lost everything when the stock suddenly crashed last fall. More than $1 billion disappeared from the company’s 401K. -more-


Republicans are destroying ‘faith’ in politics

Stephen Crockett & Al Lawrence
Saturday February 02, 2002

Editor: -more-


Prep scores

Staff
Saturday February 02, 2002

News of the Weird

Staff
Saturday February 02, 2002


Jell-O Museum coming to a town near you -more-


Making Headlines

Staff
Saturday February 02, 2002

Enter Paltrow, stage left -more-


Adding a decorative wall niche

Morris and James Carey
Saturday February 02, 2002

The project we are about to detail is so simple you might decide to go into business for yourself. -more-


Tip of the week:

Morris and James Carey
Saturday February 02, 2002

Click and Clack Talk Cars

Staff
Saturday February 02, 2002

Go ahead, make your truck’s bed a sandbox -more-


California aims to curb emissions, ease global warming

By Jim Wasserman, The Associated Press
Saturday February 02, 2002

SACRAMENTO — California has opened a new front in the battle between automakers and environmental coalitions, becoming first in the nation to target auto emissions to combat global warming. -more-


A statistical snapshot of California driving

Jim Wasserman, Associated Press
Saturday February 02, 2002

The Enron scandal: Could it be just what we needed?

By Kevin Noblet, The Associated Press
Saturday February 02, 2002

NEW YORK — Enron’s collapse added a smacking insult to the injury of the stock market’s decline over the last two years. -more-


Cancer-related drug approved by FDA

By Simon Avery, The Associated Press
Saturday February 02, 2002

LOS ANGELES — Amgen Inc., the world’s largest biotechnology firm, said Thursday the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved its latest immunity-boosting drug for cancer patients, Neulasta. -more-


Crime summit joins south Berkeley, city

By Hank Sims, Daily Planet staff
Friday February 01, 2002

Last weeks’ murders of two Oakland residents in south Berkeley have left the residents of the area calling for the city to clean up what they say is a chronic problem with crime in their neighborhood. -more-


Citizens should applaud not criticize Copwatch

Elena Pérez
Friday February 01, 2002

Editor: -more-


Stranger than fiction

Sari Friedman
Friday February 01, 2002

David Miller, who was a clean cut, Irish-American, ex-college football player from Syracuse, N.Y., did not fit the 1960s-era American cultural stereotype of an anti-Vietnam War protester. But today, David Miller is known as the “first” person to burn his draft card, which the San Francisco resident did in New York City in 1965, in front of a large crowd. A photo of Miller’s card burning is still on display in the War Remnants Museum in Ho Chi Minh City. -more-


Arts and Entertainment Calendar

Staff
Friday February 01, 2002

Out & About Calendar

– Compiled by Guy Poole
Friday February 01, 2002


Friday, Feb. 1

-more-


Bears stumble down stretch, fall to hot-shooting Arizona

By Jared Green, Daily Planet Staff
Friday February 01, 2002

After playing tough for the first 30 minutes of the game, the Cal Bears went ice-cold with the game on the line Thursday night against Arizona to take their first home loss of the season, 68-58. -more-


BDP releases information on double murder

By Hank Sims, Daily Planet staff
Friday February 01, 2002

During Tuesday night’s crime summit, the Berkeley Police Department gave its most complete account to date of the murders of Rammar Johnson and Noel Turner, Jr. -more-


Citizen’s comments did not accompany proof

Staff
Friday February 01, 2002

Allegations made in Tuesday’s, 01/29/02 edition entitled “South Berkeley resident speaks out on Copwatch” contained several provocative opinions about the group that were unsubstantiated by the editorial staff of this newspaper. We continue to stand behind our resolve to provide this space as a vehicle for the first amendment and went to a reasonable length to try to trace down the truths in her allegations but were unsuccessful. At this time, we have no reason to believe that despite the allegations made in Tuesday’s letter that anyone involved in Copwatch has been picked up by the Berkeley Police Department for a heroin overdose. -more-


Studios squabble about ‘Austin Powers’ third title

The Associated Press
Friday February 01, 2002

LOS ANGELES — MGM has a license to kill the title of the new “Austin Powers” sequel “Goldmember.” -more-


Correction

Staff
Friday February 01, 2002

Jones visits UC Berkeley, attacks his GOP gubernatorial rivals

By David Scharfenberg, Daily Planet staff
Friday February 01, 2002

California Secretary of State Bill Jones, Republican candidate for governor, attacked his rivals and touted a statewide voter registration drive during an appearance at UC Berkeley Wednesday. -more-


