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In the hands of fate City of Franklin community opposes magnet school’s closure

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet staff
Thursday February 21, 2002

Parents at City of Franklin Microsociety Magnet School said they will strongly oppose the proposed closure of the school, and criticized Superintendent Michele Lawrence for recommending the move without parental input, during a series of interviews with the Daily Planet Wednesday. 

Teachers were more sympathetic to Lawrence, who is operating in the midst of a budget crisis, but said the district would be splintering a tight-knit community and eliminating an innovative school model if it closed City of Franklin. 

The 3-year-old, K-6 school is modeled after a small city, with students serving as politicians, local officials and businesspeople. 

Lawrence has proposed the closure of City of Franklin as part of an initial, $3 million wave of cuts in next year’s budget. The Board of Education, which will vote on Lawrence’s proposal next week, must chop a total of $6 million by year’s end. 

Kim Stanton, parent of two students at City of Franklin, said she found out about the proposed school closure through newspaper accounts. 

“There wasn’t any process,” Stanton said. “They should have allowed all of us to voice our opinions.” 

Lawrence was unavailable for comment Wednesday, but has argued in recent weeks that because the district did not know the extent of its fiscal woes until January, her administration has been forced to move quickly and has not been able to solicit the public input it would like. 

“Ideally, we should have gone through the process,” said school board Vice President Joaquin Rivera, echoing Lawrence. “But, because of the timing and the urgency here, we really need to make these cuts quite soon.” 

Lawrence and members of the school board have made two arguments for the closure of City of Franklin, which would save the district an estimated $326,000. First, they say the school is under-enrolled and too costly to operate, and second, they say it is racially imbalanced. 

According to district figures, the school has about 190 students enrolled, compared to 330 in the nearby Jefferson School. The district has been unable to boost enrollment at City of Franklin through normal placements because the school operates a magnet program, and can only accept students who apply to attend. 

District figures also show that the school is 59 percent African-American, 3 percent white, and 38 percent “other.” The district-wide average for elementary schools is 35 percent African-American, 25 percent white and 40 percent “other.” The “other” category includes Latinos, Filipinos, Asians, Native Americans and mixed-race individuals. 

Stanton argues that, while the school may not have many white students, it is still diverse.  

“We’re not black and white. But we’re black, white, Hispanic, and Indian,” she said. “Let’s get into the twenty-first century.”  

“The truth is, we want all our schools to reflect the diversity in the district,” Rivera responded. “Part of that diversity is white students.” 

Several students at the school were sensitive to the racial issue, raising it with a reporter unsolicited.  

“I think it’s not our fault if not enough white kids come here,” said Latranae Rush, a fourth grader. 

“They are just judging us because of the color of our skin,” added Yoneko Morillo, a fourth grader. 

Jean Townsend, parent of a sixth-grader, argued that the school needs more than three years to boost enrollment and establish itself.  

“We’re not giving it a chance,” she said. “You’re smashing it before it even comes out of conception.” 

Board member John Selawsky said it is difficult to judge whether the school has had adequate time to build enrollment, but argued that the district may not have the luxury of granting the school more time in the midst of a financial crisis. 

Cheri Hinkley, a first- and second-grade teacher at City of Franklin, said the district would lose a precious asset if it closed the school. 

“A lot of hard work has been put into the school and it’s a very interesting, innovative model,” she said. “I’m very sorry to see this sort of innovation being knocked down.” 

Marissa Saunders, parent of a fifth-grader, said the school teaches practical skills through its unique model. Saunders said her daughter, who campaigned and served as a treasurer in the school’s mock government, learned everything from public speaking to math skills through the experience. 

“These are all real world things,” said Saunders, who added that she is nervous about sending her daughter to one of the district’s other middle schools. 

Todd Marsden, a first-grade teacher at City of Franklin, said he is most worried about the disruption to students’ lives if the school is closed. 

“The children, they have a community here, a sense of belonging.” he said. “To have that taken away from them is a horrible thing, at least in the short term.” 

Marsden said, as compensation, the district should offer City of Franklin students first choice of schools next year. Board members reached Wednesday were receptive to the idea, but suggested that space and racial balance issues at other schools would have to be taken into account. 

Parents said they planned to attend last night’s board meeting and voice their concerns. The meeting was scheduled to take place after the Planet’s deadline.  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Bears rumble over Victoria in Canadian opener

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Thursday February 21, 2002

Dave Guest made five of six penalty kicks and the Bears held the visiting University of Victoria men’s rugby team to one try on Wednesday as Cal won 27-7 at Witter Field. 

Guest, a senior, also nailed a conversion to total 17 points on the day. Cal’s two tries were scored by wing Eric Andersen and reserve forward Justin Parkhurst. 

Wednesday’s game was the first of Cal’s series against the two top Canadian collegiate teams. The Bears will face University of British Columbia on Saturday, then travel to Canada later this year to face the two teams on their home turf. 

The Canadian teams are currently in the middle of their season, but the Bears have been practicing for just six weeks. Although his team blew through their first six games against U.S. opponents by an average of 63 points, Cal head coach Jack Clark was surprised how handily the Bears won against stiffer competition. 

“I don’t think anyone would have expected a 20-point victory today,” Clark said. “It’s not a bad result for six weeks of training.” 

Guest kicked off the scoring early, nailing his first penalty kick just three minutes into the match. The Vikings put their solid kicking game to work early, attacking down Cal’s flanks with counters. Victoria wing Akio Tyler punched a kick through the Cal backline and nearly scored, fumbling the ball near the goal line. The Bears came close on a grubber of their own, with Guest slotting the ball through the Vikings, but center Mark Verlatti couldn’t corral the ball and committed a knock-on. 

Cal did manage to get the ball into the try zone after 20 minutes. A sloppy pass in the backline ended up on the ground, but it bounced right into Andersen’s hands. The senior hit a gaping hole in the Viking backline, then juked fullback Charles Baumberg on his way to a 40-yard try. Guest hit an easy conversion kick to give the Bears a 10-0 lead. 

Victoria answered right back with their only score of the game. With the Bears deep in their territory, the Vikings forced a turnover. Rather than kick out of trouble, they went on the attack, going through several phases before Tyler broke through the line. After 50 yards he dumped the ball to hooker Mark Lawson, who got the last Cal defender to bite on a fake pass before touching the ball down for a try. Ed Fairhurst made the conversion to bring the Vikings within 10-7, but that was the last time they would score against the stiff Cal defense. 

“We defended our goal well,” Clark said. “They got close a few times, but we stiffened and responded.” 

Guest gave the Bears a 13-7 halftime lead with another penalty kick at the 30-minute mark, then made three more in the first 30 minutes of the second half for a 22-7 advantage. The Bears put the game away with a try from Parkhurst with just four minutes left in the game. Guest put a penalty kick within three yards of the try zone, and the Bears’ pack won the ensuing lineout and pushed over the line, with Parkhurst diving into the try zone under two defenders. 

Wednesday’s game marked the return of Cal fullback Kyle Khasigian, who missed the team’s first six games with a hamstring injury. WIth his backline complete, Clark said he was fairly happy with the team’s play. 

“I’m pleased with the backline’s play today,” he said. “They made good decisions, which is the main thing. I think we left a try unscored, but Kyle played near-flawlessly.” 

The Bears will take on University of British Columbia at 1 p.m. on Saturday at Witter Field.


Willard/Bateman neighborhoods aren’t the only ones with traffic problems

Doris Willingham Berkeley
Thursday February 21, 2002

Editor: 

 

In his open letter to Mayor Dean, Sedge Thomson wittily (he seems to think) sets forth all sorts of things about how the city dumps overwhelming traffic burdens into his part of town. In his view, the Willard and Bateman neighborhoods are being “trod upon,” and that nefarious machinations at the Planning and Traffic Departments will cause conditions to worsen further. He also depicts “the lesser Elmwood” as being absolutely choked to death by a never ending stream of speeding cars and their exhaust fumes. 

I invite Mr. Thomson to back up his scenarios of disproportionate traffic burdens in the two aforementioned neighborhoods with some traffic count figures. I doubt that he’ll be able to elicit much sympathy from the people who live on Ashby/Tunnel, the Warring/Belrose Corridor (both with over 20,000 cars per day!), or other basically residential Berkeley streets that have the misfortune of serving as major thoroughfares. 

 

Doris Willingham 

Berkeley


Staff
Thursday February 21, 2002


Thursday, Feb. 21

 

 

Barbara Lee 

8 p.m. 

UC Berkeley 

145 Dwinelle Hall 

Rep. Barbara Lee will be on campus. Sponsored by the Commonwealth Club and the Center on Politics. 642-9355, www.igs.berkeley.edu:8880/. 

 

Purim Lecture 

7:30 - 9 p.m. 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St. 

Discover the deeper meaning of Purim as Rabbi Alexander Sheinfeld uses the lens of Kabbalah to explore what Purim has to do with being Jewish and with being human. $10, $8 members. 848-0237 x127 

 

Zimbabwe Wildlife 

7 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment, Inc. 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

Julie Edwards of Rhino Girl Safaris gives a slide presentation showcasing Zimbabwe’s remarkable variety of birds and mammals, and discusses the future of wildlife and the safari industry in Africa. 527-7377 

 

Travel Photography Workshop 

7 - 9 p.m. 

Easy Going Travel Shop & Bookstore 

1385 Shattuck Ave. 

An intensive workshop that focuses on travel photography, with an emphasis on film and equipment security, light and weather conditions, methods to make the most of well-known sites, and ways to approach and photograph strangers. $15. 843-3533 

 

Simplicity Forum 

7 - 8:30 p.m. 

Claremont Branch Library 

2940 Benvenue Ave. 

“TV and Media” – Several people who have given up their TVs will talk about the difficulties and benefits. 549-3509, www.seeds of simplicity.org. 

 

Take the Terror Out of Talking 

noon - 1:10 p.m. 

Calif. Dept. Health Services 

2151 Berkeley Way 

Room 804 

State Health Toastmasters Club is presenting a six-week Speechcraft workshop to help you overcome your fear of speaking in public and improve your communication skills. Cost is $36 for six sessions, Feb. 21, 28 & March 7, 14, 21. 649-7750. 

 


Friday, Feb. 22

 

 

Grand Canyon Splendor: Rafting the Colorado 

7 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment, Inc. 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

Guidebook author and former river guide, Tyler Williams, presents the dramatic beauty of the Grand Canyon in his slide presentation on rafting the Colorado. 527-7377 

 

Still Stronger Women 

1:15 - 3:15 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave 

Short stories. 232-1351. 

 


Saturday, Feb. 23

 

 

Archaeological Institute of America 

3 p.m. 

Shorb House 

2547 Channing Way 

Lecture by Dr. Stuart Swiny discussing Cypriot rituals surrounding fertility, life and death from the Neolithic to the Roman era. 415-338-1537, barbaram@sfsu.edu. 

 

Paying for Public Education: 

Whose Job Is It? 

3 - 5:30 p.m. 

Ocean View Elementary School 

Multi-Purpose Room 

1000 Jackson St., Albany 

A forum with Kevin Gordon of the Education Coalition, who will explain state-level funding for K-12 schools. Candidates for the California Assembly 14th District seat debate: Dave Brown (D), Loni Hancock (D), and Charles Ramsey (D). 524-7004, hao_kco@pacbell.net.  

 


Monday, Feb. 25

 

 

A Rose Grew in Brooklyn: Stories from a Jewish Girlhood 

7:30 - 9 p.m. 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St. 

Local author and therapist, Rose Fox reads from her memoir. 

 

Institute of Government Studies 

12 p.m. 

119 Moses Hall 

UC Berkeley Campus 

John Matsasuka presents a lecture entitled “For the Many or the Few: How the Initiative Process Changes American Government”. 642-4608, www.igs.berkeley.edu 

 

U. S. Nuclear Weapons Program 

9 p.m. 

Wesley Student Center  

2398 Bancroft Way 

Marylia Kelley, executive director of Tri-Valley CAREs, speaks on the U.S. nuclear weapons program, including new, mini-nukes, plutonium shipments to Livermore Lab., the National Ignition Facility project, recent law suits filed against the government. 527-2057.  

 

Parkinson’s Support Group 

1:15 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1801 Hearst Ave. 

A support group for people with Parkinson’s, their families and caregivers.  

527-9075. 

 


Tuesday, Feb. 26

 

 

Berkeley Camera Club 

7:30 p.m. 

Northbrae Community Church 

941 The Alameda 

Share your slides and prints and learn what other photographers are doing. 525-3565. 

 

The Legal Challenges of Parenting Facing LGBT Couples 

5:30 - 7:30 p.m. 

UC Berkeley 

Boalt Hall, Room 100 

An informal wine and cheese reception will follow the panel discussion. 415-551-1275, boaltcaucus@yahoo.com. 

 

Berkeley Organization for  

Animal Advocacy Presents:  

Dr. Ned C. Buyukmihci 

7 p.m. 

UC Berkeley 

204 Wheeler Hall 

Buyukmihci will speak about the ethical dangers of animal experimentation. 925-487-4419, http://www.ocf.berkeley.edu/~boaa/. 

 


Wednesday, Feb. 27

 

 

Berkeley Gray Panthers 

1:30 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

Defending and improving Medicare. 548-9696, graypanthers@hotmail.com.  

 

Berkeley Mental Health Commission 

6:30 p.m. 

2640 Martin Luther King Jr. Way 

Auditorium 

Berkeley mental health clinic. 644-8562. 

 

Poetry Workshop 

5:30 - 7:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Art Center 

1275 Walnut St. 

The Literary Arts Program at the Berkeley Art Center is starting a weekly, 3 month poetry workshop facilitated by Rob Lipton. All levels welcome. 665-1662. 

 


Thursday, Feb. 28

 

 

Cody's Evening for Parents and Teachers 

7 p.m. 

Cody's Books 

1730 Fourth St. 

Rosemary Wells, children's author of dozens of books including Max and Ruby and Noisy Nora, will discuss children, books, and the importance of reading to your children. 527-6667, www.parentsnet.org. 

 

Trekking in Bhutan 

7 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment, Inc. 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

Seasoned traveler, Ruther Anne Kocour will share slides and stories of her adventures trekking in this majestic country. 527-7377 

 

Take the Terror Out of Talking 

noon - 1:10 p.m. 

Calif. Dept. Health Services 

2151 Berkeley Way 

Room 804 

State Health Toastmasters Club is presenting a six-week Speechcraft workshop to help you overcome your fear of speaking in public and improve your communication skills. Cost is $36 for six sessions, Feb. 28 & March 7, 14, 21. 649-7750. 

 

The Writing Life 

4:30 p.m. 

North Branch Library 

1170 The Alameda 

Peter S. Beagle will discuss his works and the life and times of a professional writer. 649-3913, www.infopeople.org/bpl. 

 

Photographing the Famous 

7:30 p.m. 

College Preparatory School Auditorium 

1600 Broadway, Oakland 

Michael Collopy will talk about photographing the famous (Mother Teresa, Frank Sinatra, Mikhail Gorbachev, Nelson Mandela).  

 


Friday, March 1

 

 

Tropical Trees and Sustainable  

Development in West Africa  

3 - 5 p.m. 

UC Berkeley 

103 Mulford Hall 

Roger Leakey of James Cook University, Australia will present some of his recent work on developing indigenous fruit and nut trees to produce marketable products beneficial to resource-poor rural and peri-urban households in West Africa. Discussion and Q&A. 643-4200, http://cnr.berkeley.edu/BeahrsELP. 


Registration drive turns up apathy on campus

By Mary Spicuzza Special to the Daily Planet
Thursday February 21, 2002

Michael Lehet, a 22-year-old UC Berkeley student, devoured a package of crackers as he explained why he isn’t a registered voter. Tuesday was the registration deadline for anyone hoping to vote in the March 5 primary election, but Lehet stood inside Sproul Hall, looking at the rain. Elections failed to interest him. 

“I’m an out-of-state student,” said Lehet, a fifth-year student majoring in molecular cell biology who will be going to attending law school in the fall. “I think you can register to vote even if you’re out-of-state, but I haven’t yet.”  

Nor has he voted at home. 

Members of Associated Students of the University of California, Cal Democrats, and staff from the Loni Hancock for State Assembly office organized a last-minute on-campus registration drive Tuesday to encourage students like Lehet to fill out voter registration forms. Rain canceled plans to set up a table at Sproul Plaza, so five or six volunteers prowled campus cafes and restaurants looking for unregistered students. 

Wally Adeyemo, president of the ASUC, helped organize the drive to ensure campus voices are heard in city affairs, especially those that directly affect students. His group estimates that 23 percent of Berkeley’s more than 71,000 registered voters are students – that means Cal has upwards of another 14,000 potential voters. 

“Safety on the south side of campus is a major concern,” Adeyemo said. “The students in Piedmont want lighting. All over campus there are people who are concerned about city issues.” 

Students said Tuesday they feel politicians often give them and education issues short shrift. Eric Molina, a 22-year-old English major, said Cal now has more than 34,000 students on campus, and it’s only fair they have a say in city issues. 

“Walls were duct-taped together at my high school,” said Molina, a Danville native. “The school textbooks were 30 years old. So when I vote, education is my main concern.” 

Molina, who is registered, said though he isn’t planning to vote in the upcoming election he goes to the polls for issues that are important to him 

Omar Khan, a 22-year-old political economy major, said education was the main issue drawing him to the March 5 polls. He’s angry with Gov. Gray Davis about proposed cuts in education spending, and he may vote for one of the other gubernatorial candidates. 

“I’ll just have to see where the others stand,” Khan said. 

He agreed that UC students are politically aware and active, and deserve more representation on the City Council. 

Students are working to influence the city’s redistricting plan so that at least one of its eight districts has a student majority. Every 10 years district boundaries are redrawn to reflect population growth patterns, and Josh Fryday, a member of the ASUC, and others have submitted redistricting proposals to the city council.  

The City Council held a public hearing Tuesday to discuss redistricting proposals and will host another on Feb. 26. Students met several times with council members to discuss redistricting plans. 

Not everyone on campus seems to care about the outcome of those meetings. A half-dozen students said Tuesday they don’t follow local politics or vote. Some said they’re too busy, others said they’re not interested in politics. 

“Most people don’t know there’s an election,” said Patrick Campbell, a former ASUC president who now works for the Loni Hancock campaign. “It’s not like there’s an exciting election or a controversial proposition.” 

Campbell said getting people to the polls in early spring, or in November during a non-presidential ballot, has always been difficult. 

But Adriana Martinez, a 22-year-old political science major at San Jose State University, said students now want to have a voice in politics. While visiting the UC Berkeley campus Tuesday, Martinez said the events of Sept. 11 have created a more politically-aware students. 

“I think most people in our generation are looking for change,” Martinez said. “They are very aware, and want to vote.” 

 


Gov. Davis, come see how your budget cuts affect our schools

Anthony Chavez Berkeley
Thursday February 21, 2002

Editor: 

 

Perhaps Gov. Davis should come to our fair city and explain his justification for a $6 million cut in Berkeley schools. And maybe that town meeting could be held at City of Franklin School.  

This would give the governor a chance to show us how his Enron campaign contributions and wise energy policy have reaped economic and infrastructural benefits for Berkeley families with school aged children.  

At the same time Gov. Davis can explain how he is “working hard” to protect the state of california's credit rating after hitching it to the Enron wagon. The governor could also show how closing COF will “save” over $3 million during the next 10 years. While he is at it, the governor could run the numbers for us on how other school closings in California will give the state’s creditors a couple of hundred million more over the next 10 years.  

I think it would do the governor’s re-election campaign a lot of good to hold this meeting at COF school because it is pre-dominantly African American.  

Oh wait! What was I thinking?!?  

Maybe this isn't such a good idea. After all, COF school isn’t predominantly African American. It’s “racially unbalanced” as Superintendent Lawrence and some unnamed board members call it, according to Planet reporter David Schnarfenberg.  

And according to Board member Ted Schultz COF isn’t “running properly” either.  

Scratch the meeting idea. We wouldn’t want to embarass the governor.  

On second thought, let’s just get on with the rubber stamping the governor’s cuts and taking pride in Berkeley’s tradition of “racially balanced” (white?) political thinking.  

 

Anthony Chavez  

Berkeley


B-TV reveals bare essentials of the first amendment

By Guy Poole Special to the Daily Planet
Thursday February 21, 2002

Two programs on BTV channel 25 depicting “sexually explicit” material has sparked a free speech debate that may in fact put some of the channel’s funding in jeopardy. 

“Unlimited Possibilities” and the “Dr. Susan Block Show” both contain the questionable material, and Frank Moore, the programs’ producer said the shows are “on the chopping block” because of citizen complaints.  

At Tuesday’s City Council meeting Councilmember Betty Olds asked that complaints made by Berkeley resident Charles Haltman regarding objectionable material shown on the publicly run station be discussed and dealt with as soon as possible. 

Moore said he is protected by a 1996 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that said public access programming is protected free speech and the safe harbor for adult material is between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m.  

Last January the board of directors of Berkeley Community Media voted to restrict “sexually explicit” shows to air between 2 and 4 a.m.  

The restriction was ordered because of citizen complaints, Moore said. 

He also said that the time slot restriction censors his right to free speech, by virtually eliminating his audience. 

Berkeley Community Media Executive Director Brian Scott, said he was assigned the task of watching tapes of both shows to determine if they contained “obscene or sexually explicit material.”  

Scott said neither shows contained such material. 

At Scott’s recommendation the station later rescinded the time restrictions The decision to only show the programs between 2 and 4 a.m. was rescinded until the board could “inform itself of what the legal picture is,” said board member Chuck Miller.  

With the shows back on the air, complaints have begin to resurface. 

“The first action was an effort to come up with a policy acceptable to both sides, and it turns it out it was not. The people who were offended by the content are still offended. The people who feel the show should be aired, still feel that way,” Miller said. 

Scott said the dilemma facing the channel is the same dilemma that always faces free speech. 

“The danger is that somebody complains to the city council and the program is censored. If you censor one show, you eliminate public access television,” Scott said. 

But the City Council is not obligated to fund BCM. And Scott fears they will vote to eliminate funding for the public access channel. 

“Disgusting,” Olds said. “It shouldn’t be allowed to be put on so that someone could stumble on it, and I’m no prude. I would be willing to forego having that channel (25). What I saw that woman do (Susan Block) I don’t think that was free speech. 

“I don’t think that’s right and I know that the majority of the citizens feel the same way,” Olds added. 

Scott said public access is for the community from the community and should be regulated by the community.  

If somebody wants to regulate programming they do so by contacting the District Attorney’s office or the FCC, in writing, with the time, date, and content of the program. This could result in an investigation of the program. Then the courts would rule if something was obscene. The problem is that nobody wants to go on record for censorship.  

According to the FCC, “In 1973, the U.S. Supreme Court established the following criteria to determine whether speech is obscene: (1) whether the average person, applying contemporary community standards, would find that the work, taken as a whole, appeals to prurient interest; (2) whether the work depicts or describes in a patently offensive way sexual conduct specifically defined by applicable state law; and (3) whether the work, taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value. In 1978, the Court stated that whether the work could be deemed “patently offensive” would depend on context, degree and time of broadcast.  

“In 1996, the U.S. Supreme Court determined that cable operators may decline to carry indecent programming on leased access channels, but cannot exercise the same control over programming on public access channels.”  

Miller said he doubts the Susan Block show would be found obscene by a court. He added that one parent reported that their teen-ager saw the show, which provoked a conversation between the parent and teen-ager that proved useful.  

 

 

Contact reporter Guy Poole at guy@berkeleydailyplanet.net. 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Corporation Yard needs more than just a makeover

L A Wood Berkeley
Thursday February 21, 2002

Editor: 

 

In 1916, Berkeley’s Public Works Department completed construction of its new corporation yard on Allston Way. This early city project moved the existing maintenance yard, which at that time was little more than horse stables, from the north corner of University Avenue and Sacramento to its current site. The Public Works commissioner stated at the opening of the new yard, “We have made a beginning of which to be proud, and when completed, may well serve as a model for other cities.” Almost ninety years later, even after several major renovations in the early 30s, the 50s, and again in the late 1980s, those words and that vision have all faded away. Today, the yard is boxed in by residential neighborhoods, and is at capacity for operations and storage. Many of the yard’s problems won’t be corrected with just another makeover. Like a Trojan horse, the imminent upgrade of the corporation yard promises to open the door to a budgetary boondoggle, with millions of taxpayer dollars at stake, and more. 

Last Friday, the Public Works Department applied for a use permit to relocate the yard’s staff out of the old, single story structures and into portable office trailers. This move signals the beginning of the seismic upgrade of the site’s unreinforced masonry buildings. The cost to move the yard’s staff and to plug in the trailers is expected to reach half a million dollars, or more. However, no overall cost analysis for this retrofit has been made public. The city knows the seismic project is more than a simple posting up of the buildings so as to keep them from falling down on city employees. In the past, each of the yard’s major renovations has both added structures and expanded operations in order to meet the needs of the department. And today, that need has never been more pressing. 

The option to expand is being challenged by the area’s R2 zoning and the fact that the maintenance yard has become the largest non-conforming land use in Berkeley. Both the city’s General Plan and the yard’s Master Plan acknowledge the need to relocate, and not to expand at the Allston location. This message also has been echoed by residents who have publicly requested reductions in the yard’s activities, and specifically that the rock and gravel storage areas, as well as the yard’s fueling station, be moved to a more appropriately zoned site. All council reports evaluating the corporation yard in the last decade have reflected this same reality. The Public Works Department operations have simply outgrown the present site. 

Another serious barrier to the future expansion of the corporation yard is concern over landmark preservation. The centerpiece structure, the oldest on the five-acre site, was designed by Walter Radcliff, the city’s architect at the time. Unbelievably, it has never has been listed in any local or state Historic Resources Inventory. However, there is no question that the main administration building has need for landmark protection. The brick detail, wooden floors, and barn-like shop areas bring back the memory of those first days when a staff of 150 worked out of the yard, including a blacksmith. Some of the details of this rich history have already been destroyed by smaller capital projects at the yard, leaving only the Radcliff structure. Certainly any yard expansion should be limited because of this building’s landmark importance. It also physically partitions the site. Undoubtedly, this building will continue to be an obstacle to the yard’s modernization. 

Fix it, expand it, or move it. Those are the options, and each has its special cost for the Public Works Department, Berkeley taxpayers, and the surrounding neighborhoods. Though staff is reluctant to lay out the entire plan, our past experiences with cost overruns for seismic work done at the library, the public safety building, and the civic center, all confirm one thing. The corporation yard upgrade will ultimately cost two to three times more than originally estimated. Even a minimum investment in the site’s structures will cost several million dollars. A full-blown expansion will run six million dollars or more. If the city’s management of the project is factored in, the costs for the yard could reach up to fifteen million dollars, the projected cost of an entirely new facility. And with all costs being fairly equal, only a new location will meet the future operational needs of the department and the city. 

Moreover, Berkeley owns an ideal site at Harrison and Fifth streets where the city has begun construction of a park. With relativity little invested to date, the corporation yard should simply trade locations with the soccer fields and proposed transitional housing. This would put an end to all existing zoning conflicts at both sites. More importantly, it would give the Public Works Department a long overdue professional yard, something that will never be achieved at the yard’s current location, no matter how much money is poured into it. We can no longer afford to ignore the necessity of moving the corporation yard. 

Once again, hoping to fly under the radar of both neighbors and taxpayers, the yard’s renovation is being offered up in a piecemeal style. Public Works is now saying that it is merely fixing the yard while actually preparing the site for another expansion. The first phase of the capital project, in addition to the modular trailers, involves the removal of several sheds and buildings. Phase two of the seismic retrofit will involve new construction. This stealth project, like the last one offered to residents in 1987, needs to be revealed for what it really is. In ‘87, a “fix it” plan was packaged to disguise the facility’s second phase construction of a fueling station from the area’s residents. Imagine the neighbors’ surprise upon waking up one morning to find that the city had relocated its fueling station within 60 feet from their homes on Bancroft Way. Certainly the neighbors of the city’s most recent project, the communication tower on the new public safety building, understand this reality. 

Historically at the corporation yard, the city, as developer, has always played the bully. The Public Works Department has avoided the scrutiny of permits, honest environmental reviews, and a fair public process. For the benefit of area neighbors and local taxpayers, let’s have all the cards on the table! With so much at stake, Berkeley can not afford to miscalculate the needs of Public Works or the impacts of the corporation yard on the surrounding community. 

 

L A Wood  

Berkeley 


Tobacco tax going to children, families

Daily Planet staff
Thursday February 21, 2002

Alameda County is using the $20 million a year it receives from the Proposition 10 tobacco tax approved by voters in 1998 to improve the quality of life for children and families through the Every Child Counts program, part of the Children and Families Commission. 

Among other benefits, the program funds early health care and education programs for young children, offers family support services, and reduces exposure to tobacco and other harmful substances, according to Mark Friedman, executive director of the Alameda County Children and Families Commission.  

“We think there’s a tremendous opportunity and responsibility to make sure that we shepherd these resources as best we can,” Friedman said during his appearance Tuesday at the Commonwealth Club in San Francisco. “If we don’t do a good job with these resources, then we won’t get the opportunity again.” 

California voters approved Prop 10, the California Children and Families First Act of 1998, by a margin of 1 percent. It put a 50-cent, per-pack surtax on cigarettes and required the counties to use it for community health care services.  

Some $680 million a year is collected with 20 percent going to a statewide commission. The remaining 80 percent is divided among California’s 58 counties using a formula that takes into account birthrates and the number of smokers.  

While Alameda County gets $20 million, San Francisco gets $7 million and Santa Clara County, the largest in the Bay Area, gets $28 million. Marin, San Mateo, and Contra Costa counties receive amounts ranging from four to $13 million.  

Alameda County’s programs support caregivers, promote school readiness, and coordinate local, county and state services.  

Opponents of Proposition 10 have said that it takes money away from other health and human service programs. Friedman acknowledged that he has heard this complaint before. He said they were referring to Prop 99, an old tobacco tax, which levies a 25 cent tax that goes for education against tobacco use. Since the two taxes have dampened cigarette sales, he said, the money collected from Prop 99 has been reduced. Still, voters appear to support the newer tax. Efforts to repeal Prop 10, have failed.  

"However, the tobacco industry does not go away," Friedman warned.  

The State of California was named in three lawsuits regarding Prop 10, but thus far, the proposition is still alive. "We think Prop 10 is not be the most elegant way of providing those services, by having to tax tobacco and particularly hurt a lot of low income people who may be addicted to tobacco, but it’s the best vehicle we have right now," he said. 

"We’re not so arrogant to think that what we’ve designed here is the best way to do things, we just think it’s the best thing we can accomplish right now for children." 

Friedman’s talk was part of a series on issues that impact children and families sponsored by the Action Alliance for Children United Way of the Bay Area and Providian Financial. 


Making Headlines

Staff
Thursday February 21, 2002

Today is Thursday, Feb. 21, the 52nd day of 2002. There are 313 days left in the year. 

 

Today’s Highlight in History: 

On Feb. 21, 1965, former Black Muslim leader Malcolm X, 39, was shot to death in New York by assassins identified as Black Muslims. 

 

On this date: 

In 1878, the first telephone directory was issued, by the District Telephone Co. of New Haven, Conn. 

In 1885, the Washington Monument was dedicated. 

In 1916, the World War I Battle of Verdun began in France. 

In 1925, The New Yorker magazine made its debut. 

In 1947, Edwin H. Land publicly demonstrated his Polaroid Land camera, which could produce a black-and-white photograph in 60 seconds. 

In 1972, President Nixon began his historic visit to China as he and his wife, Pat, arrived in Shanghai. 

In 1973, Israeli fighter planes shot down a Libyan Airlines jet over the Sinai Desert, killing more than 100 people. 

In 1986, Larry Wu-tai Chin, the first American found guilty of spying for China, killed himself in his Virginia jail cell. 

In 1995, Chicago stockbroker Steve Fossett became the first person to fly solo across the Pacific Ocean in a balloon, landing in Leader, Saskatchewan, Canada. 

In 2000, consumer advocate Ralph Nader announced his entry into the presidential race, bidding for the nomination of the Green Party. 

Ten years ago: Kristi Yamaguchi of the United States won the gold medal in ladies’ figure skating at the Albertville Olympics; Midori Ito of Japan won the silver, Nancy Kerrigan of the United States the bronze. John Frohnmayer announced his resignation as chairman of the National Endowment for the Arts. 

Five years ago: Whitewater prosecutor Kenneth Starr reversed his decision to resign. The space shuttle Discovery returned to earth after a mission to upgrade the Hubble Space Telescope. A bomb exploded at a gay and lesbian nightclub in Atlanta, injuring five people. 

One year ago: The Supreme Court ruled that state workers cannot use an important federal disability-rights law to win money damages for on-the-job discrimination. At the Grammy Awards, Steely Dan won album of the year for “Two Against Nature,” plus best pop album and best pop performance by a duo or group for “Cousin Dupree”; controversial rapper Eminem won three awards, all in rap categories. 

 

Today’s Birthdays: Fashion designer Hubert de Givenchy is 75. Movie director Bob Rafelson is 69. Singer Nina Simone is 69. Actor Gary Lockwood is 65. Actor-director Richard Beymer is 63. Actor Peter McEnery is 62. Recording executive David Geffen is 59. Actor Alan Rickman is 56. Actress Tyne Daly is 56. Tricia Nixon Cox is 56. Sen. Olympia J. Snowe, R-Maine, is 55. Rock musician Jerry Harrison (The Heads) is 53. Actor William Petersen is 49. Actor Kelsey Grammer is 47. Country singer Mary-Chapin Carpenter is 44. Actor Jack Coleman is 44. Actor Christopher Atkins is 41. Rock singer Ranking Roger is 41. Actor William Baldwin is 39. Rock musician Michael Ward is 35. Blues musician Corey Harris is 33. Country singer Eric Heatherly is 32. Rock musician Eric Wilson (Sublime) is 32. Actress Jennifer Love Hewitt is 23. Singer Charlotte Church is 16.


New program by Google lets Web sites bid for advertising

By Michael Liedtke The Associated Press
Thursday February 21, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Popular online search engine maker Google Inc. is introducing a new program that allows Web sites to be displayed more prominently by paying more money — an advertising-driven system derided by critics as an invitation to deceptive business practices. 

Under a new feature launched Tuesday evening, the rankings of a search engine devoted to advertisers will be determined in part by how much Web sites offer to be listed in specific categories. 

The system lets Web sites raise their bids to increase their chances for higher placement on the section of Google’s site that’s devoted to sponsored links. 

Besides factoring in Web sites’ bids, Google’s ranking formula will consider how many times visitors click on the displayed links — a departure from other so-called “pay-for-placement” search engines. 

Mountain View-based Google will continue to reserve most of its site for results sorted by relevance to a search request — a model that has cultivated a local following among Web surfers and turned the 300-employee company into one of the Internet’s emerging power brokers. Google’s site, and the 130 other businesses that license its technology, handle about 150 million search requests each day. 

Except for a few twists, Google’s auction-style system mirrors a model used by a prosperous rival, Overture Services Inc. 

Pasadena-based Overture has emerged as one of the Internet’s biggest financial successes. During the final half of 2001, the company earned $29.7 million on revenue of $173.7 million and this year management projects a $58 million profit on revenue of $442 million. 

Privately held Google says it was profitable last year, but won’t disclose the results. The company’s revenue last year was about $60 million, estimated industry analyst Lanny Baker of Salomon Smith Barney. 

The pay-for-placement system has alienated some people. 

A consumer watchdog group last summer filed a Federal Trade Commission complaint alleging the results generated by several pay-for-placement search engines represented a deceptive advertising practice. The FTC hasn’t publicly responded to the complaint. 

Commercial Alert, the watchdog group that filed the complaint, has applauded Google for distinguishing between its non-commercial search results and its advertising-supported results. 

Last month, Texas-based Mark Nutritional Inc. sued Overture and three other search engine companies. It alleged their advertising-driven sorting systems violated Mark Nutritional’s trademark on a weight-loss program called Body Solutions by allowing other businesses to buy listings under the phrase. 

Google plans to turn away companies trying to buy a listing under categories unrelated to their main business. For instance, Google already has refused advertising from credit card companies that tried to buy listings under the “Palm Pilot” category, said Omid Kordestani, the company’s senior vice president of worldwide sales and business development. 

Google also intends to maintain strong firewalls between the business and search sides of its operations. 

“We take our editorial integrity very seriously, just like a newspaper does,” Kordestani said. 

Google will display up to eight advertisers on the far right-hand side of its Web page under a shaded section labeled “sponsored links.” 

The company has been listing results from advertisers under a similar format since 2000, but it previously sold space under a fixed pricing system, which prevented sites from boosting their rankings with more money. 

——— 

On The Net: 

http://www.google.com 

http://www.overture.com 


Czar warns against cyber complacency

By Matthew Fordahl The Associated Press
Thursday February 21, 2002

SAN JOSE — Much like the airline industry before Sept. 11, high-tech companies, customers and government agencies are well aware of security vulnerabilities but are reluctant to pay to fix them, President Bush’s top computer security adviser said Tuesday. 

It’s just a matter of time before terrorists use those flaws to launch a cyberspace equivalent of the Sept. 11 attacks on critical national infrastructure such as the electricity grid, said Richard Clarke, the Bush administration’s cyber security czar. 

“They will look for the seams. They will look to where our infrastructure is fragile,” he said during the RSA Conference, the world’s largest gathering of computer security experts. “Our infrastructure is fragile.” 

Clarke said the airlines had known for years about weaknesses in the industry’s security mechanisms but chose not to address them. There was no intelligence suggesting an attack might occur, and nobody wanted to shoulder the cost or risk inconveniencing passengers. 

“This industry runs the same risks as the aviation industry,” he said. “For years, people in the aviation industry knew there were security vulnerabilities — big ones. They convinced each other and themselves that those vulnerabilities would never be used against the industry or against the country.” 

After all, no hijackings had occurred for decades in the United States before Sept. 11. As a result, no one wanted to pay to explore how vulnerabilities might be exploited, he said. 

But the information technology industry must work quickly and not dwell on the past. Scenarios must be modeled and everyone — including government, businesses and other customers — must work together and share the costs. 

President Bush is proposing a large spending increase for computer and network security, from $2.7 billion in fiscal year 2002 to $4.2 billion in fiscal year 2003. 

RSA Conference organizers, who have been quick to criticize government security initiatives in previous years, agreed with Clarke’s comments and many of the new post-Sept. 11 measures. 

“Today, the threats to the critical infrastructure are no longer theoretical,” said Jim Bidzos, chairman of the one-week conference. 

Bruce Heiman, an attorney and executive director of Americans for Computer Privacy, also said he could not disagree with much of Clarke’s speech, but emphasized a balance must be struck between security and privacy. 

Clarke’s proposal for government-industry cooperation, for instance, could work well as long as it remains voluntary. Still, Heiman asked, what would happen in the aftermath of a real cyber attack? 

“If exhortation fails, regulation can’t be far behind,” he said. 

Despite the government’s voluntary approach so far, Heiman fears it could indirectly force technology standards on the industry if businesses cannot agree on their own. 

Heiman also questioned Clarke’s suggestion that the government form its own private network called GOVNET, allowing it to escape Internet problems. 

“Is that approach just throwing up your hands?” Heiman asked. “GOVNET says we can’t make it secure — we will just have our own system.” 

Clarke, who has served under every president since Ronald Reagan, was picked in October to advise the government and private businesses on cyber security issues. In his talk Tuesday, he said the government is a model of how not to address cyber security. 

Clarke also suggested moving away from connecting everything to the Internet. He said details of the nation’s air traffic control system could be made available to Web surfers in the Middle East. 

Unless action is taken soon, the information technology industry will suffer the same fate as the aviation industry, he said. 

“The vulnerabilities are too well known for someone not use them in a big way that make Nimda and Code Red look like small fries,” Clarke said of two worms, which last year tied up Internet traffic worldwide by exploiting well-known software vulnerabilities. 

——— 

On the Net: 

RSA Conference: http://www.rsaconference.net 


Analyst suggests $5 billion in new state budget cuts

By Alexa Haussler The Associated Press
Thursday February 21, 2002

SACRAMENTO — Legislative Analyst Elizabeth Hill warned Wednesday that “the fiscal situation has deteriorated” and lawmakers must make deeper-than-expected budget cuts to lift the state from its financial straits. 

State officials must carve $5 billion more than planned from the current and next year’s budgets or the problem could snowball in the coming years, Hill said, delivering an in-depth review of Gov. Gray Davis’ 2002-03 budget proposal. 

“It’s going to be a very tough year,” said Assembly budget committee chairwoman Jenny Oropeza, D-Long Beach. 

Hill, the Legislature’s chief fiscal analyst, predicts a steeper dip in stock and capital gains revenues and steeper education costs than Davis. 

And she suggests dozens of solutions — including raising college tuition, mothballing a state women’s prison and scrapping one state holiday — to make up the difference. 

Assembly Speaker Herb Wesson, D-Culver City, issued a statement Wednesday calling Hill’s news “worse than I expected.” 

“It is clear we are going to have to make painful decisions about crucial state services,” Wesson said. “Everyone is going to have to bear the pain.” 

Hill offered more than 100 suggested budget cuts, including some potentially controversial moves. 

They include closing the Northern California Women’s facility in Stockton because of declining inmate population statewide; suspending Davis’ pet performance awards program for schools with test score improvements; and increasing students fees for out-of-state and professional students at the University of California. 

She also proposes a series of legislative changes to ease prison terms, including providing early parole for some nonviolent offenders and elderly inmates. 

Oropeza said each of Hill’s suggestions “will be seriously examined and evaluated.” 

Republican leaders immediately sought to blame Davis, a Democrat who is up for re-election this year. GOP lawmakers have accused Davis for months of failing to tackle California’s budget woes quickly enough and spending recklessly when times were good. 

“We warned that there would be a cliff that we would fall off, and we have,” said Senate Republican Leader Jim Brulte of Rancho Cucamonga. 

Davis has defended his budgeting, saying he pumped up the state’s reserves and made sorely needed improvements in education, transportation and children’s health. And he has said he will not advocate raising taxes to fill the budget hole. 

Davis’ budget chief Tim Gage said he had not fully reviewed the analyst’s report, but said, “certainly they raise an appropriate caution that revenues may well be down further.” 

However, he said, the state will not have a clear picture of its financial health until May, when the governor revises his budget based on more accurate revenue calculations. 

“We just don’t know at this point,” Gage said. 

Hill’s analysis means that the state now faces a $14.5 billion budget deficit over the next 16 months, even accounting for a package of cuts approved by lawmakers late last month. 

Here’s why: The state faced a $12.5 billion shortfall in January for the remainder of this fiscal year and the next, which begins July 1. Lawmakers approved in January more than $2 billion in midyear cuts to the current budget, which also translate to $900 million more in reductions to next year’s budget because of trims made to ongoing programs. 

That left the state still facing a $9.5 billion shortfall — which Davis proposed to fix with a combination of cuts, shuffling and borrowing. 

And, Hill estimates the state must add $5 billion more to that figure because, even if all of the governor’s remedies were adopted for the current and next year, the state still would come up short. 

——— 

On the Net: 

Hill’s analysis and proposed solutions are at http://www.lao.ca.gov. 

The governor’s budget proposal can be found at http://www.dof.ca.gov 


Parents like small schools more than educators

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet staff
Wednesday February 20, 2002

Parents have a rosier picture of small schools than teachers, according to a nationwide poll released Tuesday by Public Agenda, a nonpartisan public opinion agency based in New York. 

“Small school parents are considerably happier on issues ranging from academic performance to student alienation,” said Deborah Wadsworth, president of Public Agenda in a statement. “High school teachers, however, did not in many instances share a similarly positive reaction.” 

The poll, commissioned by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, also found that teachers in large and small schools have equally dim views of teacher morale and student achievement. However, small schools teachers reported fewer problems with students dropping out or falling through the cracks. 

The poll re-ignited the local debate about dividing Berkeley High School into a series of wall-to-wall “small learning communities.”  

Kalima Rose, a parent activist who supports the move, focused on poll figures demonstrating that small schools parents are more satisfied with attentiveness to student needs.  

According to the survey, three quarters of small schools parents are confident that teachers identify and help struggling students, compared to less than half of large school parents. Fifty-five percent of large school parents reported problems with students falling through the cracks, compared with 30 percent of small schools parents. 

Rose said these figures reflected the opinions of parents at the handful of existing small schools at BHS.  

“Parents who have children in small learning communities feel like it’s easier to find teachers and sort out what’s happening with their children,” she said. 

School board President Shirley Issel, who voted last year to delay the consideration of the small schools proposal put forth by Rose and other activists, said the poll did point to certain small schools advantages. 

“Parents want to feel they have access to someone inside the school who knows their kid,” she said.  

But Issel focused on data from the teachers’ poll which showed little difference between small and large school teachers on several issues. 

Only 19 percent of small schools teachers and 18 percent of large school instructors reported high teacher morale. Likewise, only 19 percent of small school instructors and 21 percent of large school instructors say their students learn to speak and write well. 

“I think teachers are concerned with where they can be successful,” Issel argued. “They’re concerned with job satisfaction and effectiveness, and they’re saying size doesn’t matter.”  

“It isn’t just about small,” Rose replied. “The practices that go along with small are the key thing.” 

Rose said it is vital to give teachers more planning time and allow instructors from various disciplines to coordinate their work. 

She added that teachers should work in consortiums, sharing lesson plans and discussing how to meet the needs of students of varying ability. 

Superintendent Michele Lawrence is scheduled to visit several small schools and report back to the school board on her findings this spring.  


Cal rugby ready for Canadian challenge

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Wednesday February 20, 2002

When a team wins 11 straight national titles, it becomes apparent that the competition provided within the United States isn’t quite getting it done. That’s where the Cal men’s rugby team is: they haven’t been beaten by an American team since 1996 and routinely beat their domestic competition by 50 points or more. The answer: import tougher opponents. 

That’s what the Bears will face this week, when two Canadian teams come to town. The University of Victoria is up first today, with kickoff scheduled for 3:30 p.m. at Witter Field. The Bears will then face the University of British Columbia at 1 p.m. on Saturday. Cal will head to Canada for return matches in late March. 

The home-and-home set with Canada’s top college programs has become a tradition for Cal. British Columbia handed the Bears their only loss of last season, a 27-25 victory in Berkeley. 

“The Canadian games are definitely one of the high points of the year,” Cal prop forward Mike McDonald said. “The first set of games are especially tough, because we haven’t had enough time to really come together as a team yet.” 

The lack of cohesion hasn’t appeared to hurt the Bears so far this season. They have played six games, winning by an average margin of more than 63 points and breaking the 100-point barrier with a 103-5 win over New Mexico last weekend. Jack Clark, head coach of the Cal team for the past 19 seasons, thinks this year’s team could be the best yet. 

“We could be better than last year,” Clark said. “That’s not a prediction, because there’s certainly a lot we have to accomplish to measure up to last season. But the elements are there.” 

Clark has had unprecedented success in his time at Cal. With 14 national championships in 18 seasons, he has coached the Bears to a 307-54-4 overall record and sent scores of players on to the U.S. national team. But Clark is far from satisfied with his team’s accomplishments. 

“We’ve had pretty much a dream run as of late,” he said. “Intellectually I know it will end at some point, but emotionally we’re not ready to think 2002 might be the end.” 

While Clark’s teams haven’t had to deal with much adversity on the field, this offseason was a painful one for the program. Two former players were killed in the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, former captain Mark Bingham and football player Brent Woodall. Then in late December, starter Dominic Cooke suffered serious injuries in a car accident, leaving him partially paralyzed. 

“It’s a huge blow,” McDonald said of Cooke’s accident. “It put a dark cloud over the team for a while. We were just in shock.” 

Although the Bears haven’t suffered much on the field, with Joel DiGiorgio taking over the halfback spot, Clark knows his players are dealing with bigger issues than winning games. 

“We have to let the feelings take their course. The players should have a range of emotions,” Clark said. “We’re certainly sad for Dominic, but it does make the little things in your life more important.” 

For players like McDonald, who lived with Cooke last year, focusing on playing the game is still important. While the team’s tradition is a bragging point, it also brings with it a lot of pressure. 

“We have a great tradition going, and no one wants to be the team that breaks the streak,” McDonald said.


Council silent on ‘nonaction’ against Cal

By Devona Walker Daily Planet Staff
Wednesday February 20, 2002

In closed session yesterday the city sealed the lid on a possible lawsuit against University of California Berkeley’s plan to put a parking structure and offices on Berkeley’s southside. But perhaps more importantly, it sealed the details of that closed session meeting by further deciding not to report on it — disallowing councilmembers to speak about what took place behind closed doors.  

The proposed construction has been protested by residents living near the northeast quadrant of the campus, claiming the EIR originally drafted for the project failed to address important environmental impacts of the construction and the new buildings. 

Marie Felde, director of media relations for UC Berkeley, was unavailable yesterday but in the past has denied deficiencies in the EIR.  

University officials extended the public comment period well beyond state requirements Felde said. 

 

 

 


Sports shorts

Wednesday February 20, 2002

Keys a finalist for inaugural McDonald’s girls’ game 

Berkeley High senior Sabrina Keys has been selected as one of 100 finalists to play in the first-ever girls’ McDonald’s All-American basketball game. 

Diedra Chatman of Kennedy (Richmond) High was also named to the list of finalists. 

The final rosters for the game will be announced on Feb. 27, with the game scheduled for April 4 at Madison Square Garden in New York City. 

 

BHS-Encinal matchup set for Hercules High 

The game between Berkeley High and ACCAL champion Encinal for the league’s automatic North Coast Section playoff berth will be played on Saturday at 6 p.m. at Hercules High. 

The Lady ‘Jackets were given “competitive anomaly” status before this season, allowing them to play each ACCAL opponent just once, with the games not counting in the league standings. 

The loser of the game may apply for an at-large berth to the NCS playoffs. 

 

Cal baseball rained out 

The baseball game between Cal and University of San Francisco scheduled for Tuesday afternoon was cancelled due to rain. The game, to be played at USF’s Benedetti Diamond, has been rescheduled for April 30 at 2 p.m.


School board weighs budget cuts; City of Franklin closure very likely

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet staff
Wednesday February 20, 2002

Members of the Board of Education say they are poised to close City of Franklin School, lay off the security manager at Berkeley High School and move to a six-period day at BHS, endorsing many of the key budget cuts identified by Superintendent Michele Lawrence in a $3 million package released Friday. 

School board members were more ambivalent about proposed cuts to the school libraries, the reading recovery program, high school athletics, and the seven-period day at Longfellow middle school. 

The board will consider Lawrence’s $3 million budget cut proposal tonight and will vote on it Feb. 28. The board must cut a total of about $6 million to balance next year’s budget, and will likely rely upon heavy, district-wide layoffs to make up the difference. 

 

“Closing a school is probably one of the hardest decisions to make for a school district,” said school board member Terry Doran, discussing the City of Franklin closure, which would save the district an estimated $326,000. “On the other hand, it’s our smallest school. It’s not attracting people as much as we hoped and desired.” 

Lawrence and school board members have argued that the magnet school is underenrolled and has attracted a largely African-American population, making it racially unbalanced. 

City of Franklin advocates say the school should have more time to increase enrollment and diversify its student body. But school board members say the district cannot afford to keep the school open. 

“It’s too bad they don’t have two or three more years to get the school up and running properly,” said board member Ted Schultz. “But we’re in a budget pinch.” 

Board members also endorsed cutting BHS security manager Barry Wiggan, despite ongoing concerns about student safety on campus. Administrative duties would be handled by two recently-appointed “deans of discipline.” 

“I can see that working,” said board President Shirley Issel, discussing the shift of responsibility to the deans. 

“I think it’s great,” added Laura Menard, a parent who has long been critical of security operations at the high school. “I think the security personnel and plan need to be completely redesigned and redeveloped.”  

Wiggan declined to comment. 

Board members are also supportive of Lawrence’s proposal to hold BHS students, who in many cases take seven periods or more, to six periods, saving the district an estimated $520,000. 

Science teachers have raised concerns that the cap will eliminate a successful double-period science program. 

Lawrence has budgeted for 20 to 30 “flex periods” outside the normal day. The superintendent and members of the board have held out the possibility of using those periods for double-period science, but it appears increasingly unlikely that they will. 

Lawrence and Issel have suggested that many of the periods will be used for other activities, such as the student newspaper and leadership courses, and Doran said the program may be too expensive to retain. 

“Our science program probably offers the highest quality science education in the state, and it’s hard to dismantle that,” said Doran. “The question becomes, can we afford it at this time?” 

Rodney Kopish, a science teacher at BHS, said he was “very disappointed” by the possibility that flex time might not be used for double-period science. 

“Given the dismantling they want to do of our department,” he said, “you’d think they’d find a middle ground.” 

Lawrence has also proposed reducing by one level those high school sports that currently field three levels of teams – typically freshman, junior varsity and varsity – for a savings of $34,500. Doran said he hopes to keep the full sports program running.  

“I’m a strong supporter of the athletic program,” he said. “I think it’s a valuable tool – it helps keep students enrolled in the school.” 

Lawrence’s plan includes librarian layoffs at the middle school and high school levels. 

“We’re always the first ones to be chopped,” said Carole Bloomstein, librarian at Longfellow middle school, arguing that students would lose valuable literacy support if she were let go. 

But Lawrence and members of the school board have made it clear that, if they can find savings elsewhere, retaining librarians and reading recovery teachers, also on list, are top priorities. 

Schultz added that he will try to save the seven-period day at Longfellow middle school and at some point expand it to the other middle schools in the district. 

Lawrence estimates that eliminating the seventh period at Longfellow would save the district $221,000.  

 

 


Gov. Davis kicks off re-election campaign at weekend convention

By Malcolm Gay Special to the Daily Planet
Wednesday February 20, 2002

Los Angeles — Speaking at the state Democratic convention this weekend, Gov. Gray Davis praised himself and attacked GOP opponents as uninspired and driven by corporate interests, in what many observers called the unofficial beginning of Davis’ bid for re-election. 

“You can’t lead this state of 34 million people with old ideas and vague generalities,” Davis told the more than 2,500 assembled Democratic delegates. “All three support full energy deregulation. All three believe we should trust the energy companies and the free market to solve all of our energy problems.” 

Hitting a note of toughness that is sure to be one of the hallmarks of Davis’ re-election campaign, the governor warned.  

“In case my opponents were asleep while we were being gouged by generators and ignored by federal regulators, here’s a wake-up call: California will return to its disastrous deregulation scheme over this governor’s dead body.”  

Unlike the rest of the speakers, who, when faced with a Republican president whose approval ratings hover in mid 80th percentile, opted to attack Enron, Davis’ speech had no mention of the bankrupted energy giant. Davis has been criticized for accepting more than a $119,000 in campaign contributions from the Houston-based Enron.  

Davis concentrated instead on his administration’s accomplishments. Citing an increase in nurse-to-patient ratios, an expanded health-care system for needy children and the working poor, and the strongest domestic partnership laws in the nation, Davis boasted that California was a better place now than it was when he entered office.  

“Four years ago, I promised you that California would be stronger, kinder and better now than it was then,” Davis told the cheering delegates. “I have delivered on that promise.”  

Davis will face the victor of the March 5 GOP primary between former Los Angeles Mayor Richard Riordan, California Secretary of State Bill Jones, and businessman Bill Simon.  

In a poll conducted January 29 by the Los Angeles Times, Davis was shown to be in a dead heat with Riordan. 

At a press conference later in the day Davis told reporters that while his main priority was re-election and the governing of California, he declined to rule out a possible presidential (or vice-presidential) bid in 2004. “All that I can tell you is that I have no plans but to work as hard as I can to be re-elected and spend the next four years being governor,” Davis said accompanied by his wife, Sharon. 

If Davis does decide to make a presidential bid, attendees of the convention got a good look at who his likely Democratic opponents would be. Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle of South Dakota, Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts, and Senator John Edwards of North Carolina, were all present Saturday morning to give state Democrats a boost, and, according to many observers, to show themselves off as presidential hopefuls for 2004. 

While none of the three Senators admitted to executive ambitions, none denied the possibility of a 2004 presidential run. Senator Kerry was the most explicit in connecting his name to the office of president. “A number of you have asked me if I’m interested in running for the most powerful office in the land,” he joked in his opening remarks. “And no, I have no interest in being secretary of state of Florida.” 

But while there may have been passing reference to the 2000 election fiasco which placed George Bush in the presidency, criticism of Bush’s policies was distinctly lacking. While none of the speakers dwelled on the events Sept. 11, many made mention of their support of the United States’ efforts to combat terrorism.  

As though in deference to the President’s stellar approval ratings, speakers devoted only a small portion of their time to bashing Bush on domestic issues. But even then, speakers felt compelled to justify their criticism as being a part of the very Democratic process the country is fighting for in its war on terror. Being patriotic and supporting the president’s efforts to combat terrorism, said California Senator Barbara Boxer, “does not mean being quiet and becoming a fly on the wall on every other issue.” 

Criticisms of the president were mainly linked to his administration’s ties to Enron.  

“George Bush has given us a government that looks like it’s run like an Enron board meeting,” said Democratic National Chairman Terry McAuliffe.  

Senator Boxer joined in criticizing the Bush team: “This administration has embraced an energy policy that is drill drill and burn burn,” she said.  

But while many of the speakers spoke out against Enron, Governor Davis reserved his mention of the corporation for the press conference following his speech. Responding to a reporter’s question of whether Davis was considering refunding the campaign contributions given him by Enron to former Enron employees, Davis countered defensively. “No one in America fought Enron harder [than I did],” Davis said.  

“I had to fight Enron tooth and nail--so I see no reason to give back the money.” 

But while many delegates supported Davis, his relationship to Enron kept them from endorsing the governor unequivocally. “You can’t help but question anyone who, under the circumstances, took campaign contributions [from Enron],” said Harvey Kessler, 47, a delegate from Palm Desert, CA. “Enron was charging enormous rates to California while he was taking campaign contributions.” Still, Kessler, who came dressed in a neon Hawaiian shirt, with Uncle Sam hat and tennis shoes added, he wouldn’t judge Davis by a single issue, and in general “liked” the governor.  

Xavier Raeyes of the United Farm Workers (UFW), was less generous with his support. “He’s a Democrat in office,” said Raeyes. “It’s a lesser of two evils. Who do you want? A Republican, or a Democrat?” 

UFW political director Giev Kashkooli was likewise reserved in his support of Davis. “I think he has a mixed record,” Kashkooli said of Davis’ support of farm workers unions and immigrant rights. “There’s a lot more things he could be doing. He’s been slow to act.”  

Kashkooli said that though he thought Davis was sympathetic to the UFW’s cause, he didn’t think Davis had committed much time to it. “I think it’s fair to say that it’s not a priority for Davis,” said Kashkooli. “We’re on his list, but we’re pretty far down on the list.” 

Kashkooli said it was important for Davis to have the support of the UFW “because it basically represents the Latino community.”  

Maria Martinez, the northern vice chair of the Chicano/Latino Caucus was more enthusiastic about Davis. “We strongly support Gray Davis,” she said. “Davis is the first governor who’s gone to Mexico. I think he’s done a very good job.”  

Martinez gave Davis high marks for appointing Latinos to policy-making positions in his government. “We’re very happy about that,” said Martinez. “We’ll do whatever we can to help Davis help Latinos.” 

From the looks of it, Davis may need all the help he can get. Although his party overwhelmingly controls the state government, in the above-mentioned Los Angeles Times poll, less than half of all registered Democrats polled said they would definitely vote for Davis. He’s also going up against a Republican party that has strong national support, an extremely popular president, and a lot at stake in California with its 55 electoral votes. But Davis said he was ready for tough race. “I’m Gray Davis and I am the governor,” he said. “Whichever one of you emerges from the Republican primary--you’re in for the fight of your life.” 


Today in History

Staff
Wednesday February 20, 2002

Today is Wednesday, Feb. 20, the 51st day of 2002. There are 314 days left in the year. 

 

Today’s Highlight in History: 

Forty years ago, on Feb. 20, 1962, astronaut John Glenn became the first American to orbit the Earth, flying aboard Friendship 7. 

On this date: 

In 1790, Holy Roman Emperor Joseph II died. 

In 1792, President Washington signed an act creating the U.S. Post Office. 

In 1809, the Supreme Court ruled the power of the federal government is greater than that of any individual state. 

In 1839, Congress prohibited dueling in the District of Columbia. 

In 1895, abolitionist Frederick Douglass died in Washington, D.C. 

In 1933, the House of Representatives completed congressional action on an amendment to repeal Prohibition. 

In 1944, during World War II, U.S. bombers began raiding German aircraft manufacturing centers in a series of attacks that became known as “Big Week.” 

In 1965, the Ranger 8 spacecraft crashed on the moon after sending back thousands of pictures of the lunar surface. 

In 1971, the National Emergency Warning Center in Colorado erroneously ordered U.S. radio and TV stations off the air; some stations heeded the alert, which was not lifted for about 40 minutes. 

In 1981, the space shuttle Columbia cleared the final major hurdle to its maiden launch as the spacecraft fired its three engines in a 20-second test. 

Ten years ago: Texas billionaire Ross Perot told CNN’s “Larry King Live” he would run for president if his name were placed on the ballot in all 50 states. 

Five years ago: The National Transportation Safety Board called for a speedup in the redesign of the rudder controls on Boeing 737’s, citing potential problems suspected in a pair of deadly crashes. 

One year ago: The government announced the arrest two days earlier of veteran FBI agent Robert Philip Hanssen, accused of spying for Russia for more than 15 years. Space shuttle Atlantis landed in the Mojave Desert after three straight days of bad weather prevented the ship from returning to its Florida home port. 

Today’s Birthdays: Fashion designer Gloria Vanderbilt is 78. Movie director Robert Altman is 77. Actor Sidney Poitier is 75. Actress Marj Dusay is 66. Jazz-soul singer Nancy Wilson is 65. Singer-songwriter Buffy Sainte-Marie is 61. Hockey Hall-of-Famer Phil Esposito is 60. Movie director Mike Leigh is 59. Actress Brenda Blethyn is 56. Actress Sandy Duncan is 56. Rock musician J. Geils is 56. Actor Peter Strauss is 55. Rock singer-musician-producer Walter Becker (Steely Dan) is 52. Actor Edward Albert is 51. Country singer Kathie Baillie is 51. Newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst is 48. Actor James Wilby is 44. Rock musician Sebastian Steinberg (Soul Coughing) is 43. Comedian Joel Hodgson is 42. Basketball player Charles Barkley is 39. Rock musician Ian Brown (Stone Roses) is 39. Actor French Stewart is 38. Actor Ron Eldard is 37. Model Cindy Crawford is 36. Actor Andrew Shue is 35. Actress Lili Taylor is 35. Singer Brian Littrell (Backstreet Boys) is 27. Actor Jay Hernandez is 24. Actress Majandra Delfino (“Traffic”) is 21. Singer-musician Chris Thile is 21. Actor Jake Richardson is 17.


Council chooses plans from Cohen, Rizzo for further study

Staff
Wednesday February 20, 2002

Though various community members lauded the redistricting proposal brought forth by 16-year-old Nick Rizzo, it was Elliott Cohen’s plan that received the unanimous approval of the Council. 

Rizzo thanked councilmember Polly Armstrong for his decision to get involved in the project. 

“I drew these plans with the sense of community building and bi-partisan negotiating I think she has tried to promote,” Rizzo said. 

But some members of the community and council referred to the plan as being too politically based, as it was drawn more in accordance with social demographics than seeking to strictly correct the previous undercounting. 

Rizzo’s proposal was also chosen as an option to further study in a 5-4 vote in perfect accordance to party lines. 

Cohen’s plan received unanimous support for all members of the Council. And it would take the numbers of district 7 where the majority of Unversity of California Berkeley students live and place them into district 8 — undercounted last time around, according to Cohen. 

This proposal will make it very difficult for students who are waging an effort to get representation on the City Council.


San Francisco residents don’t trust elections department

The Associated Press
Wednesday February 20, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Dogged by scandal, the city’s Elections Department has lost credibility in the eyes of many San Franciscans, according to a report by the San Francisco Chronicle. 

In a poll the paper commissioned and published Tuesday, 31 percent of 500 voters said they doubt the city can be trusted to count votes accurately. 

The department has weathered numerous problems in recent years, including a state investigation, missing or uncounted ballots and lost precinct rosters. 

While the paper’s investigation found no evidence of vote rigging, it found elections have been tainted by numerous mistakes. 

“When people can’t trust that their votes are being counted, that’s a real crisis,” said Kim Alexander of the California Voter Foundation, a statewide elections watchdog group. 

In less than three years, the department has gone through four directors — three with no previous elections experience — and lost numerous rank-and-file employees. 

“There is a perception of a department out of control,” said David Binder, who conducted the poll.


Half Moon Bay man claims his share of $193 million lottery

By Colleen Valles The Associated Press
Wednesday February 20, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Andy Kampe was six when his family fled the communists in Latvia, fearing for their lives. He still remembers seeing the Statue of Liberty when they arrived in America. 

Now, 51 years later, the Half Moon Bay business owner is continuing to build his American Dream, and he has California Lottery millions to help him. 

The newest winner, who owns Kampe Construction, received an oversized check Tuesday for the $64.3 million he’ll get before taxes over the next 26 years. Kampe elected to take the money in annual payments, and the first real check, for $1.6 million, should arrive in two to six weeks. 

Kampe held one of three winning tickets for Saturday’s record $193 million jackpot. He grew curious after hearing on the radio Sunday that there was a winner in his small coastal town. 

Kampe checked his 20 “Quick Pick” tickets against the numbers in Sunday’s paper and found he had a winner. 

The two other winning tickets were sold in Southern California, at two 7-Eleven stores in Orange and Montebello. Those winners have yet to come forward. 

Kampe said Tuesday that he and his family — his wife Diane quit her job as a nurse at Coastside Medical Clinic — would “go hide” for about a month to figure out what to do with the money. He has two daughters, Amanda Valerino, 27, who lives in Nevada, and Ana Kampe, 26, who lives in Oregon. 

Kampe said he’s planning to fire himself from his job, travel and possibly make some big purchases. 

“I’ve gone to Europe on business, but I’ve never had a chance to go with my family,” he said. “I’ll probably get myself a pretty hot car. I’ve got a truck now.” 

He’d also like to give to disabled and paralyzed veterans organizations. Kampe said his brother served in Vietnam and a daughter, Valerino, is a U.S. Army veteran. 

Kampe said he plans to visit relatives in Latvia. His relatives in the United States include his brother, sister and mother. They fled to this country after his grandfather, who was a rich man in Latvia, was arrested and shot in the communist takeover of the country. 

Kampe talked to members of the press Tuesday in San Francisco with Valerino. The bashful winner was modest about his luck, but Valerino jumped in to talk up her dad. 

“He did deserve it. He’s the smartest man I know. I don’t know what I’d do without my dad,” she said. “He should be the president.” 

Kampe grew up in Michigan and graduated from Cal Tech in 1966. He moved to Half Moon Bay in 1970 and recently celebrated his 30th wedding anniversary with his wife. 

Kampe bought the ticket at an Alberston’s store, and he said he usually buys $5 to $10 in tickets when the jackpot grows to around $40 million. 

The $193 million jackpot created a buying frenzy as the deadline approached prior to Saturday night’s drawing. Hopeful millionaires snapped up a record $6 million worth of tickets per hour. 

The jackpot was the largest single-state prize ever hit. It was the fifth-largest including multistate games, the California Lottery said. The biggest lottery payout in U.S. history was $363 million in May 2000 for the multistate Powerball game. California’s previous record jackpot was $141 million on June 23, 2001, won by Al Castellano of San Jose. 


Survey finds employer-sponsored insurance rates rose 9.9 percent

The Associated Press
Wednesday February 20, 2002

MENLO PARK — California workers paid nearly 10 percent more for their employer-provided health insurance last year than the year before, although their costs were still under the national average, a survey found. 

Californians paid about $197 a month for employer-sponsored health coverage for one person last year and about $521 a month for family coverage, according to the survey. That was a 9.9 percent increase over the previous year but still under the national average of $221 for single coverage and $588 for family coverage. 

The survey was done by the Health Research and Educational Trust, a private, nonprofit organization that researches the health management field, and by the Kaiser Family Foundation, which said it is not associated with health-care giant Kaiser Permanente. 

The study also found that the percentage of workers in California who are enrolled in health maintenance organizations dropped from 55 percent in 2000 to 48 percent in 2001. 

Results were based on 846 interviews with employee benefit managers in private California firms with three or more workers from May 2001 to August 2001. The margin of error given was plus or minus 3.5 percentage points. 


Bay Area Briefs

Staff
Wednesday February 20, 2002

Kidnapper may be first to hand over DNA 

 

LIVERMORE — Philip Hunter, who is accused of kidnapping a 14-year-old girl, may be one of the first Californians required to provide a DNA sample under a new state law. 

The law sponsored by Assemblywoman Carole Migden, D-San Francisco, added robbery, arson, burglary and carjacking to nine other crimes already eligible for DNA testing, such as murder, sexual assault and kidnapping. 

Hunter, 37, has four prior burglary convictions. He is accused of grabbing the teen-ager as she walked to school last week and forcing her into the trunk of his car. Hunter appeared to be headed for a remote location, possibly to commit a sexual assault, before the girl escaped near Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, police said. 

Livermore police said several agencies contacted them last week about Hunter in connection with similar, unsolved crimes. 

State Attorney General Bill Lockyer, who backed the legislation, says Hunter’s case demonstrates how common it is for allegedly violent criminals to have prior burglary convictions. 

“Forty-three percent of the convicted sexual offenders in California have a prior burglary conviction,” Lockyer said.  

 

 

Man stabs wife, kills her friend 

 

OAKLAND — A man on parole for severely beating his wife five years ago was arrested Monday after allegedly stabbing his wife and killing one of her friends with a 10-inch carving knife, police said. 

James T. Mayberry, 44, called police around 3 a.m. on Monday, told the dispatcher he had stabbed his wife, and then left the house, investigators said. He was arrested a few blocks away. 

Police found Mayberry’s wife, LaShone Mayberry, 33, barely alive in a bedroom, and her friend, Kathy Mitchell, 38, dead. The couple’s three children were asleep in the living room during the incident and were unhurt. 

Oakland Police Department Sgt. Jeff Ferguson, who interviewed James Mayberry with Sgt. Gus Galindo, said Mayberry allegedly claimed the stabbing resulted from an argument that started over him drinking some of the women’s beer. 

Mayberry, who worked as a cook at a Berkeley restaurant, was convicted of assault with a deadly weapon and domestic violence in 1998. He was sentenced to five years in prison and paroled last April on the condition that he stay away from his wife, authorities said. 

Mayberry was arrested on suspicion of two counts of murder and is being held without bail at the Oakland City Jail. If convicted, he could face the death penalty, authorities said. 

 

Hoover Tower bells return to Stanford 

 

STANFORD — The 48 bells of the Hoover Tower carillon have returned home after a two-year trip to their birthplace in Belgium. 

Installation of the first bells began Tuesday morning, said Craig Snarr, Facility Manager for the Hoover Institution. 

Snarr said the bells range from 4 inches to 4 feet tall and weigh between a few pounds to 2.5 tons. 

The bells had been removed from Stanford and sent to the Royal Eijsbouts bell foundry in Ostend, Belgium, as part of a restoration project. 

The carillon’s automatic-play drum, which rotates in a manner similar to a music box activating hammers on the outside of about half the carillon’s bells, also is being restored. It was damaged in the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake. 

The carillon was built in 1938 by the Michiels bell foundry in Belgium and was part of the New York World’s Fair of 1939-1940. After the fair ended, the Belgian American Educational Foundation purchased the carillon and presented it to the Hoover Institution in appreciation of Herbert Hoover’s famine relief efforts in Europe following World War I. 


Cheney says Iraq ’harbors terrorist groups’

SBy Erica Werner The Associated Press
Wednesday February 20, 2002

YORBA LINDA — Vice President Dick Cheney said Tuesday that Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein’s regime “harbors terrorist groups,” expanding on the Bush administration’s claims of a so-called axis of evil made up of Iraq, Iran and North Korea. 

Cheney’s remarks to a luncheon group at the Richard Nixon Library and Birthplace went beyond previous characterizations that Iraq has in the past harbored terrorists. 

Cheney on Friday addressed the Council on Foreign Relations in Washington, D.C., where he said, ”(Hussein) has in the past had some dealing with terrorists, clearly. Abu Nidal for a long time operated out of Baghdad.” 

In Yorba Linda, however, the vice president said the terrorist associations are current. 

”(Hussein’s) regime also harbors terrorist groups including Abu Nidal and the Palestine Liberation Front,” Cheney told a $2,500-a-plate luncheon to raise money for the library. Abu Nidal is a Palestinian mastermind terrorist. 