Copwatch deserves an apology

Marc Polonsky
Friday February 01, 2002

Editor: -more-


Actor sues over alleged dust in ‘Planet of the Apes’ shoot

By Anthony Breznican, The Associated Press
Friday February 01, 2002

LOS ANGELES — A background actor from last summer’s “Planet of the Apes” movie accused the filmmakers of harming him and hundreds of others with dust used in a climactic desert fight scene. -more-


Family seeks historical status for black-owned homes

By John Geluardi, Daily Planet staff
Friday February 01, 2002

The Jan. 18 death of Irma Augusta, the last of the “Freedom Home sisters,” gave birth to the idea of creating a historical district honoring a group of homes on Stanton Street, which served as a springboard for impoverished Southern African-Americans to start a new life. -more-


Co-founder of Copwatch

Andrea Pritchett
Friday February 01, 2002

Editor: -more-


Film on Ireland’s Bloody Sunday lands distributor

The Associated Press
Friday February 01, 2002

LOS ANGELES — “Bloody Sunday,” a dramatization of the police massacre of 13 Roman Catholics in Northern Ireland in 1972, has been acquired by Paramount Classics. -more-


News of the Weird

Staff
Friday February 01, 2002

Students ‘won’t eat if it smells like feet’ -more-


Racial discrimination lawsuit filed against KPIX

By Munira Syeda, Special to the Daily Planet
Friday February 01, 2002

Citing a “primary” African-American female anchor at a local television station as evidence of newsroom diversity, a KPIX company attorney Thursday dismissed as baseless a racial discrimination lawsuit filed Monday by three employees. -more-


UC Berkeley satellite falls back to Earth

By Guy Poole, Dailly Planet staff
Friday February 01, 2002

The 7,000-pound Extreme Ultraviolet Explorer satellite, built and operated by UC Berkeley, fell from orbit Wednesday night and scattered debris across portions of Egypt and the Persian Gulf. -more-


Entrepreneurs fight DEA rule banning hemp food products

By Michelle Morgante, The Associated Press
Friday February 01, 2002

SAN DIEGO — The energetic 60-year-old woman with cropped white hair and seagreen eyes wouldn’t fit the usual profile of a drug pusher. But inside her cozy condominium, there’s trouble cooking. -more-


Muslims launch goodwill campaign on SoCal billboards

By Daisy Nguyen, The Associated Press
Friday February 01, 2002

LOS ANGELES — Billboards designed to restore the image of Islam are going up along Southern California roads and freeways. -more-


Ready to garden? Plant seeds of commitment first

The Associated Press
Friday February 01, 2002

Mike Gettler knows a thing or two about tomatoes. -more-


Winter’s cold temperature limits what you can grow

By Lee Reich, The Associated Press
Friday February 01, 2002

Native plants, though unpopular, rarely get shocked by changes in the weather -more-


Study: Basic cable far raunchier than broadcast TV

By Lynn Ebler, The Associated Press
Friday February 01, 2002

LOS ANGELES — “South Park” leads the pack of basic cable shows bringing a new level of raunchiness and violence to television, according to a watchdog group’s new study. -more-


Unassuming bush may be world’s oldest living thing

By Andrew Bridges, The Associated Press
Friday February 01, 2002

PALM SPRINGS — Along an unremarkable stretch of desert on the outskirts of town, just off a road named for singing cowboy Gene Autry and tucked amid heaps of garbage raked by winds strong enough to polish granite, Jim Cornett thinks he’s found the world’s oldest living thing. -more-


MGM Mirage reports earnings drop, beats analysts’ estimates

By Lisa Snedeker, The Associated Press
Friday February 01, 2002

LAS VEGAS — The largest operator of Las Vegas Strip hotel-casinos reported Thursday that fourth-quarter earnings dropped 65 percent. -more-


EU Commission clears HP-Compaq merger

By Raf Casert, The Associated Press
Friday February 01, 2002

BRUSSELS, Belgium — European regulators on Thursday cleared the $23.7 billion merger of Hewlett-Packard Co. and Compaq Computer Corp., saying the planned marriage of rival U.S. computer makers does not raise competition concerns in Europe. -more-


America West airlines reports fourth quarter lossBy Foster Klug The Associated Press PHOENIX — America West Airlines posted a wider loss for the fourth quarter, reflecting the continued impact of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on air travel, the compan