Cheney, on the second day of a four-day California visit, also repeated the administration’s claim that Iran “is the world’s leading exporter of terror.” 

He commented only briefly on North Korea, noting that President Bush was visiting South Korea Tuesday and would be addressing the administration’s concerns over North Korea’s weapons programs. 

“Each of these regimes has a choice to make,” Cheney said. “The international community should encourage all of them to make responsible choices and to do so with a sense of urgency.” 

U.S. allies have been critical of the “axis of evil” remark, which Bush made in his State of the Union address last month in defining how Washington plans to approach its war on terrorism. But Cheney said Tuesday, “the evidence is compelling.” 

Hussein’s Iraq “has single-mindedly sought weapons of mass destruction, and the means to deliver them,” he said. “Saddam has long employed terror and used chemical weapons against his own people and neighbors. His regime also harbors terrorist groups, including Abu Nidal and the Palestine Liberation Front. Since the mid-1990s, Baghdad has publicly claimed to have a suicide terrorist capability in the Fedayeen Saddam, directed by Saddam’s oldest son.” 

The vice president described the fight against terrorism as “the defining struggle of the 21st century.” 

Before his address to about 150 guests, Cheney was met by a small knot of protesters outside the library. They held signs criticizing the war in Afghanistan and linking Cheney to the failed Enron Corp. 

Cheney and his wife, Lynne, toured the library with President Nixon’s daughter Julie Nixon Eisenhower, and the library foundation awarded the Cheneys the Architect of Peace Award, which honors public service. 

Later, Cheney taped an appearance on “The Tonight Show with Jay Leno.” He said on the show that those responsible for Enron’s collapse of should pay “a very heavy price.” 

Cheney’s visit to California is part of an increasingly public schedule for the vice president. For security reasons he has been largely out of view in recent months in undisclosed locations outside of Washington. 

Leno turned that into a joke, pretending to search for Cheney before he came onstage. 

“Just what the country needs, another undisclosed location joke,” the vice president deadpanned as he popped from behind a closed door. 

Cheney visited the troops at Marine Corps Air Station Miramar in San Diego on Monday, and is scheduled to discuss agriculture with farmers in Fresno on Wednesday and deliver remarks on the new economy in the Silicon Valley on Thursday. 

There is also a political subtext to Cheney’s visit, which comes two weeks before the March 5 primary, when California Republicans will select a challenger to Democratic Gov. Gray Davis. The administration is eager to install a Republican governor in the nation’s most populous state. 

Cheney was expected to raise $1 million for the state Republican Party at a fund-raiser Tuesday evening and was also scheduled to attend fund-raisers for Rep. Richard Pombo, R-Tracy, and Rep. John Doolittle, R-Rocklin.


Venture capitalists’ losses worsen as industry copes with dot-com collapse

The Associated Press
Wednesday February 20, 2002

 

 

NEW YORK — The losses of venture capitalists continued to deepen last year while the industry coped with the fallout from the collapse of the Internet economy, according to a research report released Tuesday. 

Venture capital funds sustained an average loss of 32.4 percent in the year ending Sept. 30, based on numbers compiled by Venture Economics for the National Venture Capital Association, an industry trade group. The loss for that one-year period fell from an average decline of 18.2 percent for the year ending June 30, the report said. 

For the three months ended Sept. 30, venture capital funds lost an average of 10 percent, the report said. 

Like most investors in high-tech companies, venture capitalists have been badly burned by the stock market’s recent distaste for businesses tied to the Internet. To reflect the poor market conditions, venture capitalists have been sharply discounting the value of their portfolios. 

Despite the industry’s terrible showing during 2001, venture capital remained one of the best performing investments over a longer term period. In the three years ended Sept. 30, venture capital funds posted an average annual gain of 53.9 percent, the report said.


Failing Global Crossing gave contracts to son of one key executive

The Associated Press
Wednesday February 20, 2002

BEVERLY HILLS — Global Crossing, which is seeking bankruptcy protection after one of the most spectacular flameouts in U.S. telecommunications history, gave contracts to a fledgling Internet firm run by the son of one of its own senior executives. 

Global Crossing did at least two deals last year with Chicago-based Withit.com, a streaming media company run by the son of Joseph Perrone, executive vice president of finance, the New York Times reported Monday. 

Analysts say there was nothing illegal about the transactions, but there were other firms that might have been better suited to do the jobs. 

“There are a number of companies that are well known and established who stream financial content to investors and traders over the Internet,” said Paul Ritter, an analyst with the Yankee Group, a telecommunications research firm. “Withit is not one of them.” 

Global Crossing spokesman Daniel Coulter said Perrone was not involved in approving the Withit contracts. He could not give details on how the two companies came to work together. 

Coulter said the company was reviewing whether it needed to disclose its relationship with Withit in a future filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. 

Withit’s chairman and president, Joseph Perrone Jr., told the Times: “In no way can I comment on any of that, or whatever is happening with the Securities and Exchange Commission,” he said. “I can’t help you. I can’t talk about this matter.” 

The revelation brings more questions about the finance department of Global Crossing, which filed for bankruptcy protection last month. 

Perrone joined Global Crossing in 2000 after overseeing the company’s accounting methods for independent auditor Arthur Anderson. Those financial practices are now under investigation by the SEC and the FBI. 

Among investigators’ concerns is whether Global Crossing misled investors by booking swaps with other telecom firms as revenue, even though cash often never changed hands. 

In one contract, Global Crossing hired Withit to evaluate the technology in a desktop securities-trading operation Global Grossing was preparing to sell to Goldman Sachs for $360 million. 

Corporate governance experts question whether Global Crossing’s board was objective enough to review the company’s activities properly. 

“In the case of both the Perrone relationship and the board structure, it is not ideal, but from what we know, not necessarily wrong,” said Michael Useem, professor of management at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. 

But the fact that the company is now looking at disclosing its relationship with Withit to the SEC suggests that “it may be a significant business relationship” perhaps one worth the board’s attention, he said. 


Cancer patients hurt by ImClone downturn

By Paul Elias The Associated Press
Wednesday February 20, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Shareholders aren’t the only ones upset by ImClone Systems Inc.’s dwindling stock price and its troubles with the Food and Drug Administration and an angry corporate partner. 

Desperately ill cancer patients fear their lives are being cut short because ImClone botched its FDA application for the approval of the drug Erbitux, which had been eagerly expected for this year. 

“Many patients had hoped for this drug and there was a lot of excitement,” said cancer survivor Pamela McAllister of the Colorectal Cancer Network, a patient-support and lobbying organization. “I, too, had hope for it. Now I don’t know.” 

Erbitux is a new breed of drug, a “smart bomb” that attacks bad cells while leaving good ones alone. It’s so precisely aimed that in limited human tests, it appeared to have few side effects except for some facial acne. 

Most cancer drugs now on the market indiscriminately attack all rapidly growing tissue in the body in the hope they will kill more bad cells than good. Those chemotherapy treatments often produce severe side effects such as fatigue and nausea. 

“I certainly would have a better quality of life without the side effects,” said colorectal cancer patient Vee Kumar, a 47-year-old school psychologist in Kirkland, Wash. “It’s extremely frustrating to realize this drug isn’t available because of incomplete paperwork.” 

No doctors expected Erbitux to be a miracle cure. Still, it came highly touted because results from human tests showed promise in fighting colorectal, pancreatic and head-and-neck cancers, among others. 

The FDA last year granted the drug “fast-track” approval status for treating colorectal cancer, which kills 56,000 people a year in the United States, where about 133,000 people are diagnosed with it each year. 

Erbitux, a molecule that blocks cancer’s ability to fuel its own growth, was seen as a good, last-hope treatment for patients who proved resistant to chemotherapy. 

“The bottom line is that the drug works in some people,” said Dr. Robert Mayer, director of gastrointestinal oncology at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston. “Many of us have been very enthusiastic about this drug.” 

The drug’s reputation grew dramatically in May, when ImClone released data at the American Society of Clinical Oncology’s annual meeting in San Francisco showing that cancer tumors shrank in 22.5 percent of the 120 patients in a clinical trial. That’s a good response for a cancer drug. 

Even before that announcement, online cancer chat rooms had been buzzing and the company’s stock skyrocketed on a steady stream of good publicity. 

Patients badgered their doctors and the company for access to the drug. 

ImClone CEO Sam Waksal told a congressional panel examining “compassionate use” of experimental, unapproved drugs last year that his company received 8,500 requests for Erbitux between May 2000 and January 2001. 

Usually, patients needing unapproved treatments are enrolled in clinical trials meant to gather data for FDA approval. Needy patients not involved in the trials can still obtain experimental drugs through “compassionate use” and “expanded access” programs allowed by the FDA. 

Waksal told the committee the company could offer compassionate use to only 30 patients because of production limitations at ImClone, a small New York City-based company. 

“We know we let people down, but we tried our best,” Waksal said. “Our feeling has been and continues to be that the best and most compassionate thing we can do now is to concentrate on getting the drug approved as expeditiously and as broadly as possible, so that all the patients in need can get this drug.” 

Waksal had hoped the drug would be approved by now. So did Bristol-Myers Squibb Co., which sealed the drug’s sterling reputation in September when it paid $1.2 billion and pledged $800 million more to partner with ImClone and share Erbitux profits. 

Since the FDA refused on Dec. 28 to even review the Erbitux application without more documentation, Bristol-Myers has had write off $735 million from the deal. 

The openly feuding partners plan to meet with the FDA next Tuesday to discuss reworking the application. But even the most bullish ImClone analysts now say Erbitux will be on the market no earlier than late 2003. 

ImClone — which faces three federal investigations and at least a dozen class-action shareholder lawsuits — also has temporarily shelved a plan to petition the FDA to give to Erbitux to more needy patients pending approval, three cancer patient advocates said. 

“We were very close to announcing the expanded access,” said patient advocate Frank Burroughs. “That’s been stopped dead in the tracks.” 

Burroughs, whose 21-year-old daughter died of head-and-neck cancer in May, was among those negotiating with ImClone late last year for expanded access to Erbitux when ImClone got its bad news. 

The advocates said ImClone executives told them they want to await next week’s meeting before resuming their efforts. 

“It’s a shame that it’s not out there,” said Fred Santino of Arlington, Mass., whose wife died in May of colorectal cancer while unsuccessfully seeking Erbitux. “Cancer is bad enough without all of this other stuff going on.” 

——— 

On the Net: 

ImClone: http://www.imclone.com 

Colorectal Cancer Network: http://www.colorectal-cancer.net 

FDA: http://www.fda.gov 


Pacifica goes to task on $4.8 million deficit

By Devona Walker Daily Planet Staff
Tuesday February 19, 2002

Last week KPFA began its pledge drive just around the same time that Pacifica Radio Network announced sharp budget and program cuts as well as staff lay-offs in an attempt to blot out some of the red ink on its beleaguered books. 

Aaron Glantz, producer of Free Speech Radio News at Berkeley-based KPFA, said pending budget cuts are sad but necessary to restore the network’s finances. 

One of the programs to be cut will be the national news (The Pacifica Network News or PNN), which is a half-hour news show airs on four of the five Pacifica stations and on more than a dozen affiliates nationwide. The last day of operations for PNN news was Friday, Feb. 15 and its nine member staff has been furloughed.  

“It’s really sad that they had to close down the national news. I’ve reported for it many times,” Glantz said. “But it was a bloated national news, and it played on very few stations. Perhaps now we can put out a better news that will reach more people.”  

Pacifica Executive Producer of National Programming Brian Gibbons says the cuts will not likely be noticed in Berkeley because KPFA has the capacity to replace the cut programs. 

“There will obviously be some voices that listeners are use to hearing that they will no longer hear. But KPFA more so than other stations will easily be able to fill the slot,” he said. 

PNN will be replaced with Free Speech Radio News. Free Speech Radio News is the broadcast of former PNN reporters who waged a strike against management. 

At present there have been ten lay offs at Pacifica that include staff members with up to 20 years worth of seniority.  

“This doesn’t have a lot to do with the political struggle. It’s an entirely financial concern,” Gibbons said. 

But according to Glantz proposed lay offs will include new personnel brought in to replace former staff members fired after protesting the network.  

Also in an effort to reduce the network’s deficit, flagship program and top fundraiser, Democracy Now!, is being reorganized. A statement released by Pacifica’s new management stated that this will save approximately 25 percent in costs to the network. 

Other national units, including the Pacifica Radio Archives, the national office, and the finance department, will be absorbing cuts of 20 percent.  

The network's senior managers will also be taking a 10 percent pay cut and Coughlin will reportedly take a 25 percent reduction in salary.  

“The national management is trying to shield the stations, including KPFA, from the national debt. So in the meantime, we just have to try to raise as much money as possible,” Glantz said. 

Glantz also said KPFA now has control over their finances and consequently have a real motivation for fund raising. 

Last June Pacifica’s Foundation was criticized by Sen. John Burton, D-San Francisco, for allegedly refusing to share KPFA’s financial information with station management.  

Burton also condemned the foundation for using listener donations to pay for the board’s legal fees and efforts “to oppose union organizing.” 

KPFA journalist David Landau said the station had difficulty even getting access to the money it raised.  

But Glantz and other KPFA activists are placing their hopes in the new Pacifica management and the community to help turn things around. He also said that activists involved in a lawsuit against the network are anticipating a settlement soon with the new management team. 

Former Pacifica News Director Dan Coughlin, fired after talking on air about a one-day boycott of various stations carrying the Pacifica News, is now the network’s acting executive director.  

“We have to make some tough choices,” Coughlin said. “But together with the entire Pacifica community — with listeners, local and national board members, senior managers, and our unions, we’re going to bring this network back to where it has been the last half century – at the cutting edge of American political and artistic life.” 

The 53-year-old nonprofit recently concluded an independent review of its finances — ordered by its new interim board of directors — and revealed an unprecedented working capital deficit of $4.8 million and a projected budget gap for the 2002 calendar year of $1.5 million, according to a statement released by the network. 

“To stop the financial hemorrhaging, the nation’s oldest listener-sponsored network will reorganize its satellite distribution service and national programming division, thus saving more than $1 million over the next year,” according to a statement released by the network. 

Budget cuts and expanded fund-raising plans are expected to close this year’s $1.5 million budget gap without impinging on Pacifica’s core operations at its five sister stations, said a network spokesperson. 

The Pacifica National Board also approved the hiring of Squire, Sanders & Dempsey to handle the network’s relationship with its large creditors.  

Pacifica has been billed for approximately $2.2 million by various law and public relations firms and security companies during the past year. 

“We are bringing clarity and order to Pacifica’s financial crisis,” said Pacifica Board Chair Leslie Cagan. “We will meet the Foundation’s obligations as we revitalize its mission of free speech, corporate-free community radio.” 

The network plunged into deep crisis following the 23-day lock out of staff and community at Pacifica station KPFA in Berkeley in the summer of 1999 and the “Christmas Coup” at Pacifica-owned WBAI station in New York in December 2000. The year before, network executives spent a record amount. In 15 months the network went from a $600,000 surplus to a deficit of almost $5 million. 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Just hanging around pays off big for unexpected gold-medalist

By Jim Litke The Associated Press
Tuesday February 19, 2002

SALT LAKE CITY – Plenty people go through life with wrong-headed notions. The difference between Steven Bradbury and the rest of us is that he has a gold medal to show for his. 

So much for the traditional Olympic motto of “Swifter, Higher, Stronger.” 

Because Bradbury’s is “hang around and wait for a crash.” 

And after the way the 28-year-old Australian won the most improbable of golds in the 1,000-meter short track speedskating final, who’s going to say which is better? 

Midway through the last lap of Saturday night’s race, the only guy trailing Bradbury with 50 meters to go was the Zamboni driver. 

That was by design. 

He had made it through the quarterfinals because the two skaters ahead of him crashed. By the time he started the semifinal, his legs were shot. This time, Bradbury was praying for a crash. He got through instead because the skater ahead of him was disqualified. 

Rather than wrack his brain devising a new strategy the night before the final, Bradbury decided to make productive use of his time. 

He was so sure that Apolo Anton Ohno would win, that he dashed off an e-mail to the American cover boy asking him to plug the speedskating boots he was wearing on the medals stand. That’s because Bradbury had manufactured them. Then he put his head on a pillow and said one final prayer. 

“I was just hoping,” Bradbury recalled Sunday, “for another accident or a collision.” 

For most of the race, he looked exactly like what he was — a slacker. Up ahead, leading a pack of four skaters into the final corner was Ohno, about to deliver the first of an expected four golds. Just outside of Ohno was China’s Li Jiajun. On their heels were Korean Ahn Hyun-soo and Canadian Mathieu Turcotte. 

One moment, all Bradbury could see were flashing blades, jostling skaters and elbows flying at acute angles. In the next moment, miraculously, the thicket of bodies parted like the Red Sea. 

“I can’t recall a race where four guys went down together,” he said. “It doesn’t happen every day.” 

Some athletes’ struggles are worth celebrating as much as their victories. Bradbury’s story is one of those, an overnight sensation that was a dozen years in the making. 

Along the way, he was impaled on a skate blade in one race — a wound that required 111 stitches to close — and broke his neck in another. And yet, somehow, he always found a way to hang around. 

Bradbury was a promising 20-year-old and a gold-medal contender in the 1,000 at the Lillehammer Olympics in 1994. He got wiped out in a first-round crash. His consolation was a bronze in the 5,000-meter relay, Australia’s first Winter Games medal of any kind. 

Four years later, there wasn’t even that much. In Nagano, he finished 19th in the 500, 21st in the 1,000, and the Aussies finished eighth and last in the 5,000 relay. But Bradbury still couldn’t let go. 

He went back home to Brisbane and started making the speedskating boots in the garage of his parents’ home. He used what little money it generated to supplement the stipend he received from the Australian Olympic Committee — about $10,000 annually in U.S. dollars — and moved into their basement to save money. 

He trained at the ice rink they worked at and came here with modest ambitions. John and Rhonda Bradbury came along for once, too. The Bradburys might be Australia’s first family of short track speedskating, but in a country with one winter resort to speak of that doesn’t translate into much. 

John was the national champion almost 40 years ago, and his younger son, Warren, was on the Aussie team from 1995-97. But the family still had to scrimp and save for 18 months to make the trip. 

“Whatever happens,” Rhonda said, “at least this time I’m going to be here to see it.” 

She almost didn’t. The only tickets the Bradburys could afford stuck them in the next-to-last row of seats in the arena. 

Seconds after their son crossed the line with Australia’s first-ever Winter Games gold, his countrymen burst into celebration. John and Rhonda tried calling Warren in Canada, but by the time they got through, a friend answered and said he was already on his way to the bar. 

Fate jumps up and plants a golden kiss on your cheek only once in a lifetime — if you’re lucky. Bradbury’s Olympic moment was the best of these games precisely because it came when no one had a right to expect it. 

“Sometimes it’s a very cruel sport. Sometimes,” he said, “it’s a sport you smile a lot about.’


CIA far more threatening than John Walker Lindh

Arthur B. Waugh Berkeley
Tuesday February 19, 2002

Editor: 

 

In the article about the family of the slain CIA officer, the officer’s family was quoted as saying that John Walker Lindh is a traitor.  

I am sorry that anyone had to die and I may be churlish but I don't really feel much anger, hatred or fear about Lindh.  

The ground is not level but I feel considerable fear from the Office of John Ashcroft and the CIA. The CIA has certainly acted as a terrorist group many times since it was established. One should not be surprised that its members get killed now and then.  

In fact it could be said that some of its deeds inspired Osama bin Laden to act and young Lindh to follow a different drummer.  

Perhaps Lindh could be assigned to 10 years of community service ... cleaning public toilets, etc. 

 

 

Arthur B. Waugh 

Berkeley


Compiled by Guy Poole
Tuesday February 19, 2002


Tuesday, Feb. 19

 

 

Berkeley Garden Club  

Hosts “Crystal Palaces” 

1 p.m. 

Epworth United Methodist Church 

1953 Hopkins St. 

Ann Cunningham, author of “Crystal Palaces” will present slides of glass houses from the turn of the century to the present. Scott Medburry, Director Strybing Arboretum & Botanic Garden, will talk about the history of San Francisco’s Conservatory of Flowers including an update on its recent renovation. 524-4374. 

 

21st Century McCarthyism & The Rise of the Global Police State 

6 - 8 p.m. 

UC Berkeley 

Wheeler Auditorium 

The following speakers present their interpretations of Sept. 11 and its aftermath: Angela Davis, Diane Clemens and Jennifer Terry. Sponsored by the Departments of Women's Studies, Peace and Conflict Studies, & Ethnic Studies, and Professors for Peace. xperales@uclink.berkeley.edu. 

 

Pioneering Woman Federal Judge 

4:30 p.m. 

UC Berkeley 

Boalt Hall, Room 100 

The Hon. Mary M. Schroeder, Chief Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals, 9th Circuit, speaks on "Justice and Mercy." Inaugural event of American Constitution Society for Law & Policy, Boalt Hall Chapter. 642-1741, amconstsoc@law.berkeley.edu. 

 

Berkeley Camera Club 

7:30 p.m. 

Northbrae Community Church 

941 The Alameda 

Share your slides and prints and learn what other photographers are doing. 525-3565. 

 


Wednesday, Feb. 20

 

Staying Connected: Building A Secular Jewish Life 

7:30 - 9:15 p.m. 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St. 

An evening of discussion and song with a Klezmer/Yiddish musician. $5. 848-0237 x 127 

 

Institute of Government Studies 

4 p.m. 

119 Moses Hall 

UC Berkeley Campus 

Gerald Gamm lectures as part of the Historical Institutionalism Seminar. 642-4608, www.igs.berkeley.edu 

 

Colonial Courts, African Conflicts, and the End of Slavery in the French Souda 

4 - 6 p.m. 

UC Berkeley 3335 Dwinelle, Level “C”A talk by Richard Roberts of Stanford University. Sponsored by Department of History, Department of African-American Studies, and Center for African Studies. 642-8338. 

 

Cultural Competency in Healthcare 

6 - 7:30 p.m. 

Berkeley YWCA  

2600 Bancroft Way 

Racial Justice Lecture Series and discussion on overcoming ethnic and gender differences to deliver healthcare in under-served populations. 848-6370, www.ywca-berkeley.org. 

 

East Bay Job Fair 

noon - 6 p.m. 

Henry J. Kaiser Convention Center 

10 10th St., Oakland 

The United Way of the Bay Area, Economic Development Alliance for Business, and Bay Area Works are hosting a job fair. Free and open to everyone. 238-2410, www.uwba.org.  

 


Thursday, Feb. 21

 

 

Barbara Lee 

8 p.m. 

UC Berkeley 

145 Dwinelle Hall 

Rep. Barbara Lee will be on campus. Sponsored by the Commonwealth Club and the Center on Politics. 642-9355, www.igs.berkeley.edu:8880/. 

 

Purim Lecture 

7:30 - 9 p.m. 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St. 

Discover the deeper meaning of Purim as Rabbi Alexander Sheinfeld uses the lens of Kabbalah to explore what Purim has to do with being Jewish and with being human. $10, $8 members. 848-0237 x127 

 

Zimbabwe Wildlife 

7 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment, Inc. 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

Julie Edwards of Rhino Girl Safaris gives a slide presentation showcasing Zimbabwe’s remarkable variety of birds and mammals, and discusses the future of wildlife and the safari industry in Africa. 527-7377 

 

Travel Photography Workshop 

7 - 9 p.m. 

Easy Going Travel Shop & Bookstore 

1385 Shattuck Ave. 

An intensive workshop that focuses on travel photography, with an emphasis on film and equipment security, light and weather conditions, methods to make the most of well-known sites, and ways to approach and photograph strangers. $15. 843-3533 

 

Simplicity Forum 

7 - 8:30 p.m. 

Claremont Branch Library 

2940 Benvenue Ave. 

“TV and Media” – Several people who have given up their TVs will talk about the difficulties and benefits. 549-3509, www.seeds of simplicity.org. 

 

Take the Terror Out of Talking 

noon - 1:10 p.m. 

Calif. Dept. Health Services 

2151 Berkeley Way 

Room 804 

State Health Toastmasters Club is presenting a six-week Speechcraft workshop to help you overcome your fear of speaking in public and improve your communication skills. Cost is $36 for six sessions, Feb. 21, 28 & March 7, 14, 21. 649-7750. 

 


Friday, Feb. 22

 

 

Grand Canyon Splendor: Rafting the Colorado 

7 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment, Inc. 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

Guidebook author and former river guide, Tyler Williams, presents the dramatic beauty of the Grand Canyon in his slide presentation on rafting the Colorado. 527-7377 

 

Still Stronger Women 

1:15 - 3:15 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave 

Short stories. 232-1351. 

 


Saturday, Feb. 23

 

 

Archaeological Institute of America 

3 p.m. 

Shorb House 

2547 Channing Way 

Lecture by Dr. Stuart Swiny discussing Cypriot rituals surrounding fertility, life and death from the Neolithic to the Roman era. 415-338-1537, barbaram@sfsu.edu. 

 

Paying for Public Education: 

Whose Job Is It? 

3 - 5:30 p.m. 

Ocean View Elementary School 

Multi-Purpose Room 

1000 Jackson St., Albany 

A forum with Kevin Gordon of the Education Coalition, who will explain state-level funding for K-12 schools. Candidates for the California Assembly 14th District seat Debate: Dave Brown (D), Loni Hancock (D), and Charles Ramsey (D). 524-7004, hao_kco@pacbell.net.  

 


Monday, Feb. 25

 

 

A Rose Grew in Brooklyn: Stories from a Jewish Girlhood 

7:30 - 9 p.m. 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St. 

Local author and therapist, Rose Fox reads from her memoir. 

 

Institute of Government Studies 

12 p.m. 

119 Moses Hall 

UC Berkeley Campus 

John Matsasuka presents a lecture entitled “For the Many or the Few: How the Initiative Process Changes American Government”. 642-4608, www.igs.berkeley.edu 

 


Tuesday, Feb. 26

 

 

Berkeley Camera Club 

7:30 p.m. 

Northbrae Community Church 

941 The Alameda 

Share your slides and prints and learn what other photographers are doing. 525-3565. 

 


Wednesday, Feb. 27

 

 

Berkeley Gray Panthers 

1:30 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

Defending and improving Medicare. 548-9696, graypanthers@hotmail.com.  

 

Berkeley Mental Health Commission 

6:30 p.m. 

2640 Martin Luther King Jr. Way 


East Bay park officials banking on Measure K funds

By Devona WalkerDaily Planet Staff
Tuesday February 19, 2002

East Bay Regional Park District Board of Directors authored Measure K has so far been coasting toward the March 5th primaries with few coming out in opposition and wide-scale support. 

But how voters will respond to the parcel tax that will cost $12 per year per single family home is still difficult to say. 

Rosemary Cameron, asst.. general manager of public affairs for the East Bay Regional Parks District, said a poll was conducted last fall and illustrated substantial support for the Measure. But Cameron also stated, without further elaboration, that polling indicated a substantial need to educate voters. 

Measure K will be on the March 5 ballot, and if approved, it will bring in $8.4 million annually to pay for maintenance and operation cost of East Bay Regional Parks. 

Park District directors unanimously approved the the details of the measure at their meeting on Oct. 16 in Oakland.  

“Over the past ten years, the District has grown in size by 31 percent," General Manager Pat O'Brien said. “During the same period, funds for maintenance and operations have grown slowly in constant dollar terms.” 

Cameron says that a survey conducted by the park district showed that approximately 14 million people use the various parks and trails on an annual basis. 

“Our survey research indicates that 90 percent of the people in the East Bay use our trails and parks. So what we can say is indeed the regional parks are well used,” Cameron said. “One thing that is really significant about this measure is the specificity of it. There are 531 different projects that will be funded by this measure.” 

Fifty of those projects will be in Tilden Park.  

The Alameda County Taxpayer’s Association, a watchdog group looking out to ensure that public agencies are not overtaxing the citizenry has come out in support of Measure K, Cameron says. 

“So that should tell you how well of a written Measure it is,” she added. 

“The District has taken a number of steps to improve its efficiency in all areas," O'Brien said. “However, continued efficiencies are unlikely to provide sufficient savings to continue developing and opening land banked properties. Therefore, a parcel tax measure is recommended as a means to seek the necessary revenue.” 

“This is really in response to our success," said Director Ted Radke of Martinez, referring to the District's ability to raise and leverage funds for land acquisition and capital improvements since passage of its open space bond Measure AA in 1988.  

The proposed tax is a dollar per month per single-family home, 69 cents per month per apartment unit. A 50 percent discount will be available for low-income seniors. K also comes with a 12 year sunset law. 

Contact reporter: 

devona@berkeleydailyplanet.net 

 

 


St. Mary’s boys, girls both get first-round byes

Staff Report
Tuesday February 19, 2002

Both St. Mary’s High basketball teams received byes for the first round of the BSAL playoffs thanks to their strong regular seasons. The teams will play a second-round doubleheader at home on Thursday. 

The St. Mary’s girls will play at 6 p.m., with the boys following at approximately 8 p.m. The boys will play the winner of the St. Joseph-St. Patrick first-round game, while the girls could play any one of three playoff teams. 

The BSAL coaches also selected the all-league teams on Monday. St. Mary’s guards John Sharper and DaShawn Freeman both made the first team on the boys’ side, with Kennedy’s Devin Peal named the MVP. Chase Moore was named honorable mention for the Panthers. 

On the girls’ side, freshman Shantrell Sneed made the first team for the Panthers, with Kamaiya Warren and Meghan Leary named to the second team. Heidi Spurgeon earned honorable mention honors.


Why not allow Cal, Alta Bates to choke all the life out of Berkeley?

Sedge Thomson Berkeley
Tuesday February 19, 2002

Dear Shirley: 

 

I demand we increase the pressure to choke off life in the Elmwood neighborhoods now! We must become Berkeley’s Urban Gray Exhaust Belt! 

It is time for the neighbors to line up behind city of Berkeley, Alta Bates, the noble UC, and the Traffic Engineering department.  

In these times of homeland defense, we must rally around our values: more traffic! more congestion! Let Fed Ex smack into UPS and cars run over bicyclists!  

Let bicyclists run over pedestrians! Let runners run over walkers! Let walkers run over wheelchairs! Support your local body shop, hospital, chiropractor and osteopath with the collateral damage of our convenient way of life. 

The Willard and Bateman neighborhoods love being trod upon. Give us more traffic! Remove those horrid barriers and give us your fueled, your speeders, your impatient in our streets! 

Plant more orange flags to frame our councillors’ beaming faces on the news while pedestrians take the hit! 

Stop trying any measure of safety to slow traffic. It is a lost cause. Put no more strain on our steering wheels! Save the over-worked souls of the traffic and planning departments who want to run more traffic up our streets over our whiny objections! They work so hard to look after us! 

We poor wretches of the lesser Elmwood get lost if we can't find a street in a straight line. That’s why we live here! Don’t confuse us! We only know how to find our way by following the roaring herd! No more turns! No more turns! 

What a brilliant idea it is to mobilize against more barriers! Alta Bates needs more E-Z in, E-Z out. UC needs E-Z-me-2! Who are we to object?  

Let the cars of the world beat a path past our doors. May we choke on the dust of crashes and the fumes of our wasted breath to change our little neighborhood for the better. What a grand view we'll have from the 50th floor of Alta Bates and its magnificent parking garage.  

The air will be so much better up there. Then the merchants will rejoice. More parking! Lots more parking! 

 

Sedge Thomson 

Berkeley 

 

 

 


Today in History

Staff
Tuesday February 19, 2002

Today is Tuesday, Feb. 19, the 50th day of 2002. There are 315 days left in the year. 

 

Today’s Highlight in History: 

On Feb. 19, 1942, President Franklin Roosevelt signed an executive order giving the military the authority to relocate and intern Japanese-Americans as well as Japanese nationals living in the United States. 

 

On this date: 

In 1473, the astronomer Copernicus was born in Torun, Poland. 

In 1803, Congress voted to accept Ohio’s borders and constitution. (However, Congress did not get around to formally ratifying Ohio statehood until 1953.) 

In 1807, former Vice President Aaron Burr was arrested in Alabama. (He was subsequently tried for treason and acquitted.) 

In 1846, the Texas state government was formally installed in Austin. 

In 1878, Thomas Edison received a patent for his phonograph. 

In 1881, Kansas became the first state to prohibit all alcoholic beverages. 

In 1942, about 150 Japanese warplanes attacked the Australian city of Darwin. 

In 1945, during World War II, some 30,000 U.S. Marines landed on Iwo Jima, where they began a month-long battle to seize control of the island from Japanese forces. 

In 1959, an agreement was signed by Britain, Turkey and Greece granting Cyprus its independence. 

In 1986, the U.S. Senate approved a treaty outlawing genocide, 37 years after the pact had first been submitted for ratification. 

Ten years ago: The Labor Department reported consumer prices rose by just 0.1 percent in January. Former Irish Republican Army member Joseph Doherty was deported from the United States to Northern Ireland following a 10-year battle for political asylum. 

Five years ago: Deng Xiaoping, the last of China’s major Communist revolutionaries, died. Detroit’s daily newspapers accepted a back-to-work offer from employees who’d been on strike for 19 months, but the strikers charged the conditions for return amounted to a lockout. 

One year ago: President George W. Bush opened a museum commemorating the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing. Movie producer-director Stanley Kramer died in Woodland Hills, Calif., at age 87. 

 

Today’s Birthdays: Movie director John Frankenheimer is 72. Singer Smokey Robinson is 62. Singer Bobby Rogers (Smokey Robinson & the Miracles) is 62. Actress Carlin Glynn is 62. Singer Lou Christie is 59. Actor Michael Nader is 57. Rock musician Tony Iommi (Black Sabbath) is 54. Actor Jeff Daniels is 47. Talk show host Lorianne Crook is 45. Britain’s Prince Andrew is 42. Tennis Hall-of-Famer Hana Mandlikova is 40. Singer Seal is 39. Actress Justine Bateman is 36. Actor Benicio Del Toro (“Traffic”) is 35.


Restaurateurs should donate to needy what they now throw away

Charlie Smith Berkeley
Tuesday February 19, 2002

Editor: 

 

As you probably already know, the disposition of solid wastes of all kinds is a major problem in this country. Suitable dump sites are filling up and a lot of usable material is being discarded needlessly. 

Some local governments are being urged by a state policy to recycle increasingly higher amounts of waste from both homeowners and businesses. Newspapers, cardboard, glass, cans and plastic are all able to be recycled. Food has not had much consideration in current recycling. 

But some cities have organizations which collect the edible or left-over unserved food for the poor and homeless. Some grocery stores make their produce, which has a high spoilage rate, available to community groups for the same distribution to the poor. 

One of the best forms of recycling is for homeowners and restaurants to put the kitchen trimmings and table scraps, salads, vegetables and fruits that do not include meat or fat, into separate containers for composting. Composting is a natural process where the proper mix of materials turns back into a fertilizer which is very valuable for the soil. 

Participation in local recycling programs would be excellent publicity for your restaurants and would receive support from most of your diners. I think you restaurant managers should contact your local governments to see if you can participate in efforts to recycle food materials. 

 

Charlie Smith 

Berkeley 

 

 

 


The World Briefly

Staff
Tuesday February 19, 2002

Bush opens trip with discussions on Japanese economy 

 

TOKYO — President Bush, concerned about Japan’s recession-wracked economy, opened a three-nation Asian tour Sunday urging embattled Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi to follow through on long-promised economic reforms. 

Seeking a delicate balance, the U.S. president was publicly embracing Koizumi and his agenda while privately prodding the prime minister to take the painful steps toward reversing a decade-long economic slump, aides said. Bush hopes his support will tame Koizumi’s critics. 

Key to stability in Asia, Japan has solidly supported the U.S. campaign against terrorism. 

After a seven-hour flight from Alaska, the president and first lady Laura Bush stepped off Air Force One and into a cold drizzle late Sunday afternoon. 

 

Communist rebels in Nepal kill 129 

 

KATMANDU, Nepal — Communist rebels killed at least 129 police, soldiers and civilians in unprecedented attacks in northwestern Nepal Sunday, undermining prospects for peace in this poor Himalayan kingdom still recovering from the shock of a massacre at the royal palace last year. 

The attacks on government offices and an airport were the deadliest since the rebels began fighting to topple the constitutional monarchy in 1996 from remote mountain areas in this land of exquisite beauty but violent politics. 

The rebels, who draw their inspiration from Chinese revolutionary leader Mao Tse-tung, had abandoned peace talks and ended a cease-fire in November, saying negotiations had produced no results. The government declared a state of emergency three days later. 

 

Georgia community struggles with task of identifying bodies 

 

NOBLE, Ga. — Distraught families began the wrenching task of trying to identify loved ones Sunday in this rural community where dozens of decomposing corpses were being removed from a crematory. 

Authorities said they had recovered 97 bodies — including one infant — from storage sheds and scattered in woods behind Tri-State Crematory in this hamlet about 25 miles south of Chattanooga, Tenn. 

The final toll is expected to be at least 200, said Dr. Kris Sperry, Georgia’s chief medical examiner. Sixteen people have been identified so far. The discoveries began Friday when a woman walking her dog found a skull. 

“We’re just barely skimming the surface,” Sperry said. “Some of the remains are mummified.” 

Gov. Roy Barnes declared a state of emergency Saturday so local officials could receive state assistance. He visited Noble Sunday afternoon and had a private meeting with about a hundred people who believed their loved ones were at the crematory. 

 

Afghan leader vows stern justice for  

aviation minister’s assassins 

 

KABUL, Afghanistan — Afghan leader Hamid Karzai on Sunday vowed stern justice for high-ranking officials in his own government who he said assassinated the country’s aviation minister. 

Karzai has blamed the minister’s death on a personal vendetta among government officials despite initial reports that said he was killed by a mob of Muslim pilgrims furious over flight delays to Saudi Arabia. 

This year’s hajj — the annual pilgrimage to Mecca — has become a source of contention as the government tries to restore order in post-Taliban Afghanistan. 

Thousands of Afghans are unable to make the journey because of a lack of flights and, in the case of a U.S.-controlled airport in southern Afghanistan, delays in repairing bomb-damaged runways. 

Britain, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia sent planes to pick up thousands of pilgrims. Bad weather caused some of those planes to be diverted to the Pakistani cities of Peshawar and Karachi, Karzai said. 

Israeli army objectors spark national debate on 35-year occupation, limits of protest 

JERUSALEM (AP) — It began with a modest act of defiance: In newspaper ads, 52 Israeli reserve soldiers declared last month they would no longer serve in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. 

Their number has since more than quadrupled, and has sparked a passionate debate in Israel about the limits of legitimate protest. 

For many Israelis, the soldiers’ accounts of acts of random brutality toward Palestinian civilians have also added a new urgency to resolving Israel’s most burning problem — what to do with the territories conquered in 1967. 

The protest has reinvigorated an Israeli peace camp cast adrift by the collapse of peace talks and almost 17 months of Israeli-Palestinian fighting. It is now regrouping under the slogan “Get out of the territories,” with many advocating a unilateral Israeli withdrawal rather than waiting for a peace deal that may never materialize. 

 

Lawyer told Enron how to deal with employees who report allegations 

WASHINGTON (AP) — An attorney at Enron Corp.’s outside law firm advised the company’s in-house legal counsel on how to handle employees who questioned Enron’s accounting practices, a lawmaker leading one of the congressional investigations of the company said Sunday. 

Days before the lawyer’s Aug. 24 correspondence, Enron executive Sherron Watkins had delivered a memo to then-company chairman Kenneth Lay, warning him about what she considered dubious accounting activities. 

“They’re asking the lawyers ... what happens if we fire her?” said Rep. Billy Tauzin, R-La., chairman of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce. 

“It’s the ultimate in skullduggery,” said Ken Johnson, spokesman for the House committee. 

 

Skating scandal overshadows history-making Olympic week 

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Picabo Street competed in her last Olympic race, Americans went 1-2-3 in a winter event for the first time in 46 years and a snowboarder who had a liver transplant won a bronze medal. 

Who knew, right? 

While the world was absorbed with a skating dispute that will forever stain these games, 2,500 other athletes went on with the show — their Olympic moments overshadowed by scandal. 

Now that Canadian skaters Jamie Sale and David Pelletier finally have their gold, athletes and fans have but one plea as the games enter their final week: Move on! 

The controversy consumed the first half of the Olympics, beginning with Monday night’s pairs competition when the Russians narrowly won the gold medal over the Canadians. 

After a week of dueling news conferences, behind-the-scenes investigations and, finally, charges that a French judge was pressured to vote for the Russians, the IOC on Friday awarded the gold to the Canadians as well. 

 

‘John Q’ goes public with No. 1 debut at movie theaters 

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Denzel Washington, fresh off his latest Oscar nomination, found a captive audience at theaters as “John Q” debuted as the top weekend film. 

Starring Washington as a desperate dad who holds an emergency room hostage to secure a heart transplant for his dying son, the movie took in $20.6 million, according to studio estimates Sunday. 

Britney Spears had a solid big-screen premiere in “Crossroads,” avoiding the box-office pitfalls encountered by some pop stars — notably Mariah Carey with “Glitter” — when they cross over to film. “Crossroads” was No. 2 with $14.6 million. 

Disney’s animated “Return to Never Land,” a sequel to its classic “Peter Pan,” opened in third place with $11.8 million. 

Bruce Willis’ “Hart’s War,” a World War II POW drama, had a so-so opening of $8.3 million, coming in at No. 7. The weekend’s other new movie, the police parody “Super Troopers,” tied “Black Hawk Down” for No. 8 with $6.2 million. 


What has 18 legs and often predetermines the results of Olympic events?

Tom Mitsoff Orange Co.
Tuesday February 19, 2002

Editor: 

 

It’s the panel of figure skating judges, of course!  

Last week when a French judge was suspended after admitting that she had been pressured to help fix the final standings of the pairs figure skating event, it was the first public admission by the bodies that govern international skating and the Olympics that such incidents actually may take place, though the suspicion has been there for years. 

The French judge’s vote was critical. She was among five of the nine judges – amateur sport’s version of the Supreme Court – who voted to award the gold medal to the Russian duo of Elena Berezhnaya and Anton Sikharulidze. The other four judges joining her in the majority opinion were from Russia, China, Poland and the Ukraine. The minority opinion judges were from the United States, Canada, Germany and Japan. If you see a political landscape forming here, it’s not your imagination. The Cold War is apparently alive and well among Olympics judges, and the French judge appeared to have defected. 

The International Olympic Committee Friday voted to award a second gold medal to Canadians Jamie Sale and David Pelletier, who were the obvious winners in the court of public opinion as well in the minds of many long-time observers of the sport. 

Figure skating judging is easy to skew is because most of us don’t understand the finer points of a lutz, what makes a quality salchow or how to analyze whether a triple toe loop was performed to perfection. Ninety-nine percent of figure skating viewers know that if the skaters don’t fall or stumble, that’s good, and that if they look perky and pick good music, that’s also good. But most of us know when we hear commentators like Dick Button and Scott Hamilton critique the landing position following the triple axel, they might as well be talking about quantum physics, because we really don’t know what the heck they are talking about. 

Ah, but the judges do. They are experts. They ought to know – right? Perhaps you remember some figure skating event that you watched in the past, and you just knew that skater A had it all over skater B. But when skater B won, you just figured that those expert judges knew more than you and must have seen skater A bend her leg slightly during that camel spin. 

But now we know that we shouldn’t have mistrusted our untrained eyes so much.  

The Russian pair apparently was supposed to win last week. In the 1998 Winter Olympics at Nagano, Japan, Berezhnaya and Sikharulidze fell twice and missed three other elements in their two programs and still received a silver medal for their efforts. 

Russian-born Alexander Zhulin, a 1994 Olympic silver medalist who now coaches U.S. ice dancers Naomi Lang and Peter Tchernyshev, said deal-making to pre-determine results is rampant. 

 

Tom Mitsoff, 

Orange County


Stars, makers of ‘Sex with Strangers’ come to town

By Devona Walker Daily Planet Staff
Tuesday February 19, 2002

This weekend a documentary following the adventures and exploits of several swinging couples will premiere at Landmark's Lumiere Theatre, and selected showings will also feature a Q&A with the filmmakers Joe and Harry Gantz 

Also featured at the Friday and Saturday nights showings will be discussions with some of the film’s stars. 

Joe and Harry Gantz are Emmy award winning director/producers who established View Film, a film and television production company, in 1984. Their work explores very intimate aspect of peoples’ lives and relationships, and has been both critically and commercially successful. “With this venture they have created a continually surprising film and intimate portrayal,” said Elizabeth Einstein of ESQUIRE.  

“Sex With Strangers” offers a sexy, funny and outrageous perspective on an underground world,” she added. 

Most documentaries search for defining moments, where people reveal themselves in intimate, personal ways. This film focuses almost solely on such revelations.  

Characters James and Theresa are classic swingers who aggressively seduce couples wherever they go. Their protégé Calvin attempts to share his sexual freedom with them — and jealousy and psychodrama soon follows. 


Re: ‘Cabbies learn about sensitivity’

Helen Wheeler Berkeley 
Tuesday February 19, 2002

Editor: 

 

Berkeley seniors enjoy a wonderful taxi scrip program. But this business of the insensitive drivers has been euphemised too long. Twenty-five dollars’ worth of so- called sensitivity training does not deal with or even acknowledge the nitty gritty of sexism-ageism.     

Why don’t we hear more complaints from men? Because most seniors are women; most low-income seniors are women; and most seniors relying on taxis are women.   

Time and again testimony at senior center meetings re taxi service-related problems have bottom-lined the drivers’ sexist-agist practices. The fact that many of the drivers are perpetuating traditions they have enjoyed abroad does not mitigate the problem. 

 

Helen Wheeler 

Berkeley   

 

 

 


Feds now responsible for nation’s airline security

The Associated Press
Tuesday February 19, 2002

Airline passengers had their airport routines sharply altered after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and now the way they’re protected has changed as well. 

The new Transportation Security Administration took over responsibility for airline security Sunday, the first step toward a system where better-trained, higher-paid federal employees screen passengers and luggage. 

The new system received two early tests Monday. 

At Los Angeles International Airport, an inactive Army National Guardsman tried to pass an nonfunctioning military explosive through airport security and was arrested. A screener became concerned after noticing the device, which resembled an M-80 firecracker, said Sgt. Greg Glodery of the Los Angeles Police Department. A Federal Aviation Administration official said the device was found in the man’s carry-on luggage. 

At New York’s La Guardia Airport, a flight that had left for Cleveland was forced to return after it was discovered that one passenger had not been properly screened, FAA spokesman Laura Brown said in Washington. A concourse was evacuated and passengers were screened again after the flight returned. 

Tanie Guy, an Oracle Corp. employee, now arrives two hours early at the airport. “They’re a bit stricter, to say the least,” he said before going through the security checkpoint en route to San Francisco. 

“If a private organization does it, they’re looking to make money so they’re cutting costs and cutting corners in order to make money,” said Brandon Buhai of Chicago, departing O’Hare Airport, also for San Francisco. “You hope cost is not as much of a concern to the government.” 

Travelers said security changes weren’t dramatic.


Few lottery dollars go to education

The Associated Press
Tuesday February 19, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — To minimize the pain of buying lottery ticket duds, people often console each other, saying at least the lost money goes to a good cause: public schools. 

Despite advertisements that once hailed the lottery as a major solution to California’s education funding woes, however, lottery revenues cover less than 2 percent of the state’s education budget. 

The lottery funneled nearly $1 billion to schools last year. That translates to about $144 per student from the lottery, but only 1.8 percent of the state K-12 education budget.When the lottery started in the mid-1980s, advertisements billed it as vehicle through which to aid poorly funded schools.  


Davis’ anti-Riordan ads do little for voters

By Jim Wasserman The Associated Pres
Tuesday February 19, 2002

SACRAMENTO — For three decades, the legal right to abortion has been a fundamental cornerstone of American life. 

Suddenly, however, despite polls showing it near the bottom of voters’ concerns, abortion tops the agenda for the California’s March 5 Republican primary for governor. 

During their debate Feb. 13, the top three GOP candidates bickered about abortion, which Democratic Gov. Gray Davis injected into the race with a series of attack ads claiming Republican former Los Angeles Mayor Richard Riordan is soft in his support of abortion rights. 

All of that comes in a state where, experts say, the governor has a limited practical effect on the issue. 

California history, since Gov. Ronald Reagan signed California’s first abortion rights law in 1967, and the U.S. Supreme Court issued its 1973 Roe vs. Wade decision legalizing abortion, shows years of such abrasive abortion politics. Lately, it’s grown quieter with time and establishment of legal precedents. 

“It has changed quite a bit over the years. In the 1970s and 1980s there were tons and tons of anti-abortion legislation,” said David Alois, electoral affairs director for Planned Parenthood Affiliates of California. 

Though legislators wrangled incessantly during those decades over publicly funded abortions and parental consent issues, California’s courts largely set the rules. In 2000, the state reported approximately 87,000 abortions. 

Only one governor, Republican George Deukmejian from 1983 to 1991, maintained an active anti-abortion agenda. Yet his attempts to deny Medi-Cal funding for abortions and require minors to get parental or court permission first repeatedly failed. 

A bill Deukmejian signed in 1987 requiring parental consent faced an immediate injunction by a San Francisco Superior Court. Nine years later the California Supreme Court sided with Deukmejian, ruling 4-3 that requiring parental consent was constitutional. One year later a new court — with two new appointees by moderate Republican Gov. Pete Wilson — voted 4-3 to reverse the decision. 

Wilson and the Legislature also ended 12 consecutive years of budget amendments banning Medi-Cal funding for abortions. State courts had quashed them all. Wilson also ended Deukmejian’s practice of banning the funding in his proposed budgets. 

Activists on both sides of the abortion debate said courts are why a governor’s race matters. 

“Obviously, the judicial appointments are always key,” said Jan Carroll, legislative analyst for the California ProLife Council. 

While campaign insiders defend their abortion strategies and activists on both sides of the issue follow them closely, outsiders shake their heads. 

“That Davis ad is crazy. It goes way too far,” said Paul Milbury, a Glendale businessman who sells historic guns to collectors. Milbury, who calls himself “anti-abortion,” said, “Everything in government now is strictly emotional. They always try to scare us.” 

Davis’ attacks make “it sound like Riordan’s a rabid anti-abortionist, and I don’t see him that way,” Milbury said. “And again, he’s not going to be doing anything about abortion even if he was. It’s a federal issue.” 

At Phoenix Books in San Luis Obispo, owner Bruce Miller called it more “dogma to divide the world between Republicans and Democrats.” He described himself as “pro-choice.” 

Indeed, for the sudden insistence on a “litmus test” for abortion, as Republican candidate Bill Simon complained last Wednesday, the level of interest of voters in abortion is minimal, polls show. 

The state’s newest Field Poll, released the day of the Republican debate, showed abortion ranked 25th among 28 issues that voters care about. Nearly four in 10 of 1,022 people polled said they were “not concerned” about abortion. 

Health care and schools topped the list. 

Field pollster Mark DiCamillo said Davis created the abortion issue with TV ads to push it into the Republican primary. The strategy, he said, could be called “cynical,” but it puts Republican candidates into a “no-win” situation over an issue that divides their party. Davis campaign spokesman Roger Salazar admitted that issues of education, health, public safety and transportation are more important to people than abortion.


PETsMART stocks skyrocketing

The Associated Press
Tuesday February 19, 2002

PHOENIX — When Rick Piper wants to reward his 6-year-old, he says only one place will do. 

It has everything his boy could want — food, toys, clothing accessories and often same-sized friends to mingle with inside or outside the store. 

“We come at least once a month,” said Piper. “Anytime I want to get him all excited, I just have to say four words: Wanna go to PETsMART?” 

Piper, a local office worker, and his beloved border collie Rocky are exactly the customers PETsMART had in mind when the company opened its first pet supplies store here 15 years ago. 

The Phoenix-based retailing giant — whose motto is “Where pets are family” — now has more than 560 superstores across the United States and Canada, catering to all kinds of animals and the humans who adore them. 

A recent push by PETsMART to remodel most of its outlets and an added emphasis on in-store customer service also is paying off. 

After posting losses in 2001, the company’s stock has climbed nearly 188 percent in the past year with shares quadrupling in price, from $2.50 last March to almost $11 in recent weeks. 

Third-quarter earnings this year were at $5.8 million on sales of nearly $599 million, up 11 percent from the same period in 2001. 

Fourth-quarter earnings will be announced in mid-March. PETsMART Chairman and Chief Executive Phil Francis said the numbers should be strong again since “the fourth quarter is typically our best quarter.” 

A major factor in the upswing is the remodeling of PETsMART’s old stores — doing away with a warehouse look in favor of boldly decorated outlets with supplies neatly organized for pets ranging from cats and dogs to fish, birds and reptiles. 

Francis said more than 200 stores have been remodeled so far with another 180 targeted for next year. There also are plans for more new stores. 

“By November of 2003, we’ll have about 600 stores and all of them will be in the format we’ve recently gone to,” Francis said. “We think the store count we can eventually get to in North America is 1,100.” 

Analysts say PETsMART’s growth plan is not far-fetched despite the slowing national economy 

“The pet industry is almost recession resistant,” said David Mann, an analyst for New Orleans-based Johnson Rice & Co. “There’s a good tailwind behind the industry and it’s growing at a pretty healthy pace. It’s being helped by multiple-pet households. 

“I could see PETsMART growing by several hundred more stores. They have a new store format that’s very attractive.” 

Full-service pet styling salons now offer everything from baths to toenail trimming and teeth cleaning. 

PETsMART also has obedience classes and some stores provide veterinary care through animal hospitals and wellness clinics. 

And for those wanting to adopt a cat or dog, PETsMART has placed more than 1 million pets in new homes through its in-store adoption centers. 

“The main thrust of our business is the stores and the store customers,” Francis said. 

He said the company has changed the tone of its service. 

“Our e-commerce division is no longer a separate business. We’ve folded it in and integrated it. The Web site is still alive and you can still get information and some limited shopping there, but our main business is the stores. 

“We used to sell just food and stuff for pets,” said Francis. “Now, we think of ourselves as helping pet parents provide total lifetime care.” 

PETsMART began with just two stores in Phoenix in 1987. It expanded to Colorado and Texas the following year; then to California, Nevada, New Mexico, Missouri, Illinois and Oklahoma by 1991; and to Utah, Georgia, Florida and Idaho the next year. 

The company went public in 1993, raising more than $125 million through its initial stock sales. By year’s end, it had 107 stores in 19 states. 

Then came huge expansion years in 1994 and 1995 when PETsMART bought 29 PETZAZZ stores in five Midwestern states, 60 Petstuff superstores in the eastern United States and Canada; and The Pet Food Giant’s 10 superstores in New Jersey, Long Island and Philadelphia. 

PETsMART also acquired two worldwide catalog retailers — one for pet supplies and accessories and the other for discount brand-name tack, riding apparel and equine supplies. 

In 1999, the company launched its Web site and opened its 500th store. 

PETsMART’s biggest competitor is San Diego-based Petco Animal Supplies Inc., which was founded in 1965 and has 560 stores in 41 states and the District of Columbia. 

Petco also sells goods online and is seeking to become a publicly traded company again after losing $16 million for the 12 months ending Nov. 3 despite $1.3 billion in sales. 

Mann said PETsMART and Petco represent “a dual-opoly where both major players are doing well and there is not a third or fourth player going.” 

Francis said his company’s focus is just “doing a better job of taking care of the pet parent” and not worrying about Petco. 

Customers like Steven McDaniel have noticed. The Phoenix accountant has gone to both superstores to comparison shop and takes his business to PETsMART. 

“The prices are cheaper and the people are much friendlier,” McDaniel said as his dog made its way toward the PETsMART doors.


Disney chief to face fire at shareholders meeting

The Associated Press
Tuesday February 19, 2002

HARTFORD, Conn. — When shareholders of The Walt Disney Co. meet here Tuesday, they will be treated to a show as carefully written and rehearsed as a Broadway play. 

More than 1,000 shareholders and their guests will view clips from upcoming Disney movies, watch the quirky, funny commercials used to advertise sports network ESPN and be greeted as they enter the Hartford Civic Center by Mickey, Minnie and other Disney characters. 

But the well-planned Disney magic will likely not be enough to soothe shareholders, who have seen their stock languish in recent years and want to know what their company plans to do about it. 

Disney chief executive Michael Eisner and other executives know the questions will be tough and are prepared to answer them. 

“Are the shareholders better off today? Yes. Are they richer? No. Will they be richer going forward? Yes,” said Disney spokesman John Dreyer, summarizing the comments Eisner intends to deliver. 

“It doesn’t work to point out the tremendous value creation during most of the years since 1984 nor the enormous growth of Disney to become a worldwide media company,” wrote Eisner, who joined the company in 1984. The company has also been the subject of rumors about Eisner’s leadership and Disney’s status as a possible takeover target, given its lagging share price. Both Eisner and President Robert Iger did not receive bonuses this year because the company failed to reach certain financial targets. Still, analysts say the current management team still has time to turn the company around before Eisner’s job is called into question. 


Are thieves checking your mail?

By Devona Walker Daily Planet Staff
Monday February 18, 2002

A relatively new and surprisingly innovative scam targeting residences has been discovered where thieves steal checks, then blot out the pay to the order of line with ink remover. This allows them to fill in the line with whatever name they want and makes it fairly difficult to trace down the culprit, police say. 

The Berkeley Police Department was first made aware of this scam approximately a month ago and has notified area neighborhood associations to make their members aware. The police say that bills should and checks should not be left in mailboxes where thieves may get at them, and if anything unusual is noticed they should notify the authorities as well as their bank immediately. 

Many residents, however, remain unaware of the potential threat. 

Berkeley resident Charles Fountain, who is not a member of any neighborhood association said he had not heard of any such scam.  

“I haven’t heard about it, but I don’t leave checks out in the mailbox anyway,” Fountain said.  

The ink remover is typically bought online but is also available at specialty arts and crafts stores. 

Berkeley retailers Decorated Paper and Amsterdam Art say the supplies are often bought for people who want to remove resistant ink from surfaces. They were unaware of the scam as well. They have not noticed any pick up in the purchase of the ink, a spokes people from both retailers said. 

A quick Internet search, however, revealed several places where the ink remover could be purchased.  

FirstGov for Consumers, a federal advocacy group with a we site that offers information about various potential threats, have already looked into these scams and say they do not think it is as new as it appears. 

“The ink remover has been on the market at specialty stores for some time now,” said James Dell of the Consumer Sentinel. “It’s really a natural adjunct to identity theft which is rampant as you know on the Internet.” 

The Identity Theft Data Clearinghouse, a federal government database for tracking, says complaints have been lodged there about lost or stolen checks that have come back to account holders chased. 

They also stated that perhaps not so many people know about the potential threat is because many of these types of crimes increase in prevalence with notoriety. 

“Sometimes news stories and alerts and warnings succeed more in turning lights on the mind’s of criminals then helping the potential victims,” Dell said. “It’s a balancing game. When the complaints get to a certain level, then it’s time to alert consumers and quick.” 

The Consumer Sentinel now contains more than 100,000 complaints. The Clearinghouse information provides law enforcement agencies with a broad range of complaints, allowing them to spot patterns of illegal activity. 

Another purposed of The Clearinghouse is to enable policy makers and to get a sense of the extent of the types of theft that is taking place. 

 

Contact reporter: 

devona@berkeleydailyplanet.net 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Berkeley High boys’ soccer loses NCS quarterfinal on penalty kicks

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Monday February 18, 2002

A miraculous goal at the end of regulation wasn’t quite enough to get the Berkeley High boys’ soccer team past Castro Valley in the North Coast Section quarterfinals on Saturday night, as the ’Jackets fell on penalty kicks. 

Castro Valley goalkeeper Ryan Jimenez stopped three of Berkeley’s five attempts during the final tiebreaker, giving his team a 2-1 win. Jimenez also made 12 saves in the game. 

Berkeley barely made it to overtime. Down 1-0 since Alex Cameron’s header goal in the 21st minute of the game, the ’Jackets grew increasingly desperate late in the second half, pushing more players to the front with every attack. They finally broke through during injury time, as a Liam Reilly throw-in landed in the Castro Valley goalmouth. Several players hacked at the ball, and it ended up at the feet of Berkeley’s Willie Vega, who slammed it into the back of the net for a last-gasp tie. 

“My players were pretty down after (Berkeley) tied the game, but they fought through it,” Castro Valley head coach Al Peacock said. “For them to maintain their composure was all I could ask for.” 

Vega nearly crushed the Trojans’ hopes in the first overtime period, curling a shot over Jimenez that hit the underside of the crossbar and away from the goal. 

Berkeley dominated the next extra period as well, as Jimenez made two saves and Berkeley defender Chris Darby bounced a header off of the post. 

“Their goalkeeper was the difference today, but I’ll tell you what: the post was his best friend,” Berkeley head coach Janu Juarez said. “How many balls did was have go off the frame?” 

The ’Jackets knew they would be at a disadvantage in a shootout, as Jimenez, who will play at Sacramento State next year, is considered one of the best goalkeepers in the state. 

“We beat them in every aspect except the shootout,” Berkeley senior Chris Davis said. “But we knew that if it came down to that, it would be tough for us to win. I know Ryan, and he’s tough to beat.” 

The ’Jackets were hampered by the field conditions, with a torrential downpour an hour before the game turning the surface into a quagmire. The Berkeley players, used to their home Astroturf, looked as if they were playing on skates for much of the game. 

Berkeley outshot Castro Valley 18-10 in the game, but in the end they just didn’t finish enough of their chances. As the 10th seed in the playoffs, few expected them to win a game, much less take the second-seeded Trojans to penalty kicks. 

“Sometimes the best team doesn’t win,” Berkeley defender Victor Mendoza said. 

But Juarez had a different take on the outcome. 

“There are no sour grapes here. The best team is the one advances,” Juarez said. “That means they’re the better team tonight. But make no mistake: we took them to the mat.” 

There was no shortage of teary eyes on the Berkeley sideline after the game, especially on the outgoing seniors. Davis, who plans to play at Brown University next year, said this year’s team was a special one. 

“I’ve been playing soccer year-round for the last 12 years, and this is the best season I’ve ever had,” Davis said. “I love everybody on this team.”


Right turn only is wrong for Telegraph Ave.

Rob Pratt, Coalition to Save Telegraph
Monday February 18, 2002

Editor: 

 

On 1/30 I attended a City planning design meeting at the Claremont Library (re.the Hillegass Bicycle Boulevard).  

City staff along with Berkeley's Bicycle Talaban and a few assertive anti car residents have completed a plan to install 6 right turn only control devices at Ashby on Benvenue, Hillegass and Regent in both directions. 

Additionally large circles will be installed at Channing, Parker & Stuart intersections of Hillegass.  

Also two, one-lane only, hour glass shaped chokers are to go in the middle of Stuart-Russell & Webster-Woolsey blocks of Hillegass.  

This and more is happening in the name of bicycle safety on a quiet benign street that most cyclists avoid.  

We use Regent or Benvenue instead!  

The most alarming of all these ridiculous street de-construction plans being advanced by the anti-car extremists is the approved plan to reduce Telegraph to one lane in each direction from UC to Broadway.  

It's called the AC Transit MIS express bus lane plan.  

Along with the loss of 2 travel lanes most (40-50) center left turn safety pocket lanes will also be eliminated. Also the center of Telegraph will have a continuous median for blocks, preventing vehicles from turning left or crossing it except at Ashby, Alcatraz, 51rst. ST, etc. 

Telegraph conducts at least 60-70,000 cars a day. It works exceedingly well considering its narrow configuration. 

It is the Mississippi of the South Campus-North Oakland area. This express bus lane experiment will bring permanent congestion and gridlock to the whole area.  

It is interesting that most residents, merchants and property owners, aren't even aware of this destructive plan. 

 

Rob Pratt,  

Coalition to Save Telegraph 

 


Staff
Monday February 18, 2002


Monday, Feb. 18 

BART Operates Regular Saturday  

Service for “President’s Day," 

Beginning at 6 a.m. until midnight on all five lines. 465-2278. 

 

The East Bay Coalition Against the War 

Movie/Speaker and Discussion Night 

7 - 9 p.m. 

Fellowship of Humanity  

390 27th St., Oakland 

We will show the Noam Chomsky Video on 9/11 and the War on Terror. Plus guest speaker, Denny Riley, Vietnam Veteran and a member of the Veterans Speaker's Alliance. The film and speaker will take about one to one and a half hours. The rest of the time will be devoted to small and large group discussion about our current struggle in response to "the war on terrorism." 

 


Tuesday, Feb. 19

 

 

Berkeley Garden Club  

Hosts “Crystal Palaces” 

1 p.m. 

Epworth United Methodist Church 

1953 Hopkins St. 

Ann Cunningham, author of “Crystal Palaces” will present slides of glass houses from the turn of the century to the present. Scott Medburry, Director Strybing Arboretum & Botanic Garden, will talk about the history of San Francisco’s Conservatory of Flowers including an update on its recent renovation. 524-4374. 

 

21st Century McCarthyism & The Rise of the Global Police State 

6 - 8 p.m. 

UC Berkeley 

Wheeler Auditorium 

The following speakers present their interpretations of September 11 and its aftermath: Angela Davis, Diane Clemens and Jennifer Terry. Sponsored by the Departments of Women's Studies, Peace and Conflict Studies, & Ethnic Studies, and Professors for Peace. xperales@uclink.berkeley.edu. 

 

Pioneering Woman Federal Judge 

4:30 p.m. 

UC Berkeley 

Boalt Hall, Room 100 

The Hon. Mary M. Schroeder, Chief Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals, 9th Circuit, speaks on "Justice and Mercy." Inaugural event of American Constitution Society for Law & Policy, Boalt Hall Chapter. 642-1741, amconstsoc@law.berkeley.edu. 

 

Berkeley Camera Club 

7:30 p.m. 

Northbrae Community Church 

941 The Alameda 

Share your slides and prints and learn what other photographers are doing. 525-3565. 

 


Wednesday, Feb. 20

 

Staying Connected: Building A Secular Jewish Life 

7:30 - 9:15 p.m. 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St. 

An evening of discussion and song with a Klezmer/Yiddish musician. $5. 848-0237 x 127 

 

Institute of Government Studies 

4 p.m. 

119 Moses Hall 

UC Berkeley Campus 

Gerald Gamm lectures as part of the Historical Institutionalism Seminar. 642-4608, www.igs.berkeley.edu 

 

Colonial Courts, African Conflicts,  

and the End of Slavery in the French Souda 

4 - 6 p.m. 

UC Berkeley  

3335 Dwinelle, Level "C" 

A talk by Richard Roberts of Stanford University. Sponsored by Department of History, Department of African-American Studies, and Center for African Studies. 642-8338. 

 

Cultural Competency in Healthcare 

6 - 7:30 p.m. 

Berkeley YWCA  

2600 Bancroft Way 

Racial Justice Lecture Series and discussion on overcoming ethnic and gender differences to deliver healthcare in under-served populations. 848-6370, www.ywca-berkeley.org. 

 

East Bay Job Fair 

noon - 6 p.m. 

Henry J. Kaiser Convention Center 

10 10th St., Oakland 

The United Way of the Bay Area, Economic Development Alliance for Business, and Bay Area Works are hosting a job fair. Free and open to everyone. 238-2410, www.uwba.org.  

 


Thursday, Feb. 21

 

Barbara Lee 

8 p.m. 

UC Berkeley 

145 Dwinelle Hall 

Rep. Barbara Lee will be on campus. Sponsored by the Commonwealth Club and the Center on Politics. 642-9355, www.igs.berkeley.edu:8880/. 

 

Purim Lecture 

7:30 - 9 p.m. 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St. 

Discover the deeper meaning of Purim as Rabbi Alexander Sheinfeld uses the lens of Kabbalah to explore what Purim has to do with being Jewish and with being human. $10, $8 members. 848-0237 x127 

 

Zimbabwe Wildlife 

7 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment, Inc. 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

Julie Edwards of Rhino Girl Safaris gives a slide presentation showcasing Zimbabwe’s remarkable variety of birds and mammals, and discusses the future of wildlife and the safari industry in Africa. 527-7377 

 

Travel Photography Workshop 

7 - 9 p.m. 

Easy Going Travel Shop & Bookstore 

1385 Shattuck Ave. 

An intensive workshop that focuses on travel photography, with an emphasis on film and equipment security, light and weather conditions, methods to make the most of well-known sites, and ways to approach and photograph strangers. $15. 843-3533 

 

Simplicity Forum 

7 - 8:30 p.m. 

Claremont Branch Library 

2940 Benvenue Ave. 

"TV and Media” - Several people who have given up their TV's will talk about the difficulties and benefits. 549-3509, www.seeds of simplicity.org. 

 

Take the Terror Out of Talking 

noon - 1:10 p.m. 

Calif. Dept. Health Services 

2151 Berkeley Way 

Room 804 

State Health Toastmasters Club is presenting a six-week Speechcraft workshop to help you overcome your fear of speaking in public and improve your communication skills. Cost is $36 for six sessions, Feb. 21, 28 & March 7, 14, 21. 649-7750. 

 


Friday, Feb. 22

 

 

Grand Canyon Splendor: Rafting the Colorado 

7 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment, Inc. 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

Guidebook author and former river guide, Tyler Williams, presents the dramatic beauty of the Grand Canyon in his slide presentation on rafting the Colorado. 527-7377 

 

Still Stronger Women 

1:15 - 3:15 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave 

Short stories. 232-1351. 

 


Saturday, Feb. 23

 

 

Archaeological Institute of America 

3 p.m. 

Shorb House 

2547 Channing Way 

Lecture by Dr. Stuart Swiny discussing Cypriot rituals surrounding fertility, life and death from the Neolithic to the Roman era. 415-338-1537, barbaram@sfsu.edu. 

 

Paying for Public Education: 

Whose Job Is It? 

3 - 5:30 p.m. 

Ocean View Elementary School 

Multi-Purpose Room 

1000 Jackson St., Albany 

A forum with Kevin Gordon of the Education Coalition, who will explain state-level funding for K-12 schools. Candidates for the California Assembly 14th District seat Debate: Dave Brown (D), Loni Hancock (D), and Charles Ramsey (D). 524-7004, hao_kco@pacbell.net.  

 


Monday, Feb. 25

 

 

A Rose Grew in Brooklyn: Stories from a Jewish Girlhood 

7:30 - 9 p.m. 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St. 

Local author and therapist, Rose Fox reads from her memoir. 

 

Institute of Government Studies 

12 p.m. 

UC Berkeley Campus 

John Matsasuka presents a lecture entitled “For the Many or the Few" 

642-4608  

 

 

 

 


School is out for Cal sex class

The Associated Press
Monday February 18, 2002

A male sexuality class at University of California, Berkeley has been suspended after reports of lurid extracurricular activities surfaced late last week. The suspension of the class, run by students and sponsored by the university, was announced Friday.  

Students who had taken part in the two-unit course said several of their classmates were involved in an orgy at a class party and that another group of students chose to go to a strip club for their final project. 

At the club the students looked on as one of their student instructors had sex on stage, a student said.  

At a party held to introduce the students, some took Polaroid pictures of their genitals to show that their bodies were not disgusting, UC Berkeley freshman Christy Kovacs told the Sacramento Bee. 

An incredulous university administration quickly pulled the plug on the “democratic education” or “de-cal” course. Such courses are sponsored but not funded by the university. 

UC Berkeley spokeswoman Marie Felde confirmed the male sexuality class had been suspended after the student instructors failed to attend a meeting with a university official. A similar female sexuality course was also under review, Felde said Caren Kaplan, chair of the Woman’s Studies Department and sponsor of the sexuality classes, reviewed the course description but had not seen a detailed syllabus, said a university spokesperson. 

 

 


Huskies upset Golden Bears

The Associated Press
Monday February 18, 2002

SEATTLE – C.J. Massingale matched a career high with 25 points to give the Washington Huskies a 75-60 upset victory over California Saturday night.  

The victory snapped a four-game winning streak for the Bears.  

With Arizona losing earlier in the day, a California victory would have given the Bears a share of the Pac-10 lead. Instead, California stays one game back with four remaining before the conference tournament.  

The Bears, the top defensive team in the conference, kept the Huskies’ top scorer Doug Wrenn to two points on a pair of free throws in the first half.  

Wrenn, who had led Washington in scoring in each of its previous 11 games, finished with six points and did not make a field goal until 7:15 left in the game.  

Washington (9-16, 3-12 Pac-10) led 38-33 after Massingale scored the Huskies’ first seven points of the second half, but the Bears responded with a 12-0 run that gave them a 45-38 advantage with 14:13 left in the game.  

The Huskies regained the lead at 53-51 on a 3-pointer by Curtis Allen with 9:06 to play. From that point on, Washington never trailed.  

Allen put the game away by scoring the Huskies’ final eight points on free throws in the final minute. Allen and Grant Leep finished with 12 points apiece.  