By Foster Klug, The Associated Press
Friday February 01, 2002

PHOENIX — America West Airlines posted a wider loss for the fourth quarter, reflecting the continued impact of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on air travel, the company reported Thursday. -more-


Quiet GOP workhorse struggles to build momentum

By Alexa Haussler, The Associated Press
Friday February 01, 2002

RIVERSIDE — Bill Jones stands at a podium on the stoop of the Riverside County Sheriff’s Department, outlining his economic platform. -more-


A snapshot of GOP gubernatorial candidate Bill Jones

Alexa Haussler, The Associated Press
Friday February 01, 2002

NAME: Bill Jones -more-


Davis launches East Bay expansion project

By Devona Walker Daily Planet Staff
Thursday January 31, 2002

Gov. Gray Davis officially launched construction of the new eastern span of the Oakland/San Francisco Bay Bridge Tuesday, saying the project's primary goal was safety, and its secondary goal was to relieve congestion. -more-


Panthers take it easy, still destroy Albany

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Thursday January 31, 2002

Even before the start of Wednesday’s boys’ basketball game between St. Mary’s and Albany, it was pretty obvious that the Panthers weren’t taking their closest geographical BSAL opponent very seriously. After all, St. Mary’s head coach Jose Caraballo didn’t even bother to show up, choosing instead to scout his team’s next opponent, Salesian. -more-


Copwatch keeps a sober eye on justice

The author's name has been withheld from this letter for her safety concerns.
Thursday January 31, 2002

Editor: -more-


Staff
Thursday January 31, 2002


Compiled by Guy Poole
Thursday January 31, 2002


Thursday, Jan. 31


Berkeley Party hoping to flex some political muscle

By Hank SimsDaily Planet staff
Thursday January 31, 2002

A fledgling political movement that is aiming to shake up Berkeley city politics held its third meeting at the Shattuck Hotel Tuesday night. -more-


Copwatch attack was libelous, cowardice

Lisa Pascopella Berkeley
Thursday January 31, 2002

Editor: -more-


Lady ’Jackets cruise to second straight blowout

By Nathan Fox Daily Planet Correspondent
Thursday January 31, 2002

The Berkeley High Lady Yellowjackets basketball team steamrolled the visiting Richmond Oilers Wednesday night, 82-15. -more-


Crime rates down citywide despite recent homicides

By John Geluardi Daily Planet staff
Thursday January 31, 2002

The Berkeley Police Department presented the City Council with a crime status report Tuesday, which showed the city’s crime rates are at a 30-year low, despite three recent homicides and a general perception of higher crime. -more-


Radio tower is a monstrosity

Rob Browning Berkeley
Thursday January 31, 2002

Editor: -more-


Ortega trial postponed until late next month

By Hank Sims Daily Planet staff
Thursday January 31, 2002

The trial of Lazarus Ortega, the 21-year-old man who stands accused of killing his adoptive mother, was again delayed on Wednesday. -more-


Hancock’s HQ misrepresents facts, dollars

Don Gosney Richmond
Thursday January 31, 2002

Editor: -more-


News of the Weird

Staff
Thursday January 31, 2002

Women decieved by the church awarded by jury -more-


MTC releases Translink fare card for Bay Area commuters

Daily Planet wire services
Thursday January 31, 2002

OAKLAND – Thousands of Bay Area commuters now have a new card to carry in their wallets or purses – the TransLink universal transit-fare card. On Friday, Feb.1, the Metropolitan Transportation Commission and a half-dozen transit operators will kick off Phase One of a six-month pilot program of the TransLink electronic fare payment system. -more-


UC report finds no recovery for housing market until 2003

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet staff
Thursday January 31, 2002

The Bay Area housing market, in decline for months, will not rebound until late 2002 or 2003, according to a new study conducted by UC Berkeley’s Haas School of Business. -more-


Accounting worries shed light on debt-fighting gray areas

By Michael Liedtke The Associated Press
Thursday January 31, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Widening concerns about shoddy accounting practices are casting a spotlight on the gray areas that allow companies to keep debt off their books and dress up their earnings for the stock market. -more-


VP warned Global Crossing about accounting practices

By Simon Avery The Associated Press
Thursday January 31, 2002

LOS ANGELES — A Global Crossing vice president questioned his superiors about aggressive accounting practices less than six months before the telecommunications provider filed for bankruptcy, the company confirmed Wednesday. -more-