California (18-6, 9-5) failed to post its first five-game Pac-10 winning streak since they won six straight in 1997.  

The Bears were led by Joe Shipp’s 15 points. Tashaan Forehan-Kelly had 12, and Solomon Hughes added 11.  

The game was tied at 10 six minutes into the contest before the Bears scored the next eight points. The run was stopped when Washington’s Erroll Knight hit a 3-pointer, cutting the Bears’ lead to 18-13 with 11:35 remaining in the half.  

The Huskies’ final basket of the half was a layin from Leep after an 18-foot no-look pass from Allen with 16 seconds remaining. It gave Washington a 31-29 lead at the break.  

The Huskies’ success or failure in these final weeks of the season may factor into coach Bob Bender’s job security. His team had lost eight of its previous nine games. The Huskies desperately want to avoid losing 20 games three seasons in a row.  

Washington is sitting in ninth place in the conference, one game behind Oregon State. The Huskies play the Beavers on Thursday in a game that may determine which team gets the eighth and final spot in the conference tournament.


Rapid Transit needs a solution for street traffic

Charles Siegel Berkeley
Monday February 18, 2002

Editor: 

 

To make Bus Rapid Transit work, we should remove cars from Telegraph between Bancroft and Dwight.  

We can do this without tangling up traffic if we make Dwight Way two-way, instead of making Durant two-way as the southside traffic study recommends. 

The MTC has approved funding for a Bus Rapid Transit line that would run from San Leandro to downtown Oakland, on Telegraph Ave. to the UC Campus, and around the campus to downtown Berkeley. BRT would cut the time the bus currently takes by about a third, by providing bus-only lanes, by allowing buses to preempt traffic signals, and by taking other measures to speed up buses. 

What do we want to happen when the bus-only lane on Telegraph reaches Dwight Way?  

Do we want the buses to fight with the current traffic on Telegraph, which is sometimes so congested that you can walk faster than people drive? 

To make Bus Rapid Transit effective, we should close Telegraph to cars between Bancroft and Dwight, and allow only buses, delivery vehicles, and service and emergency vehicles to drive there. 

As Mayor Dean has said, we should be careful to do this in a way that does not cause congestion. Currently, traffic does become congested when we close Telegraph for street fairs, because all the traffic is routed up 

Dwight Way and congests the southside streets above Telegraph. 

Making Dwight two-way would reduce congestion by dispersing traffic.  

When drivers on Telegraph reach Dwight, some would go up Dwight, and some would go down Dwight and continue north through downtown.  

This would give drivers a more direct north-bound route than they now have when Telegraph is closed for street fairs. 

Making Dwight two-way would also reduce traffic in the Claremont and Elmwood neighborhoods. Traffic that begins near campus above Telegraph would be able to drive down Dwight and travel south on Telegraph, rather than driving through the Waring-Belrose corridor, as they do now. 

The southside traffic study has shown that we can close Telegraph to cars and convert two of the one-way streets to two-way traffic. There are obvious benefits to converting Bancroft and Dwight to two-way traffic, instead of Bancroft and Durant. 

 

Charles Siegel 

Berkeley 

 

 

 


Veteran teacher reflects on career of caring

By Mary Barrett Special to the Daily Planet
Monday February 18, 2002

While many veteran teachers hobble toward retirement, Rita Davies seems to be sprinting — and she is still vigorously devoted to her teaching career. Known in and around the Berkeley Unified School District as an advocate of the arts, Davies focus in teaching goes, like art, straight to the heart.  

Davies says she is intent on providing a “family place” for children at school.  

The deeper the sense of community the classroom can build, the more potential there is for learning, she says. 

Throughout her adolescence, she carried heavy responsibilities because her mother was severely ill. But there was a teacher who kept constant watch over her — and she remembers the sound of that teacher’s cane and step, cane and step, as she approached to offer supports.  

It is this kind of caring that Davies says she attempts to duplicate in her work.  

“Love is essential,” she says. “It’s the core of my curriculum.”  

Davies does not mean being sweet, instead she means being open, honest and nurturing, being ‘right there’ for the child and the child’s family. 

Born in Wales, Davies moved as a child to London where her father worked as an electrical engineer. The only one of his family who wasn’t a coal miner, he passed on his ability to think ‘out of the mold’ to his daughter.  

She earned her college degree from London University, then worked in London under Henry Pluckrose at an “Open Plan” school. Pluckrose’s educational practice revolved around providing all the arts to children, painting, music, drama, poetry – all creative things as a way to deeply involve children in their own education. With Pluckrose there was a “god forbid” attitude if you didn’t teach the arts. 

Davies initiated and organized an integrated studies program that covered not just traditional “academic” subjects but the arts as well, organized around a common theme.  

“I didn’t know how to do it any other way,” Davies says. She used her environment, including St. Paul’s Cathedral and the London Tower for study focuses.  

In the ‘60s when teachers in California were studying British Infant Schools, Davies was invited to the States to demonstrate how integrated curriculum instruction worked. She liked it so much in California that she came back to work. Herb Kohl, author of books about teaching, including Thirty Six Children, helped her locate in the Mendocino County Schools.  

For six years, she worked at the Mendocino Grammar School teaching fourth and fifth grades. Her principal, Dick Jaulus, supported the development of curriculum that made everything connect for the kids. 

Luckily for Berkeley, Davies eventually moved here and was hired by Frank Fischer, a progressive Berkeley principal. 

Davies has been in the Berkeley schools ever since.  

But the emphasis on integrated curriculum shifted in California schools to a greater push for skills. Bitter debates raged through educational circles and many California teachers have been cautioned against using integrated theme approaches to teaching.  

Davies feels a “just the skills” route is detrimental to the education of the whole child. She quotes a character from Charles Dickens who emphasized “Facts, Facts, Facts” as the best approach to education and who had students memorize and quote all the facts about a horse.  

“If we don’t reach children,” Davies says, “if the curriculum is not part of their soul, it will just drift away.” 

Davies capitalizes on both love for information and a love for the arts.  

Her work, focused on themes and integrated curriculum, includes skill instruction as a part of a comprehensible whole. Right now, she and educator-parents from the Lawrence Hall of Science develop thematic units collaboratively. Her ideas of collaboration envelop parents and colleagues alike.  

Davies and other teachers at Oxford school are involved in a “Lesson Study” method based on a Japanese model of collaborative exploration of teaching processes. It involves planning together, observing lessons in each other’s rooms and holding discussions that focus on what the teachers want to accomplish and ways of doing it. 

Davies, never content to work just at the classroom level, has given leadership to the District developing district wide Family Art Nights. With the help of several teachers, she arranged a variety of art projects for families to participate in. There were, for example, tin foil sculptures, doll making, calligraphy and always a giant mural down the middle of the cafeteria where parents, grandparents and children painted to their hearts content. Arts nights were mobbed by Berkeley families who loved creating together. 

Davies roots are now firmly planted in Berkeley. She and her partner, Barbara Phillips, have bought a house in the Westbrae area. Her next goal is to study art full time.  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Cal avoids LBSU sweep

Daily Planet Wire Services
Monday February 18, 2002

Senior second baseman Carson White knocked in the game-winning RBI with no outs in the bottom of the ninth to lead Cal to a 4-3 victory over Long Beach State Sunday at Evans Diamond. 

The Bears improved to 5-6, while the No. 21 ranked 49ers fell to 4-2. 

Freshman center fielder David Nicholson started off the bottom of the ninth for Cal with a single off of 49er reliever Chris Demaria and advanced to second on an error by Long Beach State shortstop Kevin Randel. David Weiner advanced Nicholson to third with a bunt and then White won the game with a ball hit over 49er right fielder Nick Covarrubias. 

The winning pitcher for the Bears was reliever Jesse Ingram (2-2), who pitched two innings with no hits, no runs, no walks and a strikeout. Ingram had replaced Cal starter Matt Brown (seven innings, eighth hits, three runs, two walks, one strikeout).  

Cal was down 3-0, but sophomore shortstop Jeff Dragicevich got the Bears within 3-2 with a two-run homer in the fourth inning. Cal tied the game, 3-3, in the seventh on an RBI single by sophomore third baseman Conor Jackson. 

“This was a huge win for us,” Cal head coach David Esquer said. “Matt Brown did a great job for us and gave us a chance to win. He kept us in the ballgame. We did a good job of hanging in there.


How about a lonely vote against the DEA?

Steve Geller Berkeley
Monday February 18, 2002

Representative Lee: 

 

I am one of the 40% of Berkeley residents who did NOT approve of your “lonely vote” against war powers for the President (or whatever it was; I'm still confused on that). 

But I suggest you repeat your performance, this time on an issue likely to be approved by both your earlier supporters and people like me. 

Sponsor a Congressional resolution which tells the DEA what to do about medical Marijuana and Hemp. 

As you know, the DEA has already raided medical marijuana outlets in San Francisco.  

It won't be long before the DEA comes to bother Berkeley. 

Californians voted to legalize medical use of marijuana, but “states rights” mean nothing to the Big Bushy Fed. 

TIME had a recent article about DEA plans to stop use of hemp for clothing, rope and other utility things, because hemp contains a tiny bit of THC. 

Challenges to all this DEA dumb-ness are going to the courts. That's wrong. 

The courts shouldn't be deciding these things. Congress should. Tell DEA to stop their marijuana persecutions, and concentrate on crack or whatever. 

How about another "lonely vote", Rep. Lee? 

It will make even more of us feel good. 

 

Steve Geller 

Berkeley


Farrakhan condemns Bush, war on terrorism

The Associated Press
Monday February 18, 2002

INGLEWOOD — Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan issued a call for racial and religious unity on Sunday and condemned the U.S. war on terrorism, saying “there’s a lot of ugliness in America the beautiful, ugliness that can be turned into beauty.” 

Farrakhan combined moral teachings with a long history on what he described as U.S. oil politics during a 2 1/2-hour keynote speech to thousands of followers at the Forum in Inglewood. The speech capped the Saviour’s Day annual convention, marking the birth of Nation of Islam founder Elijah Muhammad. 

The convention, which carried the theme “Healing The Wounds To Bring About A Universal Family,” was held for the first time outside of Chicago, where the Nation of Islam is headquartered. 

Farrakhan, whose black empowerment message in years past has included inflammatory remarks about Jews and Christians, urged unity and condemned religiously inspired violence. 

“I’m a Jew, I’m a Christian, and I’m a Muslim,” Farrakhan said. 

He also called on Hispanics, American Indians and other ethnic groups to unite in destroying racism by achieving success. 

“You kill it with excellence from the darker people of the world,” he said. 

He also urged Americans to speak out against the policies of the Bush administration, contending that a “shadow government” has controlled U.S. foreign policy and predicting that the administration was preparing to wage war in Iraq. 

In his State of the Union address last month, Bush said North Korea and the Muslim states of Iraq and Iran represent an “axis of evil.” 

In a long history lesson illustrated with maps flashed on the stadium’s giant TV screens, Farrakhan argued that the war on terrorism in Afghanistan, along with other Middle Eastern and African conflicts, were instigated by the United States because of its “insatiable appetite” for oil. 

“If the truth were known, there would be a Nuremberg trial for American presidents,” he said. “I cannot allow them to use the American solider, black, brown and poor white, to fight a war that is unjust and wrong.” 

Farrakhan said that true patriots should speak out against bad policies and said U.S. foreign policy could ignite more hatred of the United States. 

No Muslim leader would be capable of uniting the world’s Muslims in a holy war against America, Farrakhan said, but the Bush administration “can summon the whole Muslim world against the West by how you prosecute this war (in Afghanistan).” 

Celebrities attending the speech included Los Angeles Lakers basketball star Shaquille O’Neal, U.S. Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Los Angeles, and clergy from various religions. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Bears lose final home game to Washington

Daily Planet Wire Services
Monday February 18, 2002

Senior center Ami Forney posted her second double-double of the weekend in a competitive loss by Cal to visiting Washington, 64-53, Saturday afternoon in its final home game at Haas Pavilion in front of 1,447 fans. 

Forney posted 10 points and 11 rebounds to record her sixth double-double of the season and 13th of her career on Senior Day in Berkeley. Cal’s other senior, guard Janet Franey, played in the final minute of the game for the Bears. 

“Today showed the incredible strides that we have made all year,” said California head coach Caren Horstmeyer. “It’s tough that you don’t get the win. Maybe I’ve said that before, but things have come together. I guess what’s most important to me is the team really believed in themselves. The bottom line is that the team did a lot of things in the year that they’ve struggled with. They have every reason to hold their heads up high. I thought we did an incredibly good defensive job.” 

A month ago, the Bears (7-18, 2-14 Pac-10) suffered their worst defeat of the season to the Huskies, 85-46, in Seattle. But today was an entirely different story, as the young Bears continued to show improvement as they have all year. 

After Washington went up 14-6 four minutes into the game, Cal responded with an 11-0 run to go up 19-14 with 12:06 left in the first half. The run was keyed by four points from sophomore guard LaTasha O’Keith and Cal’s lone three-pointer of the day, courtesy of freshman guard Jackie Lord. 

Cal took its biggest lead of the game at 26-20 and 28-22 with 6:30 until the break. But the Huskies finished the half strong on a 14-5 run with seven players scoring, spurring the Huskies to a 36-33 score at the half. Freshman guard Leigh Gregory scored all 11 of her points in the first half to pace the Bears, while Andrea Lalum paced Washington with all 10 of her game points. 

In the second half, the two teams stayed within five points of each other and were tied at the 10:50 mark at 42-42 following a Cal basket from redshirt freshman forward Kiki Williams. Washington then distanced itself from Cal with a 14-0 run. Down 56-42, Cal dug in and made one final run, but the Bears could only get as close as six at 59-53. 

After four-straight games shooting 70 percent or better from the foul line, Cal struggled this afternoon, hitting on 54.5 percent of its foul shots (12-of-22). 

Also in double figures for Cal was Williams with a team-high 12 points of the bench. Williams has posted double-figure points in five-straight games for the Bears. 

Washington was paced by 14 points from Kellie O’Neill off the bench. Giuiliana Mendiola also had 10 points for the Huskies.


BART official says 'Don’t siphon from the already depleted general fund, and Vote No on 42’

Roy Nakadegawa PE BART Director, District 3 Berkeley, CA, 94707
Monday February 18, 2002

Letter to Editor  

 

The public’s assessment of transportation - Our regional transportation agency MTC poll (3% accuracy) indicated the most important issues including transportation, surprisingly, was not “Transportation and Congestion."  

It came out several places below “Spending Public Funds Wisely” and “Improving Education”. Present Gasoline Sales Tax goes into the general fund and is spent for Education, Health, Transportation, …etc.  

So, these funds are being spent wisely in keeping with people’s concern rather than only for transportation at the expense of other important issues.  

Proper Allocations?  

Regional Transportation Agencies e.g. MTC realize there is little they can do with highways to relieve congestion so, they are shifting funds to transit and other alternatives in their Plans, some over 65%. However Proposition 42 permanently allocates Gasoline Sales Tax for, roads 80% and transit 20%. To increase 20% for transit and alternatives will require another referendum or 2/3 of State Legislators.  

Gas Tax rather than its Sales Tax should provide transportation funding. In today’s dollars, Gas Tax is taking in less today than 30 years ago.  

Transportation funding should be increased in keeping with consumer price index. Other developed countries charge at least $3 per gallon for gasoline. This $3 includes $2 in Gas Tax, which keeps their highways in good condition as well as providing decent alternatives.  

With the State’s current $12 Billion deficit, let us not siphon off general fund monies into a special transportation fund allocating only 20% for transit permanently at the expense of other important categories. 

 

Vote No on Proposition 42 

 

 

Roy Nakadegawa PE 

BART Director, District 3 

Berkeley, CA, 94707


Today in History

Staff
Monday February 18, 2002

 

On this date: 

In 1516, Mary Tudor, the Queen of England popularly known as “Bloody Mary,” was born in Greenwich Palace. 

In 1546, Martin Luther, leader of the Protestant Reformation in Germany, died. 

In 1564, artist Michelangelo died in Rome. 

In 1885, Mark Twain’s “Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” was published in the United States for the first time. 

In 1930, the ninth planet of our solar system, Pluto, was discovered. 

In 1960, the Eighth Winter Olympic Games were formally opened in Squaw Valley, Calif., by Vice President Nixon. 

In 1970, the “Chicago Seven” defendants were found innocent of conspiring to incite riots at the 1968 Democratic national convention. 

In 1972, the California Supreme Court struck down the state’s death penalty. 

In 1977, the space shuttle Enterprise, sitting atop a Boeing 747, went on its maiden “flight” above the Mojave Desert. 

In 1988, Anthony M. Kennedy was sworn in as the 104th justice of the U.S. Supreme Court. 

Ten years ago: In the New Hampshire primary, President George H.W. Bush won the Republican contest while challenger Patrick Buchanan placed a strong second; among Democrats, Paul Tsongas came in first. 

Five years ago: Astronauts on the space shuttle Discovery completed their tuneup of the Hubble Space Telescope after 33 hours of spacewalking; the Hubble was then released using the shuttle’s crane. Bill Richardson began work as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. 

One year ago: Auto racing star Dale Earnhardt Sr. died from injuries suffered in a crash at the Daytona 500; he was 49. Death also claimed baseball Hall of Famer Eddie Mathews at age 69, broadcaster Roger Caras at age 72, “Cheaper by the Dozen” co-author Frank B. Gilbreth Jr. at age 89 and painter Balthus at age 92. Veteran FBI agent Robert Philip Hanssen was arrested, accused of spying for Russia for more than 15 years. 

Today’s Birthdays: Actor Jack Palance is 81. Former Cosmopolitan editor Helen Gurley Brown is 80. Actor George Kennedy is 77. Author Toni Morrison is 71. Singer Yoko Ono is 69. Singer Irma Thomas is 61. Actress Sinead Cusack is 54. Producer-director-writer John Hughes is 52. Actress Cybill Shepherd is 52. Singer Juice Newton is 50. Rock musician Robbie Bachman is 49. Actor John Travolta is 48. Game show host Vanna White is 45. Actress Greta Scacchi is 42. Actor Matt Dillon is 38. Rapper Dr. Dre is 37.


Sports Shorts

Staff
Monday February 18, 2002

Women’s tennis stays undefeated 

LOS ANGELES, Calif. - The 12th-ranked California Golden Bears dropped No. 66 Loyola Marymount, 5-2, Saturday afternoon at the LMU tennis courts. The Bears improve to 3-0 on the season, as the Lions fall to 3-5 overall.  

In singles action, California’s top seeded Raquel Kops-Jones defeated LMU’s Andrea Lord in straight sets, 6-4, 7-5. Kops-Jones is currently ranked as the No. 26 singles player in the country, according to the latest ITA poll. Penka Fileva returned to the No. 2 spot for the Lions, defeating Cal’s Jieun Jacobs in straight sets, 6-3. 6-4. Edit Pakay played at No. 3 for the Lions, defeating Cal’s 38th-ranked Christina Fusano in straight sets, 6-4, 6-4. Angelina Zdorovytska played at No. 4, falling to Catherine Lynch in two, 6-2, 6-0. Lynch is ranked at No. 49 in the current standings. In the No. 5 match, Golden Bear Jody Scheldt defeated Julie Hladik in two as well, 6-2, 7-6. And rounding out the singles for the Lions and Bears was Cal’s Kristen Case, who defeated LMU’s Jessica Placencia, giving up only one game in her straight set victory (6-0. 6-1).  

Cal returns to Berkeley next weekend. The Bears take on San Diego on Friday at 1:30, and then open their Pac-10 season Saturday at noon against arch-rival Stanford. 

Cal gymnasts finish second 

The California Golden Bears finished second, only to No. 10 UCLA, scoring a 192.825 to outdo UC Davis, 190.550 and UC Santa Barbara, 185.500, at the biannual California Invitational Sunday afternoon at Haas Pavilion. The Bruins tallied a score of 194.825.  

The Bears improved to 5-4 on the season while UCLA is now 9-4. The Aggies dropped to 9-5 and the Gauchos fell to 0-8.  

In the first rotation, junior Janet McKnight led the Bears with a season-high score of 9.825 on the vault. Freshman My-Lan Dodd also tied her season-best mark with a 9.850 performance on the uneven bars. Dodd also brought home a third place finish on the balance beam with a score of 9.800. The floor exercise, the final rotation of the afternoon, saw three Cal gymnasts draw a 9.800 mark - junior Monique Johnson, McKnight and Dodd.  

In the all-around competition, Dodd placed first with a total score of 39.075. Freshman Sheilah Buack also competed in all events, receiving a score of 38.075.  

 

Cal downs No. 6 UC Davis 

SUISUN, Calif. - Ericka Lorenz and Julie Arnold each scored two goals Saturday as fourth-ranked California beat sixth-ranked UC Davis, 11-3, in a women’s water polo match played at Solano College. Cal improved to 3-2 with the win, while the Aggies lost their third straight game to fall to 4-5 overall. 

Lorenz scored her first goal just over a minute into the game, igniting the Golden Bears who took a 3-0 lead after the first period. Cal led 5-0 early in the second quarter before Agee’s score with 4:51 remaining made it 5-1. A 4-0 surge by the Golden Bears in the third quarter - which included Arnold’s goals with 6:28 and 3:43 left - made it 9-1. Lorenz added her second scored during the third quarter as well.  

Sexton scored her goal less than 30 seconds into the final period, while Delaney converted her score on a penalty shot with 1:56 left. Cal had eight major fouls in the game, but UC Davis only scored once as a result.  

Nine different players scored for Cal in the win.  

Bear goalie Lauren Dennis had six for the Golden Bears, while Alexis Muecke put up seven stops for UC Davis.  

The Bears return to action next week, taking part in the UC Santa Barbara tournament.  

 

Cal rugby beats New Mexico 

ALBUQUERQUE, New Mexico - The Cal varsity rugby squad (5-0) traveled to the desert equipped with its high altitude and came out with a hard fought win over the Lobos, 43-3 Saturday afternoon. This was the Bears’ twentieth straight win dating back to last year’s national championship run.  

“It was a solid victory against a worthy opponent playing at home,” said head coach Jack Clark. “Maybe it was the altitude or maybe it was our fitness level, but I thought we were dragging ... especially our big guys.”  

The Bears took a narrow 15-3 lead into halftime, only to put up 28 more points in the second half while holding the Lobos to none. The first half execution was shabby at best, but the physicality and the technical skills of the Bears’ seasoned veterans proved to be too much for New Mexico in the second half.  

The second half saw Cal dominating the line-outs and scrums while controlling the run of play. Even though the high altitude seemed to tire out the players, the Bears dominated the territory for nearly two-thirds of the game, rarely letting New Mexico advance to their side of the field.  

“I don’t want to seem ungrateful for the victory, but we have a long way to go to become the team we’re capable of becoming,” said Clark.  

Senior Dave Guest led the Bears scoring attack, scoring four tries, one penalty kick and five two-point conversions for a total of 33 points on the day. Cal held the Lobos to just one first half penalty kick while scoring six tries and one penalty kick of their own.


Legendary Berkeley anthropologist, J. Desmond Clark, dies

The Associated Press
Monday February 18, 2002

OAKLAND — J. Desmond Clark, an anthropologist and African fossil hunter, has died. He was 85. 

Clark, who had been in good health and had just returned from a trip to England with his wife, died Thursday of pneumonia at an Oakland convalescent home, University of California, Berkeley officials said. 

“Clark was legendary,” said Tim D. White, one of his colleagues at UC Berkeley. “He towered above anybody else in African archaeology with his breadth and depth of knowledge about the rise and development of prehistoric culture. His death leaves an enormous void.” 

Clark, a professor emeritus at UC Berkeley, made several expeditions to India, China and Africa throughout his career. 

There he and his colleagues made discoveries of creatures known as hominids, which preceded the emergence of modern Homo sapiens by millions of years. While White and his Ethiopian colleagues found the hominid fossils, it was Clark who unearthed their stone implements, opening fresh insights into the development of early pre-human cultures. 

Clark was born in London and educated as an archaeologist at Cambridge University. He became curator of the David Livingstone Memorial Museum in 1938 in Northern Rhodesia, now Zambia. He intended it to be temporary but stayed for 24 years. 

He went to Berkeley in 1961, served as chairman of the anthropology department for many years, and for 20 years he and White led expeditions to the prehistoric sites of the Middle Awash Valley that have produced major hominid finds as old as 6 million years. 

Clark is survived by his wife of 64 years, Betty Baume Clark; a daughter, Elizabeth Winterbottom of New South Wales, Australia; a son, John Clark of Kent, England; a sister, Moira Coulson of England; and five grandchildren. 


Berkeley residents can unplug to win cash

Planet Staff Report
Monday February 18, 2002

BERKELEY — The City wants to conserve more energy, and they have decided to offer a $75 carrot to do it. 

Living in the wake of last summer’s energy crisis and this winter’s allegations of wide-scale price-gouging and corruption by Enron are not the only reasons for the energy conservation contest, according to Alice La Pierre of the Berkeley Energy Office.  

By promoting the winner, the Berkeley Energy Commission hopes to provide an opportunity for residents to learn about energy conservation methods from their neighbors. 

“We want to get the word out,” La Pierre said. 

And to get the word out about various conservation efforts, the city is sponsoring “Berkeley Unplugged,” which will highlight a wide-range of conservation solutions, from the traditional to the creative, a spokeswoman for the city says. 

Ten winners will be chosen in categories including lowest overall energy usage during January of 2002, the greatest overall reduction from the previous year and the most creative and successful measure used to conserve energy. 

Winners will receive a $75 gift certificate to be used at the  

Berkeley Conservation and Energy program, which provides energy-conserving products such as compact fluorescent lamps, water heater blankets, energy-efficient torchieres and programmable thermostats.  

The deadline for entries is March 20, 2002. More information is available at online at www.ecologycenter.org/Berkeley Unplugged. 

 

CONTACT: Alice La Pierre, Berkeley Energy Office (510) 981-5435 or Stephanie Lopez, Berkeley communications office (510) 981-2481 


Oakland to increase flights as SFO’s expansion plans waylay

Staff and Wire Report
Monday February 18, 2002

OAKLAND — Oakland International Airport has announced that its volume of daily flights is expected to increase over the next six months. 

Airport spokeswoman Cyndy Johnson said Friday that American Airlines has announced the inauguration of twice-daily nonstop service between Oakland Airport and New York's John F. Kennedy Airport beginning March 2. Also, as of Feb. 5, American reinstated nonstop service between Oakland and Los Angeles with six daily flights. 

JetBlue Airways continues to expand its Bay Area presence with the addition of a third daily nonstop flight to Kennedy Airport on March 10 and another daily nonstop later this spring, Johnson said. The fledgling airline also plans new twice-daily, transcontinental service between Oakland and Washington Dulles International Airport this spring. 

Southwest Airlines will expand its Oakland operation with three new daily nonstop flights from Chicago Midway Airport beginning April 7.  

In addition, SunTrips will relocate its Hawaii program from San Francisco International Airport to Oakland on Feb. 28, consolidating its Bay Area operation in Oakland. 

Oakland International Airport served 11.4 million passengers and handled more than 600,000 metric tons of air cargo last year. 

Though San Francisco International Airport officials have affirmed they still plan to push for runway expansions many believe that the recession will put them hold and politics may delay them long enough for further obstacles to arise. 

Critics of SFO's runway reconfigurations say it could shut down windsurfing all along the Peninsula shoreline, both through blockage and through sedimentation that could impact sites well to the south of the airport. 

New runways have been proposed for both San Francisco and Oakland airports. A new runway at either would result in the largest Bay fill since the establishment of the modern environmental and coastal resource management framework.  


Berkeley smokers may have to back up

Daily Planet Staff
Monday February 18, 2002

Mayor Shirley Dean is proposing an amendment to the city’s municipal code that will ban smoking within 15 to 25 feet of the entrances of all buildings open to the public. 

The tobacco coalition originated the idea in conjunction with others concerned about tobacco usage in the city, said Mayor Shirley Dean. 

“Whether it becomes law or not is another question,” Dean said. “But I agree with it. What has happened as people have gotten more and more use to not smoking in their offices they are going to sit outside. And the smoke is wafting into the doorway.” 

The item will be considered by the City Council during its regular meeting on Tuesday. 

The amendment would cover both publicly owned and privately owned buildings that are open to the public including stores, bars and restaurants. 

“Over the years, the city of Berkeley has been in the forefront of anti-smoking legislation and has taken aggressive positions on the sale and advertising on the sale and advertising of tobacco,” the recommendation reads. 

The recommendation claims numerous studies have found that tobacco smoke is a major contributor to indoor air pollution and that breathing secondhand smoke is the cause of disease, including lung cancer, in nonsmokers. 


Mars may be ‘loaded’ with water, experts say

The Associated Press
Monday February 18, 2002

PASADENA — A NASA spacecraft will start peeling back the dry and dusty rust-red surface of Mars this month to reveal what scientists expect are vast, hidden stores of water. 

Scientists already know there is water on Mars, in ice that caps the north pole, frost seen at high latitudes and wispy clouds crowding the planet’s highest peaks. 

Far more extensive amounts of water, even massive glaciers, could emerge from behind the dusty veil that cloaks the Red Planet, once the 2001 Mars Odyssey begins its 917-day science mission on or around Feb. 20. 

“You have a vast region that is perhaps just loaded with water,” said William Feldman of the Los Alamos National Laboratory, a scientist on the $300 million National Aeronautics and Space Administration mission. 

The possibility charges scientists because it would support theories that the planet was once — and may still be — a wet world hospitable to life. On Earth, life is found wherever there is water, nutrients and a source of energy; the same rule may hold true elsewhere in the solar system. 

Today, Mars abounds with evidence that torrents of water once flowed across its surface, carving channels, flooding plains and weeping from steep crater walls. 

Whether that water remains locked within the planet or was lost to space remains a mystery. Scientists believe Odyssey, and its ability to sniff out the hydrogen bound to oxygen that forms water, can provide an answer. 

“That would make it very exciting, that there are still gobs and gobs of water there,” said William Boynton of the University of Arizona’s Lunar and Planetary Laboratory, another Odyssey scientist. 

Rather than dig into Mars, Odyssey will scout from afar, as the satellite orbits the planet at an average distance of about 250 miles. 

Using its thermal emission imaging system and a combination gamma ray spectrometer and neutron detector, the robotic probe will peer down on — and into — Mars. A third instrument, designed to monitor the radiation environment, has malfunctioned. 

As it orbits Mars every two hours, the spacecraft will use its instruments to map the distribution of chemicals and minerals in the top three feet or so of the surface of the planet. Among the 20 elements it can detect is hydrogen, which indicates the likely presence of water. 

“As long as it’s within a meter of the surface we are going to see it,” Boynton said. 

The frozen water is most likely mixed with dirt to form a permafrost similar to that found in the Alaskan tundra. On Mars, the deposits are probably scattered near the poles, in cold regions that receive less sunlight than those closer to the equator. Odyssey should determine how close to the equator those deposits extend. 

“We suspect, and I think we’ll find out very soon an answer, that there are lots of places where there is water ice frozen in the soil,” said Jeff Plaut, the mission’s deputy project scientist at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Tracking down where the water has gone remains a key goal of NASA’s Mars program.


Illegal car show turns deadly in Oakland

The Associated Press
Monday February 18, 2002

OAKLAND — A car wreck at one of the Bay Area’s notorious illegal car rallies has left a woman dead, a man in jail and top city officials calling for new laws to curb the troublesome activity. 

U’Kendra Johnson, 22, of Oakland, was killed when the car she was riding in was broadsided by a Buick that moments before had been spinning “doughnuts” as part of the so-called sideshow, police said. 

Police arrested the driver, 27-year-old Eric Crawford of Oakland, after he fled the scene on foot. Crawford was arrested on suspicion of murder, felony hit-and-run and drunken driving. 

“There is just more and more lives being taken and everyone is like, ’who gives a damn,”’ said Winnie Johnson, the victim’s mother. 

The city has struggled since the late 1980s to curb the late-night gatherings, which draw crowds of people from around the Bay Area to watch drivers whirl around with teens on the roofs of their cars. 

Oakland Mayor Jerry Brown said he wants the state to enact emergency laws giving police the power to impound any car involved in sideshows for 30 days. 


Bush called ‘liar’ for nuke waste campaign remarks

The Associated Press
Monday February 18, 2002

SOUTH LAKE TAHOE — Sen. Harry Reid called President Bush a “liar” for telling Nevadans that he would base a decision on whether to send the nation’s nuclear waste to Nevada on “sound science, not politics.” 

At a Saturday news conference, Reid criticized Bush’s approval Friday of Nevada’s Yucca Mountain as the site for long-term disposal of thousands of tons of highly radioactive nuclear waste. 

“So this is the big lie,” Reid, D-Nev., said. “The president didn’t tell the truth ... If this is an example of how he helps Nevada, we don’t need his help.” 

Reid’s comments drew criticism from the White House. 

“The president has said all along that he would base his decision on sound science, which is what he did,” Bush spokesman Jimmy Orr said. “The fact that the senator disagrees with him on the science is a shameful excuse to personally attack the president.” 

Reid’s news conference was held at Heavenly Ski Resort’s observation deck, where Bush stood in 2000 when he told Nevadans that he would base his Yucca Mountain decision on “sound science.” 

Reid said the Energy Department did not properly consider environmental impacts or the security risk posed by transporting 77,000 tons of waste stockpiled at U.S. nuclear plants and defense facilities. 

On Friday, Bush said his decision was “the culmination of two decades of intense scientific scrutiny” and that he is certain the science is sound. 

Reid, the Senate’s No. 2 Democrat, said Bush “would not be president today” if Nevadans had known what was in store for Yucca Mountain, 90 miles northwest of Las Vegas. 

Bush won Nevada’s four electoral votes en route to his slim victory over Al Gore. 

“(Bush has) left the country, and he thinks this (issue) will be gone when he gets back, but it won’t be,” Reid said. 

Reid said he’s also concerned that, given Bush’s close ties to the energy industry, Friday’s decision may lead to future nuclear energy development. 


Big family’s house hit with graffiti

The Associated Press
Monday February 18, 2002

SAN RAFAEL — Someone scrawled graffiti on the house and car of the Marin County family accused in the death of an infant and the neglect of 12 other children. 

“Shame. It takes an entire village,” a vandal wrote on the garage door of the family’s home. 

The vandal also used red spray paint to write “murderers” on the side of a black Suburban parked in front of the house where five adults allegedly kept 13 half-starved children until one of the children died. 

“It is horrible when people take this kind of hateful stance,” said Irene Sullivan, who lives next door. 

The five people charged in the case are Winnfred Everett Wright, 45, Carol Louise Bremner, 44, Mary Campbell, 37, Deirdre Hart Wilson, 37, and Kali Polk-Matthews, 20. 

The suspects are accused of involuntary manslaughter for the November death of Wright and Campbell’s 19-month-old son and the alleged neglect of a dozen other children, all fathered by Wright. 


Online scalpers try to raid record lottery purse

By Paul Glader The Associated Press
Monday February 18, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — As interest in the record $191 million state lottery jackpot ebbed higher, so did reports of illegal online ticket sales. 

State lottery officials are re-emphasizing that tickets must be purchased within the state and in person rather than through third-party sellers. 

“Sales of lottery tickets on the Internet are not authorized nor are they legal,” said lottery Director Joan Wilson. “We want our customers to understand that legal tickets are available at our authorized locations only and that any Internet or out-of- state sites are simply not legal.” 

Lottery spokeswoman Norma Minas said at least one woman called saying she purchased a ticket from a Florida-based Web site, using a credit card. 

“We know it’s going on, we saw the Web site,” Minas said. “We assume there will be more.” 

A quick search online turned up several scalper sites offering California Lottery tickets to out-of-state residents with an added service charge. 

Nearly 19,000 retailers in the state are authorized to sell lottery tickets. Out-of-state residents may enter the state and buy lottery tickets at those sites. They cannot purchase the tickets by telephone or Internet. 

The $191 million sum is the largest single-state U.S. jackpot, and the fifth-largest including multistate games, the California Lottery said. The biggest lottery payout in U.S. history was $363 million in May, 2000 for the multistate Powerball game. 

The previous record jackpot in California was $141 million won on June 23, 2001. 

 

• Winning numbers39, 31, 32, 11 and 6. The Mega Number is 20. 

• The estimated jackpot is $193 million. 


Stores selling winning tickets rejoice, ticketholders silent

The Associated Press
Monday February 18, 2002

The morning after at least three lottery players landed shares of the biggest single-state jackpot in history, the only winners who were talking were the store owners who sold the tickets. 

The three winning SuperLotto Plus tickets, which are each worth $64.3 million before taxes, were sold at an Albertsons in Half Moon Bay and 7-Eleven stores in Orange and Montebello, California lottery officials said Sunday. 

No one had stepped forward to claim the prize Sunday morning, and the Presidents Day holiday means the winners will have to wait until Tuesday to present their tickets to lottery officials. 

The buying frenzy for a shot at the $193 million jackpot peaked Saturday night, when hopefuls snapped up a record $6 million worth of tickets an hour. 

“There’s a lot more excitement around a mega jackpot like this. You pretty much have interest from around the world,” said Norma Minas, a lottery spokeswoman. She was fielding media calls from as far away as Germany and Japan Sunday morning. 

Owners of the three lucky stores will receive $321,666 each for selling the winning tickets. The stores were buzzing with excitement and well-wishers Sunday morning, but the winners stayed away. 


UC named lead plaintiff in Enron lawsuit

By Kristen Hays The Associated Press
Monday February 18, 2002

HOUSTON — The University of California Regents will lead the charge for big-time investors and individual shareholders collectively suing current and former Enron Corp. officials for more than $1 billion gained in stock sales before the company imploded last year. 

U.S. District Judge Melinda Harmon designated the university late Friday as the head decision-maker in a massive securities-fraud lawsuit against current and former executives and directors of the company. 

“We take up this responsibility with the deepest sense of obligation not only to the UC family of employees, retirees and students, but to the millions of Americans who invested in good faith with Enron,” said James E. Holst, general counsel for the university. 

Milberg Weiss Bershad Hynes & Lerach LLP, the law firm representing the university and Amalgamated Bank, stands to collect the most in attorneys’ fees for taking on the lion’s share of work in the case as well. 

The firm could generate fees reaching hundreds of millions of dollars if an Enron judgment comes close to last year’s record $3.2 billion settlement that Cendant and its accounting firm made with stockholders. That case stemmed from a 1998 scandal involving the then-Connecticut company that became the largest financial fraud case ever brought by the Securities and Exchange Commission. 

“Millions of Americans invested in Enron because of the confidence they placed in the business practices of the company and the public information provided by its senior executives and accountants,” said Milberg Weiss partner William Lerach of San Diego, who has spoken for the regents and Amalgamated in hearings before Harmon. 

“On behalf of the University of California as lead plaintiff and working in concert with all the plaintiffs, we look forward to vigorously pursuing the shareholders’ case,” he said. 

The fees provide a big incentive for law firms competing to be lead counsel representing lead plaintiffs in large class-action lawsuits, said Henry T.C. Hu, a corporate law professor at the University of Texas School of Law. The lead plaintiff doesn’t get a bigger slice of the judgment pie. But the university will have more power to plan strategy and direct the case, Hu said. 

“From a monetary standpoint there’s nothing in it for the lead plaintiff,” Hu said. “You don’t get any more money than your prorated share. But that law firm will be putting in a lot of time, and it could be very attractive financially.” 

The original class-action fraud case was filed in Houston on behalf of Amalgamated and several investment funds days after Enron filed for bankruptcy on Dec. 2. 

Amalgamated lost $10 million in the meltdown, and sought $25 billion in damages. The suit is seeking $1.1 billion gained by current and former Enron executives and directors who sold stock from October 1998 through November last year. 

Other plaintiffs that lost more money have since joined the suit, including: 

• The Florida State Board of Administration and the New York City Pension Fund. Combined loss: $443 million. 

• The University of California Regents. Loss: $145 million. 

• Pension funds for the states of Georgia, Washington, Ohio and Alabama. Combined loss: $416 million. 

Lawyers representing shareholders and former employees also joined the suit. Employees watched their Enron-stock loaded 401(k) accounts evaporate as the company collapsed. 

Milberg Weiss had argued that as a single plaintiff, the regents would be able to better manage the case than multiple pension funds. Amalgamated did not seek the lead plaintiff designation. 


Hills fire station clears hurdle

By John Geluardi Daily Planet staff
Saturday February 16, 2002

Despite objections from neighbors, The Zoning Adjustments Board approved the Environmental Impact Report Thursday for the Hills Fire Station proposed for a quiet ridge in the Berkeley hills.  

The ZAB approved the report by a vote of 7-2 with board members David Blake and Andy Katz voting in opposition. The report, required by state law, evaluates potential impacts from the construction of the two-story, 6,800-square-foot station.  

Opponents of the station contend the quiet, residential neighborhood is not appropriate for a fire station. Others argued the station is necessary to protect the Berkeley hills from wild fires originating in the open lands east of the city. 

The proposed location is at 3000 Shasta Rd near Park Hills Road, which is adjacent to Tilden Park on the eastern edge of the city.  

Prior to voting, the ZAB heard public comments about the quality of the EIR. Also Fire Chief Reginald Garcia, Assistant Chief David Orth and Project Manager Carmella Rejwan responded to questions about information in the report. 

Proponents of the project called for the ZAB to approve the project and move quickly to approve the Use Permit for the project. Voters approved bond funds for the project in 1992, partly in response to the Berkeley/Oakland Hills Fire in 1991.  

The bond, Measure G, provided $55 million for a variety of fire safety projects including seismically upgrading the cities seven fire stations, repairing aging water mains and building a new fire station in a strategic location to battle fires in the Berkeley and Oakland hills. 

“I’m concerned with the delay to build the Hills Fire Station,” said proponent Colin Murphy. “This station will serve as a first line of defense in case of another fire in the wild lands.” 

According to fire department officials, one of the reasons 3000 Shasta Rd. was chosen from among eight other locations is because department response time trials shoed the location is within four minutes of the furthest point of the fire district, which is to the north at Grizzly Peak Road at Spruce Street.  

Chief Garcia said four minutes is widely accepted as the maximum amount of time to respond to a structural fire. 

Opponents, who have organized into a group called Citizens for Responsible Fire Protection, argued the EIR should not be approved because the response time trials were flawed. Peter Cukor, who lives immediately across the street from the proposed site, said he had himself conducted a variety of time trials. 

“There are many areas in Fire District 7 that are not reachable in four minutes,” Cukor said. “The neighbors ask the ZAB to not approve the EIR because the response times do not meet EIR standards.” 

Chief Garcia was skeptical of Cukor’s results. 

“Anyone can come up with the analysis they want to,” he said. “I timed these routes myself traveling between 25 and 30 miles an hour, which is the speed fire apparatus travels.” 

ZAB member David Blake, who said he and fellow board member Andy Katz had also timed response distances prior to the meeting, said he found problems with the response-time trials as well. He said he voted against the EIR because of discrepancies in at least one of the fire department’s reported times. 

“Some of the times don’t add up,” he said. “It’s these types of flaws and inaccuracies that make EIR’s more vulnerable to law suits.” 

The ZAB will hold another public hearing on Feb. 28.


Bears suffer late collapse, fall to Long Beach State

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Saturday February 16, 2002

For seven innings, Trevor Hutchinson dodged bullets. But in the eighth, he was done in by foam pellets. 

The Long Beach State 49ers didn’t hit a ball hard in the eighth inning on Friday at Evans Diamond, but they still managed to score four runs to break a 1-1 deadlock. They added another three runs in the ninth, again without hitting the ball very hard, to win 8-1 over Cal. 

The Bears (4-5) dropped the game to the 21st-ranked 49ers despite outhitting them, 9-8, and allowing just one extra-base hit. But Long Beach (3-1) crammed most of their hits into the final two innings, while Cal spread theirs out and left seven runners on base. 

“We need to come of age soon, and find some guys to get the big hits for us,” Cal head coach David Esquer said of his young squad. “We haven’t played very well yet, and we need to put together a string of games.” 

Hutchinson held Long Beach without a hit for the first five innings, but it was a matter of luck more than command. Jeremy Reed started the game for the 49ers with a long drive to the fence in left field, and there were several line drives that headed right for Cal gloves in the next few innings. 

“(Hutchinson) wasn’t dominating them. We just had guys in the right spots,” Esquer said. 

Cal grabbed a 1-0 lead when leadoff hitter David Nicholson cranked a two-out, two-strike home run over the left-field wall in the third inning. It was the center fielder’s first round-tripper of the season, but it was all the support Hutchinson would get on the day. 

The Bears had opportunities to extend their lead in the fourth and fifth innings, putting runners in scoring position with one out in each inning, but couldn’t get anyone home against Long Beach starter Abe Alvarez. 

“If we get even one more run there, it puts much more pressure on (Long Beach),” Esquer said. “They would have had to think about getting a couple of runs, rather than trying to manufacture one to tie the game up.” 

Reed finally got Long Beach’s first hit of the game in the sixth inning, lining the first pitch into left-center for a double. Nick Orlandos put down a sacrifice bunt on the next pitch, but Hutchinson got to the ball late and threw it away, allowing Reed to score and sending Orlandos to second base.  

Chris Wright followed with a single to left, but Orlandos was held at third and wouldn’t score as Hutchinson struck out Paul McAnulty and Nick Covarrubias, then got Mike Hofius to line out to first base to end the threat. 

Having tied the score, the 49ers called in reliever Josh Alliston, who set down Cal with little fuss for the next four innings to earn the victory. 

Reed got things started again in the eighth inning, hitting a leadoff single off of Hutchinson. Orlandos sacrificed him to second base, with Hutchinson this time handling the ball with no trouble. Esquer chose to intentionally walk Wright to set up a possible double play, but Hutchinson faltered, walking McAnulty to load the bases before Covarrubias plopped a single into right field to plate Reed for a 2-1 lead. Hofius then hit a soft ground ball to shortstop and Jeff Dragicevich could only get the out at first, allowing Wright to score. Todd Jennings then got the backbreaker, a soft looper that fell inside the foul line in right field, scoring two runs to give the 49ers a 5-1 lead. Hutchinson finally got out of the inning by inducing a grounder to Dragicevich off the bat of Adam Heether. 

Esquer had no compunction about sending Hutchinson to the mound in the eighth, although his ace had already thrown more than 90 pitches. The senior right-handed had won his first two starts, giving up just one earned run in 15 innings in the two games. 

“I absolutely wanted him out there,” Esquer said. “He’s our Friday starter, and he’s the guy who gets our big wins for us.” 

Freshman left-hander Travis Talbott started the ninth for the Bears, but got just one out before he was yanked after giving up two runs.


Last chance to voice opposition to downzoning

Lynda Hart Berkeley
Saturday February 16, 2002

Editor: 

 

The City Council will be holding a Public Hearing on the downzoning of a portion of the 1100 block of Hearst Avenue (between San Pablo and Curtis) on Feb. 19. This is the last chance to oppose this short- sighted and illegal attempt to stop our development of a 14- unit residential apartment complex in this block. Which is more important? The creation of critically needed new housing on privately owned land which is appropriately zoned or the emotional appeals of well-organized neighbors. The neighborhood activists say that this block is an “anomaly” because there is lower density housing behind Hearst on Delaware Street and therefore our block should be downzoned to match. This is a dangerous assumption because many properties in Berkeley are zoned higher than their neighbors usually because of proximity to major transit corridors.  

If this reclassification is approved it opens the door for neighborhood groups to use reclassification as a weapon against future development. It will create a disincentive for anyone to invest in rental housing in Berkeley since the zoning at purchase may be reclassified therefore reducing the value of the property. Downzoning will reduce the potential for more affordable housing since the new zoning will make it economically unfeasible to build “inclusionary units” (low- income units). Only small projects with less than five units will be built since then they won’t have to comply with the affordable housing requirement. How can the city of Berkeley say that the creation of housing is a high priority while reducing the potential for new housing by downzoning? No wonder we have between 1,000 and 2,000 homeless people in Berkeley and no way to house many of the families on the Section 8 housing list. 

Please e-mail for more information. 

 

Lynda Hart 

Berkeley


The power behind the veil

Sari Friedman
Saturday February 16, 2002

If you’re more interested in reading about eunuchs than UNIX,and you’ve been wondering about the private lives of men in turbans and women in burkas in 16th and 17th century Mughal India, then you might want to pick up a copy of “The Twentieth Wife” by first-time author, Indu Sandaresan. 

This gorgeously jacketed book, which is being given enormous publicity while the author is on a 13-city tour, is a romance novel based on the true story of the birth, childhood, young womanhood, disastrous first marriage, and then triumphant second marriage of Mehrunnisa, the “sapphire-eyed” Sun of Woman, to Emperor Jahangir.  

At her marriage – which takes place when Mehrunnisa is at the advanced age of 34 – she becomes known as Empress Nur Jahan. She is Emperor Jahangir’s 20th, and final, wife. Although women were not usually said to have much power during this period, after the Emperor Jahangir’s death, the Empress has the personal and political skills to rule the empire for 15 years. 

Indian children know this history well. The Empress Nur Jahan is best known, in Indian history books, for her connection to the Tah Mahal. A year after Empress Hur Jahan joins the imperial harem, Emperor Khurram marries Mehrunnisa’s niece, Arjumand Banu Begam. This niece later dies while giving birth to her 14th child, and, in her memory, the emperor – supposedly with help from Empress Nur Jahan, the former Mehrunnisa and the heroine of this book – builds the Taj Mahal.  

“The Twentieth Wife” covers the first thirty-four years of Mehrunnisa’s life. A sequel, titled “The Power of the Veil,” will continue where “The Twentieth Wife” leaves off. 

The non-working class women of Mughal India – which in 1601 stretched from Bengal, India to Kandahar, Afghanistan – wore burkas and looked out at the world through a veil. They spent most of their time behind the walls of the harem enclosure, listening to the sounds of camels, horses, and sheep; their bare feet walking on stone. 

Most women of this period had little power over the shape and texture of their lives. It is interesting to note, though, that women of the working class, such as potters and builders, were more commonly considered the equal of their husbands, and were not required to wear a veil. Mehrunnisa, a member of the semi-nobility, was fortunate to be trained in music, dance, poetry, and painting. Though she’s born to a father subject to the throne of Persia and fleeing debtor’s prison and, possibly, death, due to some temporary bad luck, the family is soon living a life of privilege and comfort. 

Many of the descriptions in “The Twentieth Wife” are quite pleasing to read. When Mehrunnisa is born she is described as having “Well-formed arms and legs, a thick head of shiny black hair, and long, curling black eyelashes curling over delicate cheeks.” We hear about the tent sides that flap in the wind, and “steaming dishes of saffron-tinted pulavas cooked in chicken broth, goat curry in a rich brown gravy, a leg of lamb roasted with garlic and rosemary, and a salad of cucumber and plump tomato, sprinkled with rock salt, pepper, and a squeeze of lemon.” 

Occasionally, though, descriptions of people, places, and things are described with romance novel clichés: Mehrunissa has “mischief in her eyes.” On the other hand, The Twentieth Wife provides an important and fascinating perspective to the drama taking place in Afghanistan and India today. 

 

Sari Friedman can be reached via Sari2@Earthlink.Net. 

 

 


Staff
Saturday February 16, 2002

 

924 Gilman Feb. 16: Iron Vegan, Nigel Peppercock, Lost Goat, Iron Lung, Depressor; Feb. 22: Oppressed Logic, Deface, Edddie Haskells, Throat Oyster; Feb. 23: From Ashes Arise, Artimus Pyle, Brainoil, Down in Flames, Dystrophy, Scholastic Deth; All shows start a 8 p.m. unless noted; Most are $5; 924 Gilman St. 525-9926. 

 

The Albatross Feb. 18: Paul Schneider; Feb. 19: Carla Kaufman and Larry Scala; Feb. 20: Whiskey Brothers; Feb. 21: Keni “El Lebrijano”; Feb. 23: 9:30 p.m., Dave Creamer Jazz Quartet; Feb. 26: Mad & Eddie Duran; Feb. 28: Keni “El Lebrijano”; All shows begin at 9 p.m. unless noted. 822 San Pablo Ave., 843-2473, albatrosspub@mindspring. com. 

 

Anna’s Bistro Feb. 16: Robin Gregory, Ducksan Distones Jazz Sextet; Feb. 17: Acoustic Soul; Feb. 18: Renegade Sidemen w/Calvin Keyes; Feb. 19: Ed Reed; Feb. 20: Bob Schoen Jazz Quintet; Feb. 21: Jazz Singers’ Collective; Feb. 22: Fourtet, Hideo Date; Feb. 23: Vicki Burns & Felice York, Ducksan Distones Jazz Sextet; Feb. 24: Christy Dana Jazz Quartet; Feb. 25: Renegade Sidemen w/Calvin Keyes; Feb. 26: Con Alma; Feb. 27: Mainstream Jazz Quintet; Feb. 28: Junebug; Music starts at 8 p.m. and 10 p.m., 1801 University Ave., 849-2662. 

 

Blake’s Feb. 17: Roots Science; Feb. 18: The Steve Gannon Band, Mz. Dee, $4; Feb. 20: Hebro, $3; Feb. 21: Ascension, $5; Feb. 23: Tang; Feb. 24: Famous Last Words; $3; Feb. 25: The Steve Gannon Band, Mz. Dee, $4; Feb. 26: Boomshanka, Rare Form, $3; Feb. 27: Mindz Eye, $5; Feb. 28: Ascension, $5; 2367 Telegraph Ave., 877-488-6533. 

 

Cafe Eclectica Feb. 23: 8 p.m., Hip Hop show: Little Larry, with guest MCs and DJs. A teen cafe "for youth, by youth". All ages, $3 w/HS I.D., $5 w/o; 1309 Solano Ave., Albany, 527-2344. 

 

Cal Performances Feb. 17: 3 p.m., Opera vocalist, Ewa Podles, performs works by Rossini, Chopin and Brahms. $42. Zellerbach Hall, UC Berkeley, 642-9988 

 

Cato’s Ale House Feb. 17: Phillip Greenlief Trio; Feb. 20: Anton Schwartz Trio; Feb. 24: Blue and Tan; Feb. 27: Vince Wallace Trio 

 

Club Jjang-ga Feb. 16: Deducted Value, Dopesick, Luxt, Karate High School, Forcing Bloom; Feb. 23: Cheapskate, Eddie Haskels, Resiteleros, Dead Last; 261-1108, savageproductions1@yahoo.com. 

 

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 

 

Jupiter Feb. 16: Michael Bluestien Trio; Feb. 20: Joshi Marshall Duo; Feb. 21: Spectraphonic; Feb. 22: Ben Graves Group; Feb. 23: Brenden Millstein Quartet; Feb. 27: J Steinkoler Duo; Feb. 28: Spectraphonic; All shows are free and begin at 8 p.m., unless noted. 2181 Shattuck Ave., 843-7625, www.jupiterbeer.com. 

 

Old First Concerts Feb. 16: 8 p.m., The Duke and The Lady-Faye Carol, $12; Feb. 17: 4 p.m., Miriam Abramowitsch and George Barth, $12; Old First Church, 1751 Sacramento St., 415-474-1608. 

 

The Starry Plough Feb. 16: 9:30 p.m. Camper Van Chadbourne, Dandeline, $7; Feb. 17: 8 p.m., Irish Music Session; Feb. 20: 8:30 p.m., Poetry Slam, $5; Feb. 21: 9:30 p.m., Jon Langford, Rico Bell, $12; Feb. 22: 9:30 p.m., 20 Minute Loop, Kirby Grips, She Mob, $6; Feb. 23: 9:30 p.m., Eric McFadden Experience, Mark Growden, $6; 3101 Shattuck Ave., 841-2082. 

 

Tuva Space Mar. 21: 8 p.m., Blues Translation; Mar. 22: 8 p.m., Electro-Acoustic Quartet; Mar. 23: 8 p.m. Solo Guitar Performance, 9:30 p.m. Country, Folk, and Blues Standards. $8 All shows $8. 312 Adeline St. 649-8744, acme@sfsound.org 

 

 

“Concherto Night” Feb. 16: 8 p.m., Empyrean Ensemble perform new American and 20th Century works. $14 -$18. Julia Morgan Theatre, 2640 College Ave., 925-798-1300, www.juliamorgan.org 

 

“Love is in the Air” Feb. 16: 6 p.m., Oakland Lyric Opera presents an evening of dinner, candlelight and flowers accompanied by a musical showcase of Broadway tunes, Italian street songs and nostalgic cabaret music. $65 including tax and tip. Sequoya Country Club, 4550 Heafey Rd, Oakland, 836-6772 

 

“Judi Bari Takes on the FBI” Feb. 16: 7:30 p.m., Alice Littletree and Sherry Glaser perform separately in a benefit to raise money for Judi Bari’s suit against the FBI. $5 - $15 sliding scale. Unitarian Fellowship, Cedar & Bonita St., 415-927-1645 

 

“Bosch Sisters” Feb. 20: 7:30 p.m., Swiss sisters perform piano concert featuring music by Mozart, Schubert, Mendelssohn, Debussy and Poulenc. Donations suggested. UC Berkeley International House, 2299 Piedmont Ave. 642-9490 

 

“Free Men! Free Women!” Feb. 22 through Feb. 23: 8 p.m., Wing It performs a new a combination of dance, song and story. $12. First Congregational Church of Berkeley, 2345 Channing Way, 814-9584 

 

“John Glennon and Erika March” Feb. 24: 5 p.m., A program of French music including the works of Francois Couperin, Chambonnieres, and Muffat. $15 - $18. MusicSources, 1000 The Alameda, 528-1685 

 

“Cosi Fan Tutte” Feb. 22 through Mar. 3: The Berkeley Opera will perform Mozart’s classic opera. $10 - $30. Call for specific dates and times. Julia Morgan Theater, 2640 College Ave. 841-103, www.berkeleyopera.com 

 

 

“La Tania” Feb. 14 through Feb. 16, 6 p.m., 7:15 p.m., Acclaimed Flamenco Dancer, La Tania, performs with members of her dance company. $55 dinner included. Cafe de la Paz, 1600 Shattuck Ave. 843-0662, www.cafedelapaz.net 

 

“The Ravel Project and Other Performances” Feb. 15, Feb. 16: 8 p.m., Pascal Rioult Dance Theatre will premiere the Ravel Project on February 15th and perform separate selections on February 16. $24 - $46. Zellerbach Hall, UC Berkeley Campus, 642-0212 

 

“Here..Now” Feb. 19 through Feb. 24: Tues. - Fri. 8 p.m., Sat. 2 p.m., 8 p.m., Sun. 3 p.m., 8 p.m., Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater performs three distinct programs featuring the West Coast premiere of “Here...Now”. $24 - $46. Zellerbach Hall, UC Berkeley Campus, 642-0212 

 

 

 

 

“Human Nature” Feb. 16: 8:30 p.m., X-plicit Players, $15; Art-A-Fact, 1109 Addison St., 848-1985, www.xplicitplayers.com. 

 

“Sisters” Through Feb. 16: Fri. and Sat. at 8 p.m., The Prozorov sisters look at the gap between hope and fulfillment in their lives. Live Oak Theatre, 1301 Shattack, www.actorsensemleofbkerkeley.com. 

 

“Night, Mother” Feb. 8, Feb. 15 - 16, Feb. 22 - 23: 8 p.m., A drama exploring one young woman’s decision to take control of her life with one furious and heartbreaking act. Directed by Bahati Bonner. $12, $8 seniors. La Val’s Subterranean Theatre, 1834 Euclid Ave. 496-1269 x1950, nightmother@onebox.com 

 

“Culture Clash in AmeriCCA” Through Mar. 3: Check theater for specific dates and times. The comic trio Culture Clash present their latest collection of political, ethnological and socialogical humor written for and about Berkeley. $10 - $54. Berkeley Repertory Theatre, 2025 Addison St., 647-2949, www.berkeleyrep.org 

 

 

“Rhinoceros” Through Mar. 10: Check theater for specific dates and times. An absurdist tragic-comedy about a small provincial town whose citizens slowly but surely transform into large cumbersome rhinoceroses. Directed by Barbara Damashek. $38 - $54. Berkeley Repertory Theatre, 2025 Addison St. 647-2976 www.berkeleyrep.org. 

 

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

 

Film 

 

Pacific Film Archive Feb: 14: 7 p.m., The Perfumed Garden; Feb: 15: 7 p.m., Rendezvous in Paris, 9:05 p.m., Autumn Tale; Feb. 17: 3 p.m. The Testimony of Taliesin Jones, 5:30 p.m., The Atonement of Gosta Berling; Feb. 19: 7:30 p.m., Prisoners of War; Feb. 20: 3 p.m., The General, 7:30 p.m., Kristin Lucas Simulcast Town Meeting; Feb. 21: 7:30 p.m., Kristin Lucas Workshop; 2527 Bancroft Way, 642-1412. 

 

“Human Rights International Film Festival” Feb. 22 through Feb. 24: Nine provocative films will be shown, many followed by question and answer sessions with local and visiting filmmakers. Check theater for films and times. Pacific Film Archive, 2527 Bancroft Way, 642-1412  

 

 

 

Exhibits  

 

“Rhythms” Through Feb. 2: Art installation of sculpture, neon, music and video projections by Kati Casida; Jazzschool, 2087 Addison St., 845-5373 

 

Pro Arts: “Juried Annual 2001-02” Through Feb. 2: Exhibition of painting, sculpture, mixed media, photography and more by Bay Area and regional artists; Pro Arts, 461 Ninth St., www.proartsgallery.org. 

 

“All Grown Up” Through Feb. 2: New paintings and drawings by Amy Chan. Thurs. 1 p.m. - 8 p.m., Fri -Sun 1 p.m. -6 p.m., 21 Grand Ave., Oakland, 444-7263. 

 

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

 

“New Work by Dennis Begg and Steve Briscoe” Through Feb. 9: Dennis Begg’s sculpture. Steve Brisco’s paintings. Tues. - Sat. 11 a.m. - 6 p.m.; Traywick Gallery,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.; Free. St. Mary’s Center, 635 22nd St., Oakland, 893-4723 x222. 

 

“Envisioning Ecology” Through Feb. 15: Paintings by Michelle Waters. Ecology Center, 2530 San Pablo Ave., 548-2220 x233. 

 

“The Other 364 Days: A Day in the Life of the Queer Community” 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.; Photolab Gallery, 2235 Fifth St., 644-1400, limor@indelible-images.com. 

 

“Adventures in La Land” Through Feb. 23: Installations by Suzanne Husky and Paintings by Amy Morrell. Tues. - Sat., 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.; 4920 Telegraph Ave., Oakland, 428-2349. 

 

“Transformations: Through the Eye of a Needle” Through Feb. 23: Two-person exhibition by Rebecca Bui and Linda Lemon including procelain and fabric dolls and mixed media works on handmade paper. Tues.-Sat., 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Ardency Gallery, 709 Broadway, Oakland, 836-0831, www.artolio.com 

 

“Ton of Joy” Through Mar. 1: Group show of twelve painters and sculptors: Simone Anders, Susan Brady, Erin Fitzgerald, Karen Frey, Kei Hanafusa, Nancy Legge, Burke Rainey, Robin Sebourn, Kristen Throop, Clay Vajgrt, Whitney Vosburgh, Ann West; Mon. - Sat., 8 a.m. - 6 p.m.; Hollis Street Project, 5900 Hollis St., Emeryville. 

 

“Celebrating the African Diaspora” Through Mar. 1: A Black History Month Exhibit celebrating the contributions of Africans in America and throughout the Diaspora. 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.; University of Creation Sprituality, 2141 Broadway, Oakland, 835-4827 x31 

 

“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; Through Mar. 24: “Migrations: Photographs by Sebastiao Salgado,” 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. 

 

“A Retrospective Show” Through Mar. 13: The Women’s Cancer Resource Center “The Art of Living Black,” an Open Studios event for local African American artists. The Gallery features a retrospective show of the work of the late Jan Hart-Schuyers. Mon. - Thurs. 9 a.m. - 3 p.m., Sat. 12 - 4 p.m., Women’s Cancer Resource Center, 3023 Shattuck Ave., 548-9286 x307, www.wcrc.org. 

 

The Richmond Art Center Through Mar. 16: “The Art of Living Black 2002: The sixth Annual Bay Area Black Artists Exhibition and Art Tour,” group exhibition of 81 artists; “Introspección Dual: Recent Painting by Verónica B. Rojas and Santiago Gervas”; “Transmutations: Recent work by Tim Jag”; “The NIAD` Family,” Artwork from the National Institute of Art and Disabilities; “Still Here,” collaborative art project about AIDS in the 21st century; “Girls in the Hall,” artwork by girls incarcerated in the San Francisco juvenile justice system; Tues. - Fri., 10 a.m. - 4:30 p.m., Sat. noon - 4:30 p.m.; The Art of Living Black Art Tour Weekend: Mar. 2 and 3, 11 a.m. - 5 p.m.; 2540 Barrett Ave., 620-6772, www.therichmondartcenter.org. 

 

“Stas Orlovski” Feb. 16 through Mar. 23: New work by Stas Orlovski featuring a series of large paintings and drawings examining the relationships between body and landscape and eastern and western aesthetics. Tues. - Sat. 11 a.m. - 6 p.m. Traywick Gallery, 1316 Tenth St., 527-1214 

 

“Average Female (Perfect)” Through Mar. 24: Manhattan-based artist Sowon Kwon projects footage of the first ever perfect-scoring gymnasts: Romanian, Nadia Comanece and Russian, Nelli Kim at the 1976 Montreal Olympics. Kwon superimposes over the gymnasts a hand-drawn outline of the “average” female body to direct the audience’s attention to the gymnasts’ movements throughout their performances. Wed. - Sun 11 a.m. - 7 p.m., $4 - $6. 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, Through March 30: 10 a.m. - 6 p.m., Mon. - Sat.; Sticks, 1579 B, Solano Ave., 526-6603.  

 

“Domestic Bliss” Through Apr. 4: Collection of abstract paintings and mixed medium by Amy St. George. Albany Community Center Foyer Gallery, 1249 Marin Ave., Albany, 524-9283. 

 

Trillium Press: Past, Present and Future Feb. 15 through April 13: Works created at Trillium Press by 28 artists. Tues. - Fri. noon - 5:30 p.m., Sat. noon - 4:30 p.m.; Kala Art Institute, 1060 Heinz Ave., 549-2977, www.kala.org.  

 

“The Legacy of Social Protest: The Disability Rights Movement” Through April 30: The first exhibition in a series dealing with Free Speech, Civil Rights, and Social Protest Movements of the 60s and 70s in California. Photograghs by: Cathy Cade, HolLynn D’Lil, Howard Petrick, Ken Stein. The Free Speech Cafe, Moffitt Undergraduate Library, University of California-Berkeley, hjadler@yahoo.com.  

 

“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. 

 

“Jurassic Park: The Life and Death of Dinosaurs” Feb. 2 through May 12: An exhibit displaying models of the sets and dinosaur sculptures used in the Jurassic Park films, as well as a video presentation and a dig pit where visitors can dig for specially buried dinosaur bones. $8 adults, $6, youth and seniors. Lawrence Hall of Science, Centennial Dr., above the UC Berkeley campus, 642-5132, www.lawrencehallofscience.org 

 

“The Image of Evil in Art” Feb. 7 through May 31: An exhibit exploring the varying depictions of the devil in art. Call ahead for hours. The Flora Lamson Hewlett Library, 2400 Ridge Rd., 649-2541. 

 

“The Pottery of Ocumichu” Feb. 7 through May 31: A case exhibit of the imaginative Mexican pottery made in the village of Ocumichu, Michoacan. Known particularly for its playful devil figures, Ocumichu pottery also presents fanciful everyday scenes as well as religious topics. Call ahead for hours. The Flora Lamson Hewlett Library, 2400 Ridge Rd., 649-2540 

 

Readings 

 

Black Oak Books Feb. 27: 7:30 p.m., Author & Activist Randy Schutt discussing his new book "Inciting Democracy: A Practical Proposal for Creating a Good 

Society." 1491 Shattuck Ave., 486-0698. 

 

Boadecia’s Books Feb. 9: 7:30 p.m., Loolwa Khazzoom reads from her new book “Conseqence: Beyond Resisting Rape” which takes a street savy look at street harassment. The evening will include a screening of the film “War Zone” and several spoken word presentations. Free. 398 Colusa, Kensington, 595-4642 

 

Cody’s on Fourth St. Feb. 15: Nuala O’Faolain talks about “My Dream of You”; Feb. 19: Tracy Hogg will tell “Secrets of the Baby Whisperer for Toddlers”; Feb. 21: Dan Bessie discusses Alvah Bessie’s Spanish Civil War Notebooks; Feb. 27: 6 p.m., Rodney Yee brings “Yoga: The Poetry of the Body”; Feb. 28: Rosemary Wells talks about children, children’s books, and the importance of reading; All events begin at 7 p.m. unless noted and ask a $2 donation. 1730 Fourth St., 559-9500, www.codysbooks.com.  

 

Cody’s on Telegraph Ave. Feb. 7: Mark Kurlansky considers “Salt: A World History”; Feb. 11: Edward O. Wilson discusses “The Future of Life”; Feb. 12: Frances Moore Lappé and Anna Lappé offer “Hope’s Edge: The Next Diet for a Small Planet”; Feb. 15: Cindy Engel describes “Wild Health: How Animals Keep Themselves Well and What We Can Learn From Them”; Feb. 19: Robert Cohen reads from “Inspired Sleep”; Feb. 22: “The Whole World is Watching,” a panel discussion with Harold Adler, Leon F. Litwack, Charles Wollenberg, Hollynn D’Lil, Ronald J. Riesterer and Cathy Cade; Feb. 25: David Henry Sterry describes “Chicken: Self-portrait of a Young Man for Rent”; Feb. 26: Carter Scholz reads from “Radiance”; All events begin at 7:30 p.m. unless noted and ask a $2 donation. 2454 Telegraph Ave., 845-7852, www.codysbooks.com.  

 

Coffee With a Beat Feb. 2: Julia Vinograd, Shauna Rogan; Feb. 9: Sydney Bell, Debrale Pagan; All readings 7-9 p.m., free and followed by open mike. 458 Perkins, Oakland, 526-5985.  

 

Easy Going Travel Shop & Bookstore Feb. 5: William Chapman presents slides and reads from his book, “The Face of Tibet”; Feb. 7: A panel of female travel writers read from their works published in “The Unsavvy Travelers”, a chronicle of hilarious tales of cathartic misadventures on the road; Feb. 19: Christopher Baker, author of “Costa Rica: Moon Handbook” presents a slide show demonstrating what makes the Central American country so appealing; Richard Sterling, author of Lonely Planet’s “World Food: Greece”, presents a culinary tour revealing the culture and character of Greece through the medium of her cuisine’s; Feb. 28: Terrence Ward reads from his book “Searching for Hassan: An American Family’s Journey Home to Iran”; All readings are free and start at 7:30 p.m., 1385 Shattuck Ave. at Rose, 843-3533. 

 

Shambhala Booksellers Feb. 3: 7 p.m., William Peterson will read from his latest book “Voices in the Dark: Esoteric, Occult & Secular Voices in Nazi-Occupied Paris 1990-1994”. Free. 242 Telegraph Ave., 848-8443 

 

 

Poetry 

 

Poetry Flash @ Cody’s Feb. 6: Adrianne Marcus, Diana O’Hehir; Feb. 10: Cathy Coldman, Judith Serin; Feb. 13: Murray Silverstein, Gillian Wegener, Helen Wickes; Feb. 17: Sharon Doubiago, Doren Robbins; Feb. 20: Linda Elkin, Steve Rood; Feb. 27: Stephen Kessler and John Oliver Simon; All events begin at 7:30 p.m., $2 donation. 2454 Telegraph Ave., 845-7852, www.codysbooks.com.  

 

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. 

 

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.  

 

Oakland Museum of California Feb. 14: 1 p.m., Diane Curry shares her experiences researching photographic archives for the history of Oakland, free; Feb. 17: 12 - 4 p.m., A family program in which artists engage families in creative projects inspired by the work of California African American artists; 2 - 3 p.m., Artist Raymond Howell discusses his creative process and artistic techniques. $6 general, $4 seniors and students with ID. 10th & Oak St., 238-2200, www.museumca.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.


Staff
Saturday February 16, 2002


Saturday, Feb. 16

 

Puppet Show 

1:30 and 2:30 p.m. 

Hall of Health, Children’s Hospital Oakland 

2230 Shattuck Ave. 

Includes puppets from diverse cultures and with such conditions as cerebral palsy, blindness, and Down syndrome. Free. 549-1564. 

 

Launch Party for War Times 

4 p.m. 

Mandela Village 

1357 Fifth St., West Oakland 

A new national anti-war newspaper covering an alternative truth. 869-5156. 

 

BANA, Berkeley Alliance of  

Neighborhood Associations 

9:30 - ll a.m.  