Former President Clinton calls for monetary investment in Third World

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet staff
Wednesday January 30, 2002

Former President Bill Clinton urged the United States to invest in health care, education and economic development in the Third World as an antidote to terrorism during his speech before a packed house of 2,000 at UC Berkeley’s Zellerbach Hall Tuesday afternoon. -more-


Hill continues scoring barrage against De Anza

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Wednesday January 30, 2002

Kamani Hill scored his sixth hat trick of league play as the Berkeley High boys’ soccer team beat a game De Anza squad, 5-0, on Tuesday in Berkeley. -more-


City should inform residents about tree hazards

Charlie Smith Berkeley
Wednesday January 30, 2002

Editor: -more-


Compiled by Guy Poole
Wednesday January 30, 2002


Wednesday, Jan. 30


Staff
Wednesday January 30, 2002


BPD clears bomb scare on University

By Hank Sims Daily Planet staff
Wednesday January 30, 2002

Half a block of the south side of University Avenue, between Milvia Street and Martin Luther King, Jr. Way, was evacuated Tuesday following a bomb scare at the California Department of Corrections office. -more-


’Jackets slam overmatched Dons

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Wednesday January 30, 2002

Thanks to their “competitive anomaly” status, the Berkeley High girls’ basketball team will face each of their ACCAL opponents only once this season. But for the De Anza Dons, one game against the Lady ’Jackets was more than enough. -more-


Political lesson from the black community to the students

Robert Cabrera Berkeley
Wednesday January 30, 2002

Editor: -more-


Leafletting Claremont employees suspended

By John Geluardi Daily Planet staff
Wednesday January 30, 2002

Four Claremont Resort & Spa workers, who are currently involved in union contract negotiations, were indefinitely suspended Monday for apparently handing out union leaflets at the entrance way of the exclusive hotel. -more-


Solving traffic problems

James E. [Jed] Donnelley for the TACTC group.
Wednesday January 30, 2002

Editor: -more-


News of the Weird

Staff
Wednesday January 30, 2002

You can decide M&M’s new color -more-


GE head honcho donates scholarships for UMass

Staff
Wednesday January 30, 2002

BOSTON — Jack Welch, the former chairman and CEO of General Electric Co., has donated $1 million for scholarships to help students at his alma mater. -more-


ABAG predicts economic recovery in third quarter

Daily Planet wire services
Wednesday January 30, 2002

OAKLAND — The most recent economic forecast for the Bay Area from the Association of Bay Area Governments suggests reasons for the region to be somewhat optimistic about an economic recovery. -more-


Police Blotter

Hank Sims
Wednesday January 30, 2002

Methadone stolen from addiction treatment center deliveryman -more-


‘Poet laureate of death row’ executed

By Michelle Locke The Associated Press
Wednesday January 30, 2002

SAN QUENTIN— Stephen Wayne Anderson, described by his defenders as the poet laureate of the condemned and by prosecutors as a stone-cold killer, was executed early Tuesday. -more-


Enron woes could halt electricity deregulation

By Jennifer Coleman The Associated Press
Wednesday January 30, 2002

SACRAMENTO — Electricity deregulation could be “dead in the water” for a few years due to bad publicity from Enron’s bankruptcy, an energy market researcher said Tuesday. -more-


ChevronTexaco suffers $2.5 billion loss

By Michael Liedtke The Associated Press
Wednesday January 30, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — The newly combined ChevronTexaco Corp. stumbled to a fourth-quarter loss of $2.5 billion as the company paid for the aftershocks of its merger and revised its outlook in the depressed energy market. -more-


Hilton profits tumble in wake of Sept. 11

By Simon Avery The Associated Press
Wednesday January 30, 2002

LOS ANGELES — Hilton Hotels Corp. said Tuesday that profit fell 93.5 percent during the fourth quarter from a year earlier, citing a severe slowdown in travel after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. -more-


Chain of shootings plague city

By John Geluardi Daily Planet staff
Tuesday January 29, 2002

A Monday morning dispute in the 2000 block of Blake Street sent one man to the Highland Hospital with a gunshot wound to the thigh. -more-


French cities love their cars

John Cecil via e-mail
Tuesday January 29, 2002

Editor: -more-


Staff
Tuesday January 29, 2002


Compile by Guy Poole
Tuesday January 29, 2002


Tuesday, Jan 29


UC course takes on attendant shortage

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet staff
Tuesday January 29, 2002