Live Oak Park, Fireside Room 

l30l Shattuck Ave. 

Neighbors are welcome to network and connect on issues with groups across the city. 848-3l75, HCMuir@mindspring.com. 

 

Judi Bari Takes on the FBI 

7:30 p.m. 

Unitarian Fellowship 

Cedar and Bonita St. 

Benefit for the Judi Bari suit against the FBI. $5 - $15. 415-927-1645. 

 

Habitual Avoidance of Intimacy? 

5 - 6:30 p.m. 

Twelve-step meeting for sexual, social, and emotional anorexia. Open to anyone who wants to recover from habitual avoidance of intimacy. Call first, 548-1285. 

 

Fundraiser for BHS Common Ground Costa Rica trip 

9:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. 

1924 Cedar St. 

Humongous multi-family Berkeley High School indoor garage sale. Marciagoodman@aol.com. 

 


Sunday, Feb. 17

 

 

Jewish Learning Seminar 

10 a.m. - noon 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St. 

K’Tanim: A Celebration of Jewish Learning for Families with Young Children, Birth to 3. Family activities, songs, stories, crafts, and discussions. $10. To register call: 549-9447 x 104. 

 

Plant Meditations: Cultivating Your Relationship with the Healing Power of Herbs 

7:30 p.m. 

The Berkeley Psychic Institute 

2018 Allston Way 

Spend the evening exploring the many ways of communicating with the healing presence of the plants. $10 donation, 644-1600. 

 


Monday, Feb. 18

 

 

BART Operates Regular Saturday  

Service for “President’s Day 

Beginning at 6 a.m. until midnight on all five lines. 465-2278. 

 

The East Bay Coalition Against the War Movie/Speaker and Discussion Night 

7 - 9 p.m. 

Fellowship of Humanity  

390 27th St., Oakland 

We will show the Noam Chomsky Video on 9/11 and the War on Terror. Plus guest speaker, Denny Riley, Vietnam Veteran and a member of the Veterans Speaker’s Alliance. The film and speaker will take about one to one and a half hours. The rest of the time will be devoted to small and large group discussion about our current struggle in response to “the war on terrorism.” 

 


Tuesday, Feb. 19

 

 

Berkeley Garden Club  

Hosts “Crystal Palaces” 

1 p.m. 

Epworth United Methodist Church 

1953 Hopkins St. 

Ann Cunningham, author of “Crystal Palaces” will present slides of glass houses from the turn of the century to the present. Scott Medburry, Director Strybing Arboretum & Botanic Garden, will talk about the history of San Francisco’s Conservatory of Flowers including an update on its recent renovation. 524-4374. 

 

21st Century McCarthyism & The Rise of the Global Police State 

6 - 8 p.m. 

UC Berkeley 

Wheeler Auditorium 

The following speakers present their interpretations of September 11 and its aftermath: Angela Davis, Diane Clemens and Jennifer Terry. Sponsored by the Departments of Women's Studies, Peace and Conflict Studies, & Ethnic Studies, and Professors for Peace. xperales@uclink.berkeley.edu. 

 

Pioneering Woman Federal Judge 

4:30 p.m. 

UC Berkeley 

Boalt Hall, Room 100 

The Hon. Mary M. Schroeder, Chief Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals, 9th Circuit, speaks on "Justice and Mercy." Inaugural event of American Constitution Society for Law & Policy, Boalt Hall Chapter. 642-1741, amconstsoc@law.berkeley.edu. 

 

Berkeley Camera Club 

7:30 p.m. 

Northbrae Community Church 

941 The Alameda 

Share your slides and prints and learn what other photographers are doing. 525-3565. 

 


Wednesday, Feb. 20

 

 

Staying Connected: Building A Secular Jewish Life 

7:30 - 9:15 p.m. 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St. 

An evening of discussion and song with a Klezmer/Yiddish musician. $5. 848-0237 x 127 

 

Institute of Government Studies 

4 p.m. 

119 Moses Hall 

UC Berkeley Campus 

Gerald Gamm lectures as part of the Historical Institutionalism Seminar. 642-4608, www.igs.berkeley.edu 

 

Colonial Courts, African Conflicts,  

and the End of Slavery in the French Souda 

4 - 6 p.m. 

UC Berkeley  

3335 Dwinelle, Level "C" 

A talk by Richard Roberts of Stanford University. Sponsored by Department of History, Department of African-American Studies, and Center for African Studies. 642-8338. 

 

Cultural Competency in Healthcare 

6 - 7:30 p.m. 

Berkeley YWCA  

2600 Bancroft Way 

Racial Justice Lecture Series and discussion on overcoming ethnic and gender differences to deliver healthcare in under-served populations. 848-6370, www.ywca-berkeley.org. 

 

East Bay Job Fair 

noon - 6 p.m. 

Henry J. Kaiser Convention Center 

10 10th St., Oakland 

The United Way of the Bay Area, Economic Development Alliance for Business, and Bay Area Works are hosting a job fair. Free and open to everyone. 238-2410, www.uwba.org.  

 


Thursday, Feb. 21

 

 

Barbara Lee 

8 p.m. 

UC Berkeley 

145 Dwinelle Hall 

Rep. Barbara Lee will be on campus. Sponsored by the Commonwealth Club and the Center on Politics. 642-9355, www.igs.berkeley.edu:8880/. 

 

Purim Lecture 

7:30 - 9 p.m. 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St. 

Discover the deeper meaning of Purim as Rabbi Alexander Sheinfeld uses the lens of Kabbalah to explore what Purim has to do with being Jewish and with being human. $10, $8 members. 848-0237 x127 

 

Zimbabwe Wildlife 

7 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment, Inc. 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

Julie Edwards of Rhino Girl Safaris gives a slide presentation showcasing Zimbabwe’s remarkable variety of birds and mammals, and discusses the future of wildlife and the safari industry in Africa. 527-7377 

 

Travel Photography Workshop 

7 - 9 p.m. 

Easy Going Travel Shop & Bookstore 

1385 Shattuck Ave. 

An intensive workshop that focuses on travel photography, with an emphasis on film and equipment security, light and weather conditions, methods to make the most of well-known sites, and ways to approach and photograph strangers. $15. 843-3533 

 

Simplicity Forum 

7 - 8:30 p.m. 

Claremont Branch Library 

2940 Benvenue Ave. 

"TV and Media” - Several people who have given up their TV's will talk about the difficulties and benefits. 549-3509, www.seeds of simplicity.org. 

 

Take the Terror Out of Talking 

noon - 1:10 p.m. 

Calif. Dept. Health Services 

2151 Berkeley Way 

Room 804 

State Health Toastmasters Club is presenting a six-week Speechcraft workshop to help you overcome your fear of speaking in public and improve your communication skills. Cost is $36 for six sessions, Feb. 21, 28 & March 7, 14, 21. 649-7750. 

 


Friday, Feb. 22

 

 

Grand Canyon Splendor: Rafting the Colorado 

7 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment, Inc. 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

Guidebook author and former river guide, Tyler Williams, presents the dramatic beauty of the Grand Canyon in his slide presentation on rafting the Colorado. 527-7377 

 

Still Stronger Women 

1:15 - 3:15 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave 

Short stories. 232-1351. 

 


Saturday, Feb. 23

 

 

Archaeological Institute of America 

3 p.m. 

Shorb House 

2547 Channing Way 

Lecture by Dr. Stuart Swiny discussing Cypriot rituals surrounding fertility, life and death from the Neolithic to the Roman era. 415-338-1537, barbaram@sfsu.edu. 

 

Paying for Public Education: 

Whose Job Is It? 

3 - 5:30 p.m. 

Ocean View Elementary School 

Multi-Purpose Room 

1000 Jackson St., Albany 

A forum with Kevin Gordon of the Education Coalition, who will explain state-level funding for K-12 schools. Candidates for the California Assembly 14th District seat Debate: Dave Brown (D), Loni Hancock (D), and Charles Ramsey (D). 524-7004, hao_kco@pacbell.net.  

 


Sunday, Feb. 24

 

 

Monday, Feb. 25 

A Rose Grew in Brooklyn: Stories from a Jewish Girlhood 

7:30 - 9 p.m. 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St. 

Local author and therapist, Rose Fox reads from her memoir. 

 

Institute of Government Studies 

12 p.m. 

119 Moses Hall 

UC Berkeley Campus 

John Matsasuka presents a lecture entitled “For the Many or the Few: How the Initiative Process Changes American Government”. 642-4608, www.igs.berkeley.edu 

 


Tuesday, Feb. 26

 

 

Berkeley Camera Club 

7:30 p.m. 

Northbrae Community Church 

941 The Alameda 

Share your slides and prints and learn what other photographers are doing. 525-3565. 

 


Wednesday, Feb. 27

 

 

Berkeley Gray Panthers 

1:30 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

Defending and improving Medicare. 548-9696, graypanthers@hotmail.com.  

 

Berkeley Mental Health Commission 

6:30 p.m. 

2640 Martin Luther King Jr. Way 

Auditorium 

Berkeley mental health clinic. 644-8562. 

 


Thursday, Feb. 28

 

 

Cody's Evening for Parents and Teachers 

7 p.m. 

Cody's Books 

1730 Fourth St. 

Rosemary Wells, children's author of dozens of books including Max and Ruby and Noisy Nora, will discuss children, books, and the importance of reading to your children. 527-6667, www.parentsnet.org. 

 

Trekking in Bhutan 

7 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment, Inc. 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

Seasoned traveler, Ruther Anne Kocour will share slides and stories of her adventures trekking in this majestic country. 527-7377 

 

Take the Terror Out of Talking 

noon - 1:10 p.m. 

Calif. Dept. Health Services 

2151 Berkeley Way 

Room 804 

State Health Toastmasters Club is presenting a six-week Speechcraft workshop to help you overcome your fear of speaking in public and improve your communication skills. Cost is $36 for six sessions, Feb. 28 & March 7, 14, 21. 649-7750. 

 

The Writing Life 

4:30 p.m. 

North Branch Library 

1170 The Alameda 

Peter S. Beagle will discuss his works and the life and times of a professional writer. 649-3913, www.infopeople.org/bpl. 

 

Photographing the Famous 

7:30 p.m. 

College Preparatory School Auditorium 

1600 Broadway, Oakland 

Michael Collopy will talk about photographing the famous (Mother Teresa, Frank Sinatra, Mikhail Gorbachev, Nelson Mandela).


Schools may face a $3 million budget cut

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet staff
Saturday February 16, 2002

Superintendent Michele Lawrence recommended an initial wave of $3 million in cuts, including the closure of City of Franklin School, in a budget proposal released Friday. 

Lawrence, who would trim $1.1 million from the central office, also laid the groundwork for heavy layoffs, which would include more than 100 teachers. 

The Board of Education, which needs to cut about $6 million in order to balance the budget next year, will discuss Lawrence’s recovery plan during its Feb. 20 meeting, and is expected to vote on it Feb. 27. The board will not vote on the official 2002-2003 budget until June. 

Lawrence has discussed the need for multi-million dollar cuts for weeks, but the proposal still hit school activists and elected officials hard Friday. 

“Quite honestly, it’s a bit depressing now,” said school board member John Selawsky. “Seeing the reality of it, it kind of shakes you up.” 

Lawrence said recommending the closure of City of Franklin, a K-6 school, was a “very painful” decision. But she said the 3-year-old magnet program has failed to draw an appropriate number of students. 

“It’s a school of barely 200 and we can’t afford to run it,” she said. “The overhead, the administrative costs, are just too high.” 

The district estimates that closure will save $326,000, plus tens of thousands in transportation costs. 

“It’s very upsetting,” said Shay Williams, parent of a first-grader at City of Franklin, arguing that the school should have more time to increase enrollment. 

Shirley Issel, president of the Board of Education, said she will seek input in the next two weeks before making a decision on the school’s closure. 

“It’s very important to hear from anyone who wants to address the board before I make up my mind,” Issel said. 

Lawrence’s budget proposal identifies about 300 positions for potential layoffs, including 70 to 80 “temporary” or beginning teachers employed by the district. The document also targets 20 “permanent” teacher positions in grades four through eight and 12.2 slots at Berkeley High School.  

The proposal also names librarians, reading teachers and music instructors among dozens of others who could be laid off. 

But the district will not necessarily let go all of the employees on the list. By law, the system must notify certain classes of teachers and administrators by March 15 if it intends to let them go next year.  

Lawrence and school board members say they hope to take back some of the lay off notices before the end of the year if they are able to realize additional savings between March 15 and the official June budget vote. 

The district is currently pursuing special legislation to forgive a $1.1 million fine owed to the state for failure to turn in a professional development document on time, but Lawrence is not optimistic about forgiveness. 

Rick Ayers, an English instructor at BHS, said he is concerned about the layoffs. 

“We’re just hoping a lot of good teachers don’t get pushed out by this,” he said, adding that normal resignations and retirements may soften the blow. 

“We’re going to keep working as hard as we can to keep the cuts as far away from the classroom as possible,” Lawrence said. 

She added that literacy programs will be a top priority, and noted that librarians and “reading recovery” instructors will be near the top of her list for employees she will attempt to retain. 

Selawsky also voiced his strong support for the district’s early literacy program. “We’ve got to save that, from my point of view,” he said. 

Lawrence’s proposal also calls for a shift from a seven- to a six-period day at BHS, saving the school eight full-time teaching positions and an estimated $520,000.  

Science teachers have expressed concern that the move will reduce or eliminate the school’s successful double-period science program. 

Lawrence’s proposal would increase BHS class size from 29 to 31 students, and use the savings to pay for an additional 20 to 30 “flex time” class sections outside the normal six-period day. 

Rodney Kopish, a biology teacher at BHS, said he hopes the outside sections will allow for some partial continuation of double-period science.  

Lawrence said extra science classes are a possibility, but warned that the flex periods could also be used for leadership classes, orchestra, the school newspaper and other activities. 

The superintendent’s reorganization of the central office involves some 35 layoffs, $844,000 in cuts from the business office and $311,000 from the educational services office. 

The superintendent would, among other things, fold administration of the Berkeley Schools Excellence Project, a special local tax, into the district’s business office. Until now, BSEP has been administered by a separate, independent body. 

Nancy Riddle, co-chair of the BSEP planning and oversight committee, said she has concerns about the loss of independent management of the local tax, which generated about $10 million this year and may only be used for certain purposes, like class size reduction. 

“When times are rough, it’s really tempting to dip into restricted funds,” she said, arguing that the shift to district management could lead to a plundering of BSEP funds.  

“I have absolutely none of those fears,” Lawrence responded, arguing that her administration will be more careful with district funds than its predecessors. “We know the difference between restricted money and unrestricted money.”


Open letter to Gov. Davis to stop new Bay Bridge

Andrew Berna-Hicks Oakland
Saturday February 16, 2002

Dear Governor Davis: 

 

Why are we spending billions to build a new half a bridge when by the time it is built, it will be a commuter parking lot 24/7? 

It is obvious that the people who make these decisions (you, Willie and Jerry Brown, etc.) can not see out the tinted windows of your limousine if in fact you do get caught on the Bay Bridge at rush hour (6 to 9 a.m., 3:30 to 7 p.m., Friday and Saturday evenings ...) when it may take upwards of an hour to get across the three-mile span. 

Why aren’t we building a bridge from San Leandro to San Mateo, which Frank Lloyd Wright has already designed with a park in the middle. Sounds a little different, but the bridge would have rail, bike lanes etc. ... It would actually help relieve the strain of traffic on the existing Bay Bridge (hey, is this a new concept?). Meanwhile, we could retrofit the existing bridge, which held up pretty damn well during the 1989 Loma Prieta quake. Oh, sorry, what am I thinking. Scrape the plans for the new single-span thing-a-ma-bob? 67,000 jobs put on hold? Ruin your chances of re-election? Please excuse the sarcasm, but it helps me cope.  

No, it is not to late to stop this project and do it right.  

 

Andrew Berna-Hicks 

Oakland


ZAB grants affordable senior housing project the go ahead

By John Geluardi Daily Planet staff
Saturday February 16, 2002

The Zoning Adjustments Board unanimously approved a Use Permit for a controversial four-storey, 40-unit senior residence on Sacramento Street at the site of the former Outback clothing store. 

The bleary-eyed ZAB members cast their votes after closing the public hearing on the mixed-use project at 2:30 a.m. Friday at the end of an especially long meeting. 

About 100 people attended the meeting to make comments for and against the project during the public hearing. But as the hours dragged on, the crowd thinned until there was about 12 speakers for each side.  

Opponents complained the project at 2517 Sacramento St. is too dense for the mostly residential neighborhood. Proponents, many who are elderly, argued that affordable housing is in critical need, especially for seniors. 

The project, which will be built by the nonprofit developer Affordable Housing Associates, will include 30 low- and very low-income units for seniors. The remaining 10 units will be leased to moderate income tenants.  

AHA Executive Director Ali Kashani estimated the project will cost $8.8 million to complete. He added that if additional funding is secured this summer, the project is expected to break ground in early October. 

Kashani said the mixed-use project will be 42,000 square feet including 3,600 square feet or commercial space. The project will also have 12 parking spaces. 

“We are very excited the city leaders have put their faith in us to build this project,” said Kashani, who has sought approval for the project since June of 1999. 

South Berkeley resident Howie Muir, who spoke in opposition to the project, said the unit density was inappropriate for the neighborhood. 

“The approval of the project as proposed literally represents the imposition of downtown density in a lower density neighborhood,” Muir wrote in a statement on Friday. “The project is equal to 100 units per acre in an area the (General Plan) foresaw as “medium” density, of 40 units per acre.”


Using terror to squeeze our rights

Tod H. Mikuriya, M.D. Berkeley
Saturday February 16, 2002

Editor: 

 

Warnings of the FBI to be on increased alert for terrorism are effectively subverted and attenuated by the federal fifth column actions by the Justice Department’s DEA. (Or is it the other way around?)  

Right wing Republican Enronites exploit the threat of foreign terror to attack civil and state’s rights. Since 9-11 we have seen an increase in domestic federal attacks against California and Oregon. The fuzzy connection of drugs with terrorism is true – but the result of prohibitory laws that set up the illicit markets.  

Undermining governance and mutual trust, the assaults against the Harm Reduction Center in San Francisco no doubt pandered to their covens. A slap in the face to uppity Terence Hallinan, San Francisco District Attorney, and the City and County of sanctuary and gays. Twelve hours before DEA chief Asa Hutchinson’s speech at the Commonwealth Club.  

Marking his turf, he cited the official extraordinary unpopular delusions and madness of Congress and the Supreme Court as the justification for his agency assaults. This toxic federal hegemony is promoted by the Bush II, Ashcroft, Hutchinson, Walters evil axes. This subverts and blunt readiness and alert by divisive persecution. 

A pathetic national version of the bible thumpers holding forth on Sproul Plaza at UC Berkeley to show bravery as they sermonized in the belly of the beast. Asa showed that he could be just as nasty and meanspirited to stick it to those San Francisco, California godless deviants. On the backs of the medical marijuana patients and the California voters. 

The divisive creation of enmity and distrust by Californians of good will, wanting to do the right thing to implement and comply with will of the people expressed through their enacting the Compassionate Use Act of 1996. This is subversion and giving comfort to enemies of democracy.  

The myopic and simplistic notion promoted by the attempts to link terrorism with illicit drugs is merely efforts to seek a moral high ground and justification for a failed policy of prohibition. All perpetrated by a leadership dazed and confused- unable to conceptualize long term strategies to combat foreign terrorism. The refuge of scoundrels is seeing a mass clustering: Patriotism. Anyone conspicuously proclaiming it should undergo additional scrutiny for misdeeds. 

These elements of toxic federalism will do more to hinder the national effort to defend against terrorism. They will not deflect from the developing Enron scandals except to expose the harm that has been done to California and Oregon. 

 

Tod H. Mikuriya, M.D. 

Berkeley


Today in History

Staff
Saturday February 16, 2002

Today is Saturday, Feb. 16, the 47th day of 2002. There are 318 days left in the year. 

 

 

Today’s Highlight in History: 

On Feb. 16, 1862, during the Civil War, some 14,000 Confederate soldiers surrendered at Fort Donelson, Tenn. (Union Gen. Ulysses S. Grant’s victory earned him the nickname “Unconditional Surrender Grant.”) 

 

On this date: 

In 1804, Lt. Stephen Decatur led a successful raid into Tripoli Harbor to burn the U.S. Navy frigate Philadelphia, which had fallen into the hands of pirates. 

In 1868, the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks was organized in New York City. 

In 1918, Lithuania proclaimed its independence. 

In 1923, the burial chamber of King Tutankhamen’s recently unearthed tomb was unsealed in Egypt. 

In 1945, American troops landed on the island of Corregidor in the Philippines during World War II. 

In 1948, NBC TV began airing its first nightly newscast, “The Camel Newsreel Theatre,” which consisted of Fox Movietone newsreels. 

In 1959, Fidel Castro became premier of Cuba after the overthrow of Fulgencio Batista. 

In 1961, the United States launched the Explorer 9 satellite. 

In 1968, the nation’s first 911 emergency telephone system was inaugurated, in Haleyville, Ala. 

In 1977, Janani Luwum, the Anglican archbishop of Uganda, and two other men were killed in what Ugandan authorities said was an automobile accident. 

Ten years ago: Two days before the New Hampshire primary, five Democratic presidential candidates debated on CNN, directing most of their criticism at President George H.W. Bush. Israeli helicopters attacked a convoy in Sidon, Lebanon, killing Sheik Abbas Musawi, leader of the pro-Iranian group Hezbollah. 

Five years ago: U.S. Rep. Dan Burton, R-Ind., the chairman of the House committee investigating campaign fund-raising activities, told NBC’s “Meet the Press” that his probe would be far broader than originally anticipated. 

One year ago: The United States and Britain staged air strikes against radar stations and air defense command centers in Iraq. President George W. Bush met with Mexican President Vicente Fox on the first foreign trip of Bush’s presidency. Dr. William H. Masters, who with his partner and future wife Virginia Johnson, pioneered research in the field of human sexuality, died in Tucson, Ariz., at age 85. 

 

Today’s Birthdays: Singer Patty Andrews is 82. Movie director John Schlesinger is 76. Actor Jeremy Bulloch is 56. Actor Pete Postlethwaite is 56. Actor William Katt is 51. Actor James Ingram is 46. Actor LeVar Burton is 45. Actor-rapper Ice-T is 44. Actress Lisa Loring is 44. Tennis Hall of Fame player John McEnroe is 43. Rock musician Andy Taylor (Duran Duran) is 41. Singer Sam Salter is 24.


Berkeley Observed Looking back, seeing ahead

By Susan Cerny Special to the Daily Planet
Saturday February 16, 2002

John Hinkel Park is located off Arlington Avenue in north Berkeley on a steep wooded hillside. A small creek cascades through it and paths meander under native oak, bay and buckeye trees. The almost six acre park was given to the city in 1919 by John Hinkel, a downtown property owner. It was reported to be the largest gift the city had ever received. The park area was used by the Boy Scouts, and a Boy Scout Club house still stands in the park.  

Before giving the property to the city Hinkel made some notable improvements: he built a rustic redwood clubhouse, a stone fireplace and playground and also created the network of pathways. The park was conceived by Hinkel to be a natural park where the native flora would be retained and enhanced rather than being replaced it with artificial plantings. The park and clubhouse were designed by landscape architect and professor John W. Gregg, who became the first president of Berkeley's Park Commission.  

The clubhouse is located just below San Diego Road on the east side of Devon Lane, a footpath that bisects the park. Since the park was envisioned as a “natural” park, this building was designed by Gregg to fit into and blend with its natural setting.  

The rustic clubhouse is constructed of redwood inside and out and is sheathed with shingles in keeping with the concept of “building with nature” advocated by the Hillside Club. It is a simple, rectangular building with a gable roof, surrounded on three sides with a wide-covered veranda. The building is essentially one room with a small kitchen on the east side. The main floor of the building is set above a raised basement where the slope of the hillside provides for a storage room beneath. The rustic charm of this building is a significant element in the park.  

Since 1999 the clubhouse has not been used because it is in need of restoration. A group of neighbors are interested in helping to restore it. Previously it had been used by a variety of groups over the years: Ann Halprin taught dance here, Elaine Schooley taught Theater Movement for thirty years, and it was the home to the Berkeley Folk Dancers. Between 1974 -1991the basement had been used as storage for the Shakespeare Festival. The clubhouse was also a popular site for weddings and memorial services. 

The outdoor amphitheater was built later, and is located on a steep slope of the canyon overlooking the outdoor fireplace which has served as a backdrop of the stage. The theater was built by the Civil Works Administration (Project Number 5) and was dedicated on April 22, 1934. That same year the park commission reported that the “CWA funds not only provided much needed relief to the unemployed but also gave to the citizens of Berkeley a new means of cultural recreation.”  

 

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


Lindh’s trial date tentatively set

By Larry Margasak The Associated Press
Saturday February 16, 2002

ALEXANDRIA, Va. — John Walker Lindh’s trial will likely start in late August, raising the odds the former Taliban soldier will be in court on the one-year anniversary of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. 

U.S. District Judge T.S. Ellis III set Aug. 26 for jury selection, but said Friday he might later consider a defense request to move the date beyond that historic September date. 

On the day the Lindh case moved forward, Ellis handed down a 21-month prison sentence to a Virginia man who helped two of the September hijackers obtain fake Virginia identifications. 

In a third case in the same federal courthouse, a man charged with carrying false identification near the Pentagon was released on $5,000 bond after a prosecutor indicated the case may be dropped. The man was arrested Monday night, just after the FBI issued its latest terrorism alert. 

Lindh, 21, is charged in a 10-count indictment with conspiring to kill Americans, providing support to terrorists, including Osama bin Laden’s al-Qaida, and using firearms during crimes of violence. Three of the charges carry a maximum life sentence and the other seven could bring an additional 90 years in prison. 

Lindh, wearing a green prison suit, sat at the defense table throughout the federal court proceeding to schedule the trial date and pretrial proceedings. During a brief recess, he spoke with his attorneys and signed papers as his parents, Frank Lindh and Marilyn Walker, sat in the second row. 

Defense attorney George Harris asked the judge for a Sept. 16 trial date to get past Sept. 11, saying the defense might be presenting its side of the case on or near the anniversary. 

Harris said there was no link between the attacks and the Lindh case, but contended that Attorney General John Ashcroft tried to leave the implication there was a connection. The lawyer argued for a Sept. 16 trial date. 

“There will be memorial services. There will be a great deal of genuine emotion in this country,” Harris argued. “The government has attempted to make that connection (between the trial and the attacks). For us to be in trial at that time is prejudicial to the defendant.” 

Ellis told Harris, “I may be persuaded by the force of your argument. You may revisit this point” as the August date approaches. 

The judge, however, said he rejected defense concerns that pretrial publicity would harm Lindh’s case and told Harris he would ensure that no jurors would be selected who formed an opinion about the case. 

The Virginia man who aided the Sept. 11 hijackers, Luis Martinez-Flores, had pleaded guilty in December to one count of document fraud. 

The Falls Church, Va. man admitted he falsely certified that Hani Hanjour and Khalid Almihdhar, hijackers on the flight that crashed into the Pentagon, were Virginia residents. The hijackers paid him $100. 

At a sentencing hearing Friday, prosecutor John Morton said the defendant’s lies about potential imminent attacks on East Coast targets were brought to the attention of President Bush, Ashcroft and FBI Director Robert S. Mueller. 

“Hundreds of hours were wasted by investigators dealing with Mr. Martinez’s misstatements,” Morton said. 

In the third case, U.S. Magistrate Judge Theresa Buchanan ordered Imad Abdel-Fattah Hamed of Manassas, Va., released on $5,000 bond and limited his travel to the Washington, D.C. area until his arraignment. But the prosecutor indicated the case of the man arrested near the Pentagon — just after the alert — may be dropped. 

“I’m not sure that this case will actually make it that far,” said Morton, the assistant U.S. attorney. 

According to court papers filed by the FBI, Hamed and a passenger drove a red tow truck past signs that ban commercial vehicles on a highway which passes within yards of the Pentagon. 

State police stopped them and found several false identifications and a cashier’s check for $12,700.


Californians look for luck to win $175 million Lotto jackpot

By Daisy Ngyuen The Associated Press
Saturday February 16, 2002

LOS ANGELES — Californians looked for ways to boost their luck Friday as the jackpot for Saturday night’s SuperLotto Plus draw rose to $175 million. 

“Play Here” screamed lottery banners at a Chevron station in Los Angeles’ Chinatown, where the lottery craze was mixing with Chinese New Year traditions. 

“The last few days has been crazy,” said manager Joe Shiber, 48, who was seeing many first-time Lotto ticket buyers. 

Customers usually spend $1 to $5 on lottery tickets, he said, but that increased to up to $50 after Wednesday, when no one won the midweek draw and the jackpot rolled over again. 

“Now with the Chinese New Year, my Chinese customers have been spending a lot more. They tell me they’re using ’good-luck’ money,” Shiber said. 

A single jackpot winner who chose the option of 26 annual installments would receive payments starting at about $4.37 million and rising to about $8.92 million, before withholding of 27 percent federal withholding tax. The estimated cash option would be $87.5 million, or $63 million after federal taxes. 

The $175 million jackpot is a record for California. The previous mark was $141 million on June 23, 2001. 

At George’s Liquor, a Chinatown store that has sold two winning lottery tickets in the past, the line of customers went out the door and down the sidewalk. 

Stan Ng, 33, a recreational assistant, said he stood in line for 10 minutes to buy 10 SuperLotto tickets. 

“I seldomly play the Lotto, but since this is a big jackpot and it’s Chinese New Year, I’m trying my luck,” Ng said. 

Ng said he wasn’t really spending his own money because he was using “good-luck” money he’s received from relatives. He said he was also picking numbers himself, especially those with the lucky number eight. 

“I don’t believe I will win, because of the odds, but I needed to spend my good-luck money,” he said. 

Frank Benin, 37, went out of his way to buy tickets at George’s. 

“A gambler in my office told me to come here. This is a big jackpot and I felt I needed to come to a lucky place to get my tickets,” he said. 

Benin said that if he won he would build a community center in south Los Angeles and help underprivileged children. 

“It’s all for fun. You play the Lotto to see where it will take you,” he said. 


Riordan challenges GOP to change or face extinction

By Erica Werner The Associated Press
Saturday February 16, 2002

LOS ANGELES — Richard Riordan, the front-runner for the GOP gubernatorial nomination, has issued a challenge to fellow California Republicans: Embrace moderate stances such as support for abortion rights or risk becoming “an extinct species.” 

His opponents, businessman Bill Simon and Secretary of State Bill Jones, the GOP’s only statewide officeholder, believe Republicans can win without distancing themselves from their bedrock principles. 

Those competing visions are sure to be discussed when the candidates meet for their third and final debate Wednesday evening in Long Beach. And on March 5, when Republicans pick a challenger to Democratic Gov. Gray Davis, they’ll also be determining their party’s ideological direction. 

“As the late Jess Unruh said, ’Winning isn’t everything, but losing isn’t anything,”’ said University of Southern California political analyst Sherry Bebitch Jeffe, quoting the legendary Assembly speaker of the 1960s. “That’s basically the debate, and that’s what’s driving the GOP to consider the direction in which it wants to go.” 

Riordan, 71, the former mayor of Los Angeles, leads Jones and Simon in polls and narrowly edges Davis. 

With his moderate views on social issues, Riordan was popular as mayor among women, Hispanics and independents, groups Republicans must attract to beat Davis. Thirty-five percent of the state’s voters are Republicans while 45 percent are Democrats. 

Riordan’s crossover appeal led most of the state’s GOP leadership to embrace his candidacy, and President Bush reportedly urged him to run. 

But in hewing to his promise of broadening the party’s reach, Riordan has largely ignored its conservative base. He doesn’t identify himself as a Republican in campaign literature, and revelations of his financial support for Democratic candidates have incensed some of the GOP loyalists most likely to vote in the primary. 

Party activists picked Simon, who lives in the Pacific Palisades section of Los Angeles, in a nonbinding straw poll at last weekend’s state GOP convention, and several conservative leaders, including former Gov. George Deukmejian, announced they won’t vote for Riordan if he becomes the nominee. Deukmejian is Jones’ campaign chairman. 

“Riordan made the decision several months ago that he was going to run a campaign directed very strongly and specifically at those swing voters that Republicans have lost in past elections,” said Republican strategist Dan Schnur, who worked briefly for Riordan. “In doing so, he may have created an opportunity for a more conservative challenger to reach out to the party’s base.” 

Riordan aides counter that he does have support from many conservative leaders, in part because of his untraditional approach. 

“In California, the Republican Party unfortunately has taken on a negative image,” Riordan strategist Kevin Spillane said. ”... We need to demonstrate that we’re a party that provides political opportunity and power to women, Asian-Americans and other minorities.” 

At the first GOP debate, Riordan announced the need for a “new Republican Party ... of inclusiveness” and said the anti-abortion positions of Jones and Simon “would turn (the Republican Party) from an endangered species into an extinct species.” 

Jones and Simon, both traditional conservatives, took strong issue with that. They contend the GOP can attract diverse voters without moderating its core stances. 

“Some in our party suggest that only a liberal can win and we have to nominate a liberal even if he sounds like a Democrat,” Simon told the party faithful last weekend to cheers and applause. “Some have suggested that our ideas no longer work and can’t lead another California comeback. We have a better idea, don’t we?” 

GOP strategists point to President Bush’s success as an example of how Republicans can reach out beyond the party’s base without wavering on their principles. 

Although the GOP has been a minority party in the state since the 1930s, voters have elected Republican governors again and again, from Ronald Reagan to Deukmejian to Davis’ predecessor, Pete Wilson. But the party has suffered a string of recent setbacks. 

Wilson did Republicans lasting harm with Hispanics with his support for anti-immigrant Proposition 187 in 1994. The GOP’s last gubernatorial nominee, then-state Attorney General Dan Lungren, lost to Davis in 1998 by a margin of 20 percentage points. Democrats greatly outnumber Republicans in the state Legislature. 

All this has led to a consensus that the Republican Party must be more inclusive. For Riordan to succeed, Republican voters must conclude that that requires adopting more moderate positions. 

“The only way to know whether he’s done it well or not is to wait until the day after the election,” Schnur said.


In race for his political life, Condit is reaching out — to anybody

By Brian Melley The Associated Press
Saturday February 16, 2002

STOCKTON — Hoping to save his political skin, Rep. Gary Condit is shaking every hand he can. 

Last Friday, that quest took him to a retirement home in this former Gold Rush depot, where he flashed his wide grin and started pumping hands. 

“I’m Gary Condit,” he told a woman, who said he looked familiar. 

Familiar maybe, but not someone any of them could vote for. 

Most of those he met said they were Republicans and unable to vote for him in the March 5 primary. Even the Democrats couldn’t vote for Condit: The Bayside Landing community is not even in his redrawn congressional district. 

Rookie mistakes like this only reinforce how uphill Condit’s bid for re-election is. 

After a summer of bad publicity and abandonment by many of his Washington colleagues and political donors, Condit is running more like an underdog than a 12-year veteran. 

His mailer plaintively asks voters: “Perhaps you will reconsider me when you vote for Congress.” 

In person, however, Condit uses the charm that has given him an undefeated, 30-year electoral record, one that made him a household name in California’s Central Valley before it was linked to that of missing Washington intern Chandra Levy. 

His weekend campaign swing started Friday morning at a Christian radio station, where Condit, the son of a Baptist minister, talked issues with four other Democratic candidates. 

Into the crowd in their Sunday best walked Condit, wearing boots, blue jeans, a plaid shirt and corduroy jacket. He displayed clear command of the issues — the economy, energy and farming. The other candidates echoed his answers. 

But the incumbent first elected to the Ceres city council in 1972 now looks more like a challenger, while his longtime friend, ally and protege, Assemblyman Dennis Cardoza, plays the front-runner. 

Cardoza has won important endorsements, has an edge in the polls and has raised more money than Condit — $144,000 at year’s end to Condit’s $36,000. He held a Washington fund-raiser last week that aimed to bring in $40,000; Condit had a dinner in Turlock on Friday that raised about $5,750. 

Condit once did TV commercials for Cardoza. Cardoza now does his own TV spots, while Condit can afford only radio. 

Cardoza turned down the radio appearance, as well as more than 20 requests for debates, in part to avoid questions about Levy, said his spokesman Doug White. 

Condit called that “disingenuous,” because Cardoza “wouldn’t be running if it wasn’t for the Chandra Levy case.” 