A new, student-run class at UC Berkeley called the “Inclusion Initiative” is working to address a shortage in attendants, or “personal care assistants,” for the city’s disabled. -more-


South Berkeley resident speaks out on Cop Watch

The author’s name has been withheld from this letter for her safety.
Tuesday January 29, 2002

Editor: -more-


Second victim dies in southside shooting

By Devona Walker Daily Planet staff
Tuesday January 29, 2002

Noel Turner, Jr. died about 5 p.m. Saturday at Highland Hospital due to complications related to a gunshot wound to the head, making him the second homicide victim in Berkeley since the beginning of the year. The incident also intensifies the police department’s so-far fruitless search for information on two men seen running from the scene of that crime. -more-


News of the Weird

Staff
Tuesday January 29, 2002

PALO ALTO — At age 8, Mario Pagan might have asked for a trip to Disneyland or a visit from a professional athletes to get his mind off cancer. -more-


Making Headlines

Staff
Tuesday January 29, 2002

PARIS — Paris Opera’s principal conductor, James Conlon, has stepped down as director of Rolf Liebermann’s “Medea” because of illness, the opera said in a statement Monday. -more-


City to host NYC firefighter

By John Geluardi Daily Planet staff
Tuesday January 29, 2002

The city of Berkeley will foot the bill for a New York firefighter’s weekend adventure here as part of a national effort to thank the emergency workers who provided critical services to victims of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. -more-


Lakireddy’s immigration charges sentencing postponed

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet staff
Tuesday January 29, 2002

The brother and sister-in-law of Berkeley landlord Lakireddy Bali Reddy, sentenced to eight years in prison last year for transporting minors to the United States for illegal sexual activity, will not be sentenced on immigration chages until March 25. -more-


Bay Area Briefs

Staff
Tuesday January 29, 2002

S.F. a good place for criminals -more-


BBC producers borrow from controversial Stanford U. experiment for a reality show

The Associated Press
Tuesday January 29, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — The British Broadcasting Corp. has planned to borrow from a controversial 1971 Stanford University experiment on prison life for a reality television show. -more-


Snow falling from Santa Cruz to Napa and beyond

By Justin Pritchard The Associated Press
Tuesday January 29, 2002

More winter storms were on the way for California, where a blast of Arctic air blew snow into the San Francisco Bay Area, causing treacherous driving conditions and some schools to close. -more-


Drifter scheduled to die early Tuesday

By Michelle Locke The Associated Press
Tuesday January 29, 2002

SAN QUENTIN — A drifter who killed an 81-year-old woman and then fixed himself a meal in her kitchen was scheduled to be executed early Tuesday. -more-


Insurance executive accused of selling phony health plans

The Associated Press
Tuesday January 29, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — An insurance executive was indicted Monday by a federal grand jury on accusations he sold fraudulent health plans and enriched himself with customers’ premiums. -more-


Enron Corp.’s is a tale of anguish for California

By Michael Liedtke The Associated Press
Tuesday January 29, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — After bedeviling California with huge power bills in its heyday, Enron Corp. is causing the state more anguish as it crumbles. -more-


American Skiing falls below NYSE’s listing criteria

The Associated Press
Tuesday January 29, 2002

NEWRY, Maine — American Skiing Co. said Monday it was advised by the New York Stock Exchange that it has fallen below the listing criteria for market capitalization and stockholders’ equity. -more-


Ticketmaster reports smaller loss for fourth quarter

By Simon Avery The Associated Press
Tuesday January 29, 2002

LOS ANGELES — Ticketmaster posted a $46 million loss in the fourth quarter, despite a 10.5 percent growth in sales from a year earlier to $159.6 million. -more-


Moderate ex-mayor says concern for poor fuels ambition

By Erica Werner The Associated Press
Tuesday January 29, 2002

LOS ANGELES — GOP gubernatorial candidate Richard Riordan has a favorite anecdote about his approach to governing. -more-


A snapshot of GOP gubernatorial candidate Richard Riordan

The Associated Press
Tuesday January 29, 2002

NAME: Richard J. Riordan. -more-


Four-alarm blaze lights up Telegraph

By John Geluardi, Daily Planet staff
Monday January 28, 2002

Two area businesses destroyed but no one injured -more-


Out & About Calendar

Compiled by Guy Poole
Monday January 28, 2002

OPEN LETTER FROM THE EDITOR REGARDING ‘DAUGHTER’S ASSAULT HAS NOT BEEN DEALT WITH’

Devona Walker
Monday January 28, 2002

In a letter to the editor printed last week several juveniles were named in allegations made by one parent regarding a schoolyard altercation. -more-


Rhinoceros romp absurdity in politics, history

by John Angell Grant, Special to the Daily Planet
Monday January 28, 2002

Romanian-French playwright Eugene Ionesco’s 1959 play “Rhinoceros” is a theater-of-the-absurd fable about the conflict among human beings between impulses towards individuality and desires for conformity. -more-


Bruins ruin Bears’ attempt at sweep

Staff
Monday January 28, 2002

Cal can’t pull off another miracle comeback -more-


Transportation Czar sets up shop

By John Geluardi, Daily Planet staff
Monday January 28, 2002

Looking out a café window at the stop-and-go procession of cars, trucks and buses on University Avenue, the city’s new assistant city manager for transportation sipped coffee and spoke about reducing personal automobile use. -more-


Ramsey’s contribution numbers are padded

Mal burnstein
Monday January 28, 2002

Editor:, -more-


Cal women fall to fierce Wildcats

By Jared Green, Daily Planet Staff
Monday January 28, 2002

The Cal women’s basketball team finally put up some decent offensive numbers on Saturday against Arizona. Unfortunately, they ran into a Wildcat team that was just a little too big and strong for the Bears to beat. -more-


Watchful eyes on justice

By Hank Sims Daily Planet Staff
Monday January 28, 2002

Copwatch: the name conjures up street battles of yore, with proud and defiant demonstrators asserting their legal rights to lunky, baton-wielding police. -more-


Torture Enron not the Taliban

Carol Denney
Monday January 28, 2002

Editor: -more-


Sports this week

Staff
Monday January 28, 2002

Monday -more-


Consider this, W. !

Marc Sapir, MD
Monday January 28, 2002

Editor: -more-


Candlelight vigil marks one year since Whipple’s death

By PAUL GLADER, The Associated Press
Monday January 28, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — About 200 friends and supporters of Diane Whipple held a candlelight in a rain-soaked park Saturday to show they hadn’t forgotten the popular woman mauled to death by dogs at her doorstep last year. -more-


Woman indicted for allegedly stealing identity of 22 people

Staff
Monday January 28, 2002

WALNUT CREEK — Generose Yambao is accused of stealing the identities of 22 people and nearly $400,000 in goods and services before she was arrested in Florida. -more-


Disabled students sue

Staff
Monday January 28, 2002

OAKLAND — Deaf and hearing impaired students at two University of California campuses are suing, claiming the schools don’t adequately accommodate their disability. -more-


Afghans want continued commitment to help rebuild

The Associated Press
Monday January 28, 2002

WASHINGTON — When Hamid Karzai, Afghanistan’s interim leader, meets President Bush on Monday, he is expected to seek a continuing U.S. commitment to help restore the peace in his violence-torn country, Afghan officials say. -more-


Palm’s long-awaited wireless handheld arrives

By MAY WONG, The Associated Press
Monday January 28, 2002

SANTA CLARA — A long-awaited new wireless handheld from Palm Inc. was set to hit store shelves Monday, giving the world’s leading PDA maker an important weapon in the fight against encroaching rivals. -more-


Financial Briefs

Staff
Monday January 28, 2002


Cheney defends Bush on Enron debacle -more-


Opinion

Editorials

Police Blotter

Hank Sims
Saturday February 02, 2002

Pizza delivery -more-


Making Headlines

Staff
Friday February 01, 2002

Is Stephen King retiring for real? -more-


Making Headlines

Staff
Thursday January 31, 2002

Lay’s wife gets p.r. makeover -more-


Local group protests 9/11 lecture series

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet staff
Wednesday January 30, 2002

A handful of organizers from the Berkeley group If Americans Knew turned out Tuesday night to raise concerns about a new course and public lecture series being offered at UC Berkeley called “Issues in U.S. Foreign Policy After 9/11.” -more-


Council crime, police reports tonight

Staff
Tuesday January 29, 2002

During the City Council’s special quarterly meeting tonight, the police department will present the council with information about city crime trends and police staffing issues. -more-


Napa’s low-income families go unpaid still

Staff
Monday January 28, 2002

A year later, many families have not been compensated in $1.3 million fraud, breach of contract lawsuit against landlords -more-