After Levy vanished in May, Condit’s stronghold collapsed. Police sources said he admitted having a romance with Levy, 24, but is not considered a suspect in her disappearance. 

Condit will not talk about it in any detail, saying he has no idea what happened to her. “It would be wonderful if she would turn up, and she would be healthy and everything,” he said. “It’s something I pray about every day.” 

Levy’s name was not mentioned during the radio show or at a candidates’ forum on Sunday, which Cardoza did attend. But the case hangs over the campaign, in part because the 10 other people running would be doing something else if Levy never disappeared. 

Condit is also facing a redrawn district full of voters who primarily know of him through news reports. The new district, approved by the Legislature in September, has a strong Democratic edge, but Condit lost much of his base. 

As a result, the Condit who hustled from the cameras last summer is courting the media, often joking with photographers. The man who skipped public appearances is now spending as much time as he can walking precincts, speaking at churches and rallying his supporters. 

At Krazy Gal’s Kafe in Gustine on Saturday, Condit slapped supporters on the back and called farmers by name. He hugged and kissed Janet Carlsen, the former mayor of nearby Newman, who said she loves Cardoza but still supports Condit and thinks he will pull out a victory. 

“I feel safe with Gary,” she said. 

Waitress Lisa Partlow said Condit’s visit made her and her 17-year-old daughter, a dishwasher at the restaurant, uncomfortable because of the Levy scandal. 

“One woman asked if I was a supporter,” Partlow said. “I said, ‘No I’m not’ and she said, ’I don’t imagine any mother with daughters our age would be.”’ 

If he loses the primary, Condit said, he will not rule out anything, including running as an independent in November or returning to work as a welder, a job he held in his teens. 

He suggested there is an undercurrent of support from the voters that does not register in the polls. 

“Voters have a funny way of making things fair,” he said.


Legislation would end new drilling off Central Coast

By Mark Sherman The Associated Press
Saturday February 16, 2002

WASHINGTON — Two California Democrats on Thursday said they would try to end any prospect for new drilling for gas and oil off the central California coast by letting energy companies swap their leases for similar rights in the Gulf of Mexico. 

Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., said she and Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La., will introduce legislation to allow energy companies that hold 36 leases that the federal government granted decades ago to obtain credits for their investment that they could apply to oil and gas exploration in the central and western Gulf of Mexico. The bill would include four other leases that had been canceled but are tied up in court. 

The bill would permanently ban drilling in the tracts that range from northern Ventura County to southern San Luis Obispo County, Boxer said. 

The lease sites “would become an ecological preserve, never more to be touched,” Boxer said. 

The swap would cost the government $1 billion to $2.8 billion, she said. 

Boxer said her staff has been assured by some of the energy companies that they back the swap. She said she will try to make her measure part of a broad energy bill that the Senate will take up in early March. 

Rep. Lois Capps, D-Santa Barbara, whose district would be most affected by new drilling, will sponsor a similar bill in the House of Representatives. 

Boxer, Capps and 30 other California lawmakers on Thursday also filed legal documents in a lawsuit over the leases. A federal judge last year halted all oil and natural gas exploration, siding with California officials who adamantly oppose new drilling and who argued that the state has authority to restrict new exploration. The decision left energy companies wondering whether they simply would lose the money they have invested. 

The Bush administration recently decided to appeal last year’s court ruling, arguing that the lease owners’ property rights are at stake. The lawmakers oppose the appeal. 

“This ... is about local control and California’s right to be at the table when the federal government is making decisions that affect its coastline,” Capps said. “We cannot risk another oil spill off of our coast.” 

President George Bush banned new drilling off California’s coast in 1990 and President Clinton later extended it to 2012. But those presidential edicts did not cover existing oil platforms or the 40 leases on tracts that have yet to be developed. The leases allow for exploration, but no drilling. 

Boxer’s legislation would require all the lease holders to agree to the swap and to end all outstanding lawsuits over the leases. If those conditions are met, the Secretary of the Interior would be directed to cancel the leases and offer equivalent rights off the coast of Louisiana and Texas, where oil platforms are more numerous. 

Jim Bray, a spokesman for lease holder Nuevo Energy of Houston, said his company would consider a swap, although he has not seen Boxer’s legislation. “But our message to the senator has been, ’This has been going on for 20 years,”’ Bray said. “It’s time to move forward.” 

——— 

On the Net: 

Rep. Capps: http://www.house.gov/capps 


Davis, Democrats gather to prepare for re-election campaign

By Alexa Haussler The Associated Press
Saturday February 16, 2002

LOS ANGELES — After months of unrelenting attacks from the Republicans who want to unseat him, Gov. Gray Davis will face a friendly crowd at the California Democratic Party convention this weekend. 

Davis is scheduled to speak at the gathering that falls in the heart of an intense Republican primary race to challenge him, and as he continues to launch counterattacks at GOP front-runner Richard Riordan. 

“The party is focused on re-electing Gov. Gray Davis in California,” said party spokesman Bob Mulholland. 

The general election is more than eight months away, and Davis is virtually uncontested in the March 5 primary. But he has been the consistent target of the three men vying for the GOP nod and a national Republican party hungry to regain power in California. 

Plus, a crippling power crisis last year and budget crisis this year also have chipped away at Davis’ popularity and he has slightly trailed Riordan in some recent statewide polls. 

Davis has poured more than $4 million into television ads in recent weeks, many of which criticize Riordan for his stance on abortion, the death penalty and his record of crime. 

Riordan, who also has come under fire from some members of his own party for left-leaning stances on some issues, has brushed aside barbs from his Republican opponents and aimed his attacks squarely at Davis. 

As a result, the campaign is likely to consume much of the meeting of the Democratic Party’s most loyal activists at Los Angeles’ Westin Bonaventure Hotel. 

“It’s an opportunity to rally the activists and to energize them for the November election,” said David Lara-Tellez, chairman of the Riverside County Democratic Party. 

Party leaders also will be focusing on a handful of contested primaries, including the open seats for secretary of state, controller and insurance commissioner. 

Also, two key figures in the campaign finance reform debate will address the convention. Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle, D-S.D., and nation’s highest-ranking female legislator, House Minority Whip Nancy Pelosi, D-San Francisco, are scheduled to speak Saturday. 

The Democratic convention is falling one week after a raucous Republican party convention in San Jose, where steep divisions have formed among the gubernatorial candidate supporters. 

Many Republicans believe Riordan is the party’s best hope the win the governor’s seat in a state where Democrats outnumber Republicans. But others, including former Gov. George Deukmejian, have said they doubt his loyalty and said they would not vote for him in the general election is he is the nominee. 

Mulholland said the Democrats plan to remain positive at their annual gathering, “compared to the cannibalism at the Republican convention last weekend.” 

——— 

On the Net: 

The California Democratic Party Web site is http://www.ca-dems.org 


Biologists ready to release condors in northern Arizona

By Arthur H. Rothstien The Associated Press
Saturday February 16, 2002

TUCSON, Ariz. — Seven California condors born in captivity will be released Saturday atop northern Arizona’s Vermillion Cliffs, adding to the current population of 25 in Arizona. 

However, officials nearly postponed the release because at least two previously released condors had eaten from coyotes that had been killed with lead shot. Scavengers and birds of prey, including condors, often die from lead poisoning after eating game killed with lead gunshot. 

“Since we were able to capture the birds at risk and determine through initial tests that they’re healthy, we’re confident that we can move ahead with the condor release as scheduled,” said Chris Parish, field coordinator for the Peregrine Fund. 

Biologists with the Peregrine Fund, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and other federal and state agencies plan to release 11 new condors in all in the 10th such release since efforts to restore the birds to the wild began in 1996. 

California condors are the biggest and among the most ancient of North America’s birds. They nearly became extinct — dropping to only 22 in 1982 — before biologists launched a multimillion-dollar recovery program. As of January, there was a total California condor population of 183. 

Ten of the birds being released were born in captivity last year at the Peregrine Fund’s World Center for Birds of Prey. The other was hatched in 1999 at the San Diego Zoo. 

A pair of condors among the 25 living in or near the Grand Canyon produced an egg in a cave there last year, believed to be the first in the wild since the early 1980s, but the egg did not hatch, said Jeff Cilek, a spokesman for the Boise, Idaho-based Peregrine Fund. 

Scientists are hopeful other eggs will be laid and hatched successfully this year, Cilek said. 

Condors, which are strict scavengers, do not normally reproduce until they are about six years old, he said. Typically, females produce one egg every other year. Incubation takes 56 days. 

David Harlow, Arizona field supervisor for Fish and Wildlife, called condor recovery efforts in Arizona “an overwhelming success” in terms of the surviving wild population. 

“We anxiously await the first successful breeding and egg hatching of condors in the wild since the early ’80s,” he said. 

Condors have few natural predators. But a naturally low rate of reproduction, shootings, poisoning — particularly lead poisoning — and collisions with power lines have been major contributors to the bird’s near-extinction. 

As of January, there also were 33 California condors in the wild in southern and central California, another 12 in field pens in California and 102 in captive populations in Idaho and California. 


Farrakhan urges rappers to turn away from violence

By Leon Drouin Kieth The Associated Press
Saturday February 16, 2002

BEVERLY HILLS — Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan, joined by Russell Simmons and other prominent hip-hop figures, called on rap artists to move away from explicitly violent lyrics. 

Farrakhan, who also condemned the U.S. war on terrorism, told a receptive, sometimes raucous audience Thursday that rappers owe poor and minority communities more than many of them have given. 

“From the suffering of our people came rap,” Farrakhan said. “That should make you a servant of those that produced you. That should make you a servant of the hood.” 

Children “can’t read Dick and Jane, but they can recite your raps,” he continued. “The question is, what are you feeding them?” 

More than 300 people, including rappers Boo-Yaa Tribe, Kurupt and DJ Quik, packed into a hotel conference room for his speech, and Simmons and others seconded the message. 

The Hip Hop Summit was organized by Simmons as an opportunity for rappers to reassess an industry that draws millions of fans worldwide but is widely blamed for violent and sexually explicit lyrics. It was one of a series of regional gatherings that are to lead up to a national meeting this summer. 

Simmons also advised the performers it may be time to step back from lyrics about sex and violence, especially when the raps are delivered by performers who didn’t emerge from gangs. 

“Truth sells — it always did,” Simmons said. “Integrity and honesty last forever.” 

At the same time, the founder of Def Jam Records acknowledged that his favorite recordings are those “that people have been most offended by.” 

Comedian and Los Angeles radio personality Steve Harvey told the group that radio stations, including the one he works for, are turning away from violent rap. 

“They’re making the conscious decision to play conscious music,” he said. 

Marion “Suge” Knight, who co-founded Death Row Records, called on rap artists to form a union to protect themselves from an ever-smaller number of large record companies and to secure pensions for artists after their popularity fades. 

Farrakhan also used his keynote speech to attack the Bush administration’s use of military force to fight terrorism, predicting that if the fighting spreads to other countries, “You will start a war that will engulf the whole planet — the war called Armageddon.” 

“I’m a patriot, I’m not an enemy of this nation,” Farrakhan said. “This is the greatest nation on Earth, but she won’t be if she stays on this course.” 

Benjamin Muhammad, president and chief executive officer of the Hip-Hop Summit Action Network, said he believes rap lyrics already are changing for the better. He added that artists also are stepping up their community involvement through charitable work and get-out-the-vote efforts. 

In a closed-door session during the afternoon, hip-hop artists expressed support for unionization, Muhammad said. He added that the topic probably will be more thoroughly examined at the national meeting. 

Artists at the summit also expressed unanimous support for Sarah Jones, a New York poet who is suing over a Federal Communications Commission fine levied against a Portland, Ore., radio station that played her song “Your Revolution.” 

The song contains vivid sexual imagery, but Jones intended it as a criticism of the degradation of women in hip-hop. 


Former Enron chair wrote repeatedly to urge Bush’s support for self-serving legislation

By Natalie Gott The Associated Press
Saturday February 16, 2002

AUSTIN, Texas — Former Enron Corp. Chairman Kenneth Lay wrote repeatedly to George W. Bush throughout his governorship, seeking support for legislation benefiting the energy giant, according to documents released Friday. 

Many of the letters concerned utility deregulation and tort reform. Others were personal. Some 350 pages of correspondence were released by state archivists following requests from news organizations and others under the state’s open records law. 

“It’s old news,” White House spokesman Scott McClellan Friday. “The governor of Texas like any other governor receives thousands and thousands of letters from people across Texas who have diverse views on a variety of topics.” 

Although Bush signed a law deregulating the electricity market in 1999, the documents do not appear to show that Bush responded in print to Lay’s interest in the issue. 

Also, Bush had made clear during his first gubernatorial campaign that tort reform would be a top priority. He signed a sweeping bill into law in 1995. 

The two also exchanged birthday, holiday and get-well wishes. Much of the correspondence came from Lay, while a few letters originated from Bush’s desk. 

Bush wrote a note in 1997 wishing Lay a happy birthday: ”55 years old. Wow! That is really old. Thank goodness you have such a young, beautiful wife.” 

In his two Texas gubernatorial campaigns, Bush received $312,000 from Enron officials, including Lay, who was one of his biggest donors. 

In separate letters in 1996, Lay and former Enron chief executive Jeffrey Skilling told Bush that Enron officials could arrange for him to tour Enron’s trading floor in Houston. 

“We would like to show you how we do business,” Skilling wrote. 

The following year, Lay wrote Bush about Enron’s negotiations for a $2 billion joint venture to develop Uzbekistan’s natural gas fields. According to the note, Bush was scheduled to meet with Uzbekistan’s ambassador to the United States just a few days later. 

“This project can bring significant economic opportunities to Texas, as well as Uzbekistan,” Lay wrote. 

Earlier this month, Texas Gov. Rick Perry released correspondence between Enron executives and the governor’s office in response to another open records request. 

Those documents showed that as governor Bush appointed at least two officials recommended by Lay. The White House has said the appointments were made on merit, not on Lay’s recommendation. 


Global Crossing paid millions to its chairman’s own firms

By Simon Avery The Associated Press
Saturday February 16, 2002

LOS ANGELES — Global Crossing chairman Gary Winnick controlled companies that had lucrative dealings with his fiber optics network firm before it imploded, regulatory filings show. 

The special relationships between the firms added an undisclosed amount to the personal profits of Winnick, who sold $734 million worth of stock before the company began bankruptcy proceedings on Jan. 28. 

The dealings involved Global Crossing paying millions of dollars to a privately held merchant bank and its subsidiaries founded and controlled by Winnick. 

The fees paid to Winnick through Pacific Capital Group Ltd. and its subsidiaries covered real estate leases, corporate aircraft fees and financial advice, according to documents filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. 

In one deal made in October 1999, Global Crossing agreed to pay North Cresent Realty, a subsidiary of Pacific Capital, $400,000 a month to lease office space in Beverly Hills. Pacific Capital then subleased space back to North Cresent Realty for $53,000 a month. 

The agreement also involved Global Crossing paying North Cresent $3.2 million toward $7.5 million of renovations. 

Global Crossing is formally based in Bermuda, although Winnick and other top executives work out of Beverly Hills. The company is expected to announce soon that it will leave its Beverly Hills offices and relocate 60 employees to El Segundo and the San Fernando Valley. 

The company said an independent real estate consultant reviewed the complex transaction and determined it to be “the product of an arm’s length negotiation.” 

Mike Sitrick, a spokesman for Winnick, said Global Crossing got three independent valuations of the property and paid North Cresent the middle quote. In addition, Winnick excused himself from the negotiations, Sitrick said. 

Pacific Capital also billed Global Crossing $2 million during 1999 for using airplanes in which Pacific had a stake. Sitrick said the fee was less than Global Crossing would have paid an independent charter company. 

Global Crossing made another large payment to Winnick’s companies as part of a consulting contract drawn up in 1997, in which a unit of Pacific Capital advised Global Crossing’s wholly owned subsidiary, Atlantic Crossing Ltd., on a $482 million loan. 

Under terms of the deal, Pacific Capital’s PCG Telecom was to receive 2 percent of Atlantic Crossing’s gross revenue over a 25-year period. 

In June 1998, Global Crossing terminated the deal by agreeing to pay $135 million to Pacific Capital, several members of Global Crossing’s own board, including Winnick, and two financial partners: the CIBC and Union Labor Life Insurance Co. 

Since Global Crossing filed for bankruptcy protection, shareholders have accused the company of overstating revenue, and past and present employees have complained that they have lost the bulk of their retirement savings. 

Matt Fico was laid off by Global Crossing in November. The 27-year-old customer support manager said he lost about $20,000 in stock options and 401(k) retirement savings. 

He said knowledge of the multimillion-dollar deals between Global Crossing and some of its top executives has left him feeling “distrustful.” 

“These things might be legal, but they certainly don’t look ethical,” he said. 

In Washington, a spokesman for the House Energy and Commerce Committee, which is investigating the collapse of Enron Corp., said the panel has begun looking into the Global Crossing affair. 

“It’s inevitable we’re going to do something” related to Global Crossing, said the spokesman, Ken Johnson. 

Meanwhile, Rep. Louise Slaughter, D-NY, has asked the Committee on Education and the Workforce to examine Global Crossing’s move preventing employees from accessing their 401(k) accounts during December and January. 

The retirement accounts were flush with company stock, which employees could not trade because Global Crossing was in the process of switching plan administrators. 


Biotech companies scramble to meet pet cloning demand

By Paul Elias The Associated Press
Saturday February 16, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Tundra died three years ago, but Susann Rivera never gave up hope that one day she would play with her furry friend again. 

Her heart soared Friday after she learned that Texas A&M University researchers had successfully cloned a little calico kitten named cc, short for copycat. 

“Tundra’s coming back,” said Rivera, the first cat customer of Genetic Savings & Clone, which charges people to store their pets’ DNA. 

The Burlingame woman — who has kept Tundra’s toys and Elvis Presley costume in anticipation of his resurrection — is on a long list of pet owners hoping cloning can bring back their beloved companions. 

Several biotechnology companies see a lucrative market in the frisky ball of fur that researchers unveiled Thursday. They say they’ve been inundated with calls since the feline hit the news. 

Hundreds of people have already paid as much as $1,000 each to freeze their pets’ DNA with hopes that cloning will someday become affordable and safe. The cloned kitty has buoyed those hopes while opening a giant can of worms. 

“I’m very worried that people are putting a piece of Fluffy in the fridge with the hope that cloning will restore it,” said Arthur Caplan, a University of Pennsylvania bioethicist. “Cloning is an echo. It is not a copy. These companies border on deceiving people.” 

Even cc looks nothing like her surrogate, a calico cat named Rainbow. The genes are the same but cc’s markings differ substantially from Rainbow’s. That’s no surprise since other cloned animals have displayed similar differences. 

The kitten born in December looks different because the pigmentation pattern of the animal’s coat isn’t controlled strictly by the lineup of genes. 

“This is a reproduction,” said Texas A&M researcher Duane Kraemer “not a resurrection.” 

That’s a huge hurdle for the successful commercialization of cloned pets given that people like Rivera want their Tundra back. 

“The idea of cloning is a sham,” said Wayne Spacelle, a senior vice president with the U.S. Humane Society. “Their behavior and personality will be different. You may have a better match personality wise by going to a shelter and seeing an animal that exists, than by rolling the dice with cloning.” 

Genetic Savings chief executive Lou Hawthorne agrees. 

“Tundra ain’t coming back,” said Hawthorne, whose company funded the Texas A&M research and is putting the finishing touches on a new 7,000 square-foot cloning laboratory in College Station, Texas. 

And though Hawthorne says it is spending millions on research to produce as close to exact duplicates of cats, dogs, horses and cattle as possible, he concedes that today’s cloning technology is “crude”. 

“We can’t give you a guarantee that the personality will be the same,” he said. 

The kitty clone was the research team’s only success after transferring 87 cloned embryos into eight female cats. 

Overall, the success rate was comparable to that seen in other cloned species, the researchers said. 

Still, at least three other companies are racing to develop successful commercial pet cloning operations, including Cyagra of Worcester, Mass. Cyagra is a subsidiary of Advanced Cell Technology, the biotechnology firm that announced in November it had cloned a human embryo. 

Lazaron Biotechnologies of Baton Rouge, La., and Canine Cryobank of San Marcos are two other companies interested in pet cloning. 

Cyagra vice president Ron Gillepsie estimates that up to 10 million pet owners would be interested in cloning their animals for about $3,000 each. Hawthorne said his marketing studies show the same number of interested people, though he declined to talk about pricing. 

These companies have been collecting and storing pets’ DNA in deep freezes for prices ranging between $800 and $1,200 each. They all see a big market in people like Rob Fine of New York City. 

Fine’s beloved 11-year-old Rottweiler, Cali, died in January. 

“She was absolutely the most incredible animal I’ve ever known,” he said of the dog he raised from a pup. “She had so much personality. She was beautiful and smart. I was broken up when she died.” 

To help cope with his loss, Fine hedged his bet and paid two biotechnology companies about $800 each to store some of Cali’s cells and keep hope alive that someday, maybe, science could deliver him a clone — or something close to an exact duplicate. 

—— 

On the Net 

Genetic Savings: http://www.savingsandclone.com 

Humane Society: http://www.hsus.org 

Cyagra: http://www.cyagra.com 


PayPal’s shares gain 55 percent in debut

By Michael Liedtke The Associated Press
Saturday February 16, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Shares of PayPal Inc. soared 55 percent in the online payment provider’s stock market debut Friday, signaling investors burned by the dot-com crash might be ready to take another chance on promising — but unprofitable — Internet companies. 

After the company’s investment bankers sold 5.4 million shares at $13 apiece in an initial public offering Thursday, PayPal’s stock closed at $20.09 Friday on the Nasdaq Stock Exchange. The shares sold for as much as $22.44 during Friday’s session. 

At Friday’s price the company had a market value of $1.2 billion. The biggest individual winners Friday were PayPal’s co-founders, Elon Musk, 30, and Peter Thiel, 34. 

Musk, formerly PayPal’s CEO and now a director, held a stake worth $143 million as of Friday. Thiel, currently the company’s CEO, owned stork worth $56 million. 

Besides enriching PayPal insiders, Friday’s robust gain encouraged market observers who hope the rapidly growing company will rekindle investor interest in Internet startups. 

After feasting on dot-com stock during the late 1990s, Wall Street has largely avoided the Internet sector during the past 18 months. Investors have worked to recover from massive losses stemming from the high-tech bust. 

“It feels like 1999 all over again,” said James Van Dyke, an analyst with Jupiter Media Metrix. “PayPal could be like the torch bearer that kicks off the Olympics.” 

The Palo Alto-based company boasts an impressive track record for growth, swelling from 24 experimental users in October 1999 to 12.8 million customers as of Dec. 31. 

The service obtains payments from credit cards and bank accounts before sending them to a designated recipient through e-mail. PayPal generates revenue by charging transaction fees based on the amount transferred and is particularly popular at online auctions like eBay. 

PayPal’s strong IPO performance is bound to lure other privately held Internet companies into the stock market, predicted Kyle Huske of IPO.com. “The market just shook off all the risks associated with this one,” she said. 

Huske and other analysts had been worried that several legal and regulatory hurdles facing PayPal might scare off investors Friday. 

Just before PayPal was set to launch its IPO, New York-based CertCo Inc. filed a patent infringement lawsuit that threatens to shut down the service with a court order. 

PayPal, which is nearly 3 years old, also is embroiled in disputes with various state regulators who believe the company is illegally running an unlicensed bank. 

Regulators in Louisiana were poised to shut down PayPal’s service in that state until company officials negotiated more time to work out the licensing issues. New York regulators this month also reiterated their opinion that PayPal is breaking that state’s banking laws. The alleged violations could expose PayPal to huge fines. 

PayPal also acknowledged its activity is being scrutinized by bank regulators in other states. 

“If you try to balance all the positives and negatives with this company, it looks like there are more negatives right now,” said David Menlow, president of IPOfinancial.com. 

PayPal also hasn’t made a dime yet. 

The company’s losses totaled $283 million through Dec. 31, including a 2001 loss of $107.8 million on revenue of $104.8 million. 

But with PayPal opening an average of 18,500 new accounts per day, investors are betting the company will eventually become profitable. If not for accounting charges absorbed to pay for past acquisitions and stock-based compensation, the company says it would have earned $3.2 million in the final quarter of last year. 

——— 

On The Net: 

http://www.paypal.com 


Judge orders California to dump ’hanging chad’ machines by 2004

By Leon Drouin Keith The Associated Press
Saturday February 16, 2002

LOS ANGELES — A federal judge has ordered California to get rid of its “hanging chad” voting machines by the 2004 elections, more than a year before the deadline the state had set. 

U.S. District Judge Stephen V. Wilson made the ruling late Tuesday — a week before a lawsuit filed in April against Secretary of State Bill Jones was set for trial. He ruled based on briefs filed by Jones and plaintiffs including the AFL-CIO and the advocacy group Common Cause. 

“California can look forward to a chad-free presidential election in the year 2004,” said Dan Tokaji, staff attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union, which helped represent the plaintiffs. 

But the chief elections official for Los Angeles County called the decision “catastrophic,” saying that two years isn’t enough time to implement a more accurate system. 

“It’s going to throw the election system in LA County into chaos,” said Conny B. McCormack, the county’s registrar-recorder and county clerk. “The ultimate irony is that the outcome is going to be exactly the opposite of what the plaintiffs are seeking.” 

Tokaji said the ruling was the first requiring the replacement of voting systems by 2004 since the 2000 presidential election, when disputed punch-card ballots in Florida left the winner undeclared for weeks. 

Jones, who helped put on next month’s state ballot a $200 million bond for new election equipment, had ordered all Votomatic and Pollstar punch-card systems to be replaced by July 2005. The systems are used in nine of California’s 58 counties: Alameda, Los Angeles, Mendocino, Sacramento, San Bernardino, San Diego, Santa Clara, Shasta and Solano. 

Jones spokesman Alfie Charles said July 2005 is the earliest counties can buy equipment for touch-screen voting and get it running. 

“The date selected by the judge may prevent counties from obtaining the best equipment possible,” Charles said. 

But Tokaji said Jones isn’t requiring counties to switch to touch-screen balloting, and that other, quicker-to-implement options also would be better than punch-card ballots. “The priority here is to get rid of the worst offenders,” he said. 

Los Angeles County elections officials used touch-screen voting in a pilot project in November 2000, and want to expand its use in the November 2002 elections, McCormack said. 

But she added that the county is nowhere close to buying, testing and setting up the 30,000 touch-screen monitors it would need to rely on in an election. About 2.7 million people voted in the county in November, more than in each of 41 states, McCormack said. 

Using another paper-based system such as optical scanners as an interim measure could cause more error than punch-card balloting because voters won’t be used to them, McCormack said.  

She said the county, which must print ballots in 3,184 different local combinations and seven languages for primary elections next month, would be better off switching to a paperless system. 

“The plaintiffs are worried we’re going to be Florida, but we weren’t Florida, and we haven’t been for 34 years” — the length of time the county has relied on the punch-card voting system, McCormack said. 

She added that counties need to be alloted time to deal with problems that likely will arise during the switch. For instance, election officials in Broward County, Fla., this week said that more than two-thirds of their first shipment of 101 touch screen machines were defective. 

Switching to a touch-screen system would cost $90 million to $100 million for Los Angeles County alone, McCormack said. The state bond would cover some of the expense if voters approve it, and Congress is working on appropriating money for new elections equipment. 


Medical sleuths try to figure out mysterious rash affecting students

By Michael Rubinkam The Associated Press
Saturday February 16, 2002

PHILADELPHIA — Hundreds of youngsters in at least seven states have broken out in mysterious rashes, and some health investigators suspect it might be caused by a new or yet-to-be-identified virus. 

The red, itchy rash appears to be more an annoyance than a serious health threat, but it has managed to temporarily close schools, worry parents and frustrate school administrators, for whom answers have been elusive. 

Students in Pennsylvania, New York, West Virginia, Virginia, Ohio, Oregon and Washington state have complained about rashes on the face, arms, legs and body. For the most part, the rash goes away when the students leave school. 

“For something like this to occur almost simultaneously in different parts of the country is, to my knowledge, unprecedented,” said Dr. Norman Sykes, who examined about 30 suburban Philadelphia students who came down with the rash this month. 

In the Quakertown Community School District, where nearly 170 students at all nine schools were confirmed to have the rash, an environmental company collected air and water samples and examined carpets, floor mats, vacuum bags and clothing, but all tested negative for contaminants. 

“We may never know what this thing is,” said Quakertown Superintendent Jim Scanlon. 

Most school systems have ruled out an environmental cause, but not the Peninsula School District in Gig Harbor, Wash., where more than 50 students and teachers complained about a rash. 

Test results showed an abnormally high level of dust, dandruff and skin particles — probably caused by an overactive ventilation system that took too much moisture out of the air. 

“People are very concerned about their children,” said Peninsula Superintendent Jim Coolican, who does not suspect a virus. “We say it’s not a long-term problem, but people say, ‘How do you know? How do you know it won’t be a problem for my child 10 years from now?”’ 

Sykes, a dermatologist and professor at Jefferson Medical College in Philadelphia, suspects the culprit in Quakertown is a mutation of the childhood illness known as fifth disease or a virus not yet known to science. 

Fifth disease, so-called because it was once considered one of the five main childhood illnesses, produces a low fever and cold-like symptoms, followed by a rash that creates a “slapped cheek” appearance and a lacy red rash on the trunk, arms and legs. 

Though Sykes’ patients had those same symptoms, a blood test turned up no evidence of the virus that causes the disease. Sykes then performed a more sophisticated test and found DNA evidence of fifth disease virus. But nine other students tested negative for fifth disease. 

“We only know a tiny, tiny percentage, certainly less than 10 percent, of the organisms that are in and on our bodies,” said infectious-disease expert Madeline Drexler, author of “Secret Agents: The Menace of Emerging Infections.” 

Dr. Suzanne Jenkins, of the Virginia Department of Health, also suspects a virus as yet unknown by science. The virus probably lives in the gastrointestinal tract, and can be spread by coughing, sneezing or failing to wash one’s hands after using the bathroom, the epidemiologist said. 

Scanlon, the Quakertown superintendent, believes some of the rashes might have been caused by psychosomatic “hysteria.” And some rashes were not rashes at all — high school students rubbed themselves with sandpaper in a futile attempt to get the school shut down, he said. 

“We sat there itching and then it got all red and bumpy and then it started stinging. I put a paper towel on it so it wouldn’t burn that much,” said 8-year-old Samantha Makl, who went to the hospital on the first day of the Quakertown outbreak. 

Quakertown parent Keith Ruppel said the rashes are distracting his two children from their school work. 

“I really wish they could find the cause,” said the father of a 10-year-old boy and 12-year-old girl. “But you can’t keep them out of school.” 


Loving your body on Valentine’s Day

By David Scharfenberg, Daily Planet staff
Friday February 15, 2002

Academics warned that destructive concerns about body image are filtering down to 6-and 7-year-olds during a conference on body image Thursday afternoon sponsored by UC Berkeley’s Center for Weight & Health. 

“We’re seeing this desire to lose weight at earlier and earlier ages,” said Joanne Ikeda, co-director of the center, citing a Stanford study of 13 elementary schools in northern California, released last year, which found that 35 percent of third-grade girls and 25 percent of boys wanted to lose weight. 

Ikeda said attempts to diet during pre-pubescent growth spurts can be particularly harmful.  

“If you reduce calorie intake, that growth is not going to take place,” she said. 

Jennifer O’Dea, a visiting professor in the Department of Nutritional Sciences at UC Berkeley, presented findings from a study she conducted in Australia in 2000, involving 470 adolescents ages 11 to 14, which found that general self-esteem education is more effective in improving body image than a program focused on food and eating disorders in particular. 

O’Dea’s “Everybody Is Different” program, tested in two schools, emphasized that “diversity is normal” and celebrated each student’s unique characteristics. 

Using a standard test called the “Eating Disorders Inventory,” the study measured lasting improvements in body image among those exposed to the curriculum, and declining body image in a control group. 

The study also measured an 8 percent growth in weight loss attempts among girls in the control group, compared to a 2 percent growth in the study group. 

O’Dea said previous studies, which emphasized direct education on eating disorders, had moderate effects on improving students’ knowledge about the topic, but did little to change behavior. 

Marilyn Wann, author of “Fat! So?,” and self-described “fat rebel,” said the nation must “break the connection” between notions of body type and fitness. 

“If everyone in America exercised for an hour a day and ate nothing but broccoli, there would still be a variety of body types,” she said. 

Ikeda pointed to a spate of recent studies which suggest that overweight people who exercise and eat well can reduce their risk for hypertension, diabetes and other maladies.  

Still, Ikeda acknowledged that there are significant health risks associated with obesity, and said there is not yet any evidence to suggest that overweight people who exercise and eat well face the same low risk as thin, fit people. 

O’Dea said the next wave of problems will be with boys, who are starting to exhibit the body image concerns that emerged with girls in the 1960s. 

O’Dea said that boys face a “double-edged” sword. They fear not only being too fat, but being too scrawny. 


Shelf talks of cutting library funds

M.L.King Middle School
Friday February 15, 2002

Editor: 

 

I read with interest the front page article (1.23.02) pertaining to Berkeley school libraries. As a BUSD Library Media Teacher, I feel a few points need to be added. 

Berkeley is home to a world class research library. It can also boast a public library system which enjoys the highest use of any library system serving a community of similar size in the state and has for years. 

Furthermore, it receives a higher level of public support than most public libraries anywhere. 

One would think that in a community such as ours, a vibrant school library program would be in place.  

Sadly, this is not the case.The library media technicians in our elementary schools do wonderful work under difficult circumstances, but they are not librarians.  

The research referred to in the article states: [Students who score higher on] "tests tend to come from schools which have more library resource staff and more books, periodicals and videos, and where the instructional role of the teacher-librarian and involvement in cooperative program planning and teaching is more prominent."  

The Impact of School Library Media Centers on Academic Achievement. 

Shelf talks of cutting library budget. This conclusion from the Colorado study has been replicated in at least three other states. What is most crucial to point out is that they hold true regardless of socioeconomic status and parental level of education. 

In Berkeley we are forever obsessing (and rightly so) about the achievement gap. We have in our own backyard a powerful means to address it, we need only to recognize that fact and act on it.  

At a time when our school district is potentially facing huge budget cuts, let us remember that the school library is a classroom--the most expensive and potentially the most powerful. Staffed by a Library Media Teacher who collaborates with other teachers, our libraries have the potential to level the playing field for all students. 

The research is there. Lets not cut here, let's build. 

 

 

M.L.King Middle School 

Berkeley


A king and a lion bring in street sounds of the Middle East

By Peter Crimmins, Special to the Daily Planet
Friday February 15, 2002

The explosive popularity of world music the last decade has brought Cuban son and Caribbean soca and Latin American salsa and African high life to the ears of many Americans, but music of the Middle East has, for many people, stayed in the domain of the belly dancing parlor and the odd Oum Kulthum cassette. A Berkeley performance by a couple of giants in the Arabic music world will show how close alongside Western pop this music is progressing. 

Appearing at the Berkeley Community Theater on Friday, February 22, is Khaled, and Hakim, “The king of rai” and “The lion of Egypt,” respectively. Their monikers don’t come easily. 

Khaled, who has dropped the traditional rai prefix, Cheb, from his name, is an Algerian-born, Paris-based singer and musician who draws from musical influence from all corners of the Arabic world and beyond to make his pop rai. Like rock and roll from the blues, rai has transmogrified over and over through the 20th century from its roots in Algerian folk chants with percussion and flutes, through influences of Western pop and jazz, into electronic beats and funky grooves underneath traditional melodies and instrumentation. 

Rai is an idiomatic word that resists translation into English; depending on who you’re talking to and how loose they’re feeling at the time, it can mean “opinion,” “advice,” “my way,” “tell it like it is,” or simply “oh yeah!” British pop star Sting had invited “The prince of rai” Cheb Mami to bring an exotic flair to his 1999 “Brand New Day” album on the “Desert Rose” track. As the modern music of Algeria, began to take its shape with confrontational and plain-talking lyrics in the early 1960s after the country became independent from France. 

The music comes with radical political baggage as the street sounds of the dispossessed. It was repressed from airwaves by the Algerian government until 1985 because it was associated with dissenting elements, and the assassination of popular rai musician Cheb Hasni by Islamic militants caused many musicians to flee to France, where they discovered studio facilities to make rai sound like it never had before. 

Khaled was one of those artists in France who rose to the top to become a global sensation. He not only admits to finding influence from Egyptian and Spanish music, but also from the Beatles and James Brown. On his new CD “Kenza,” named after his second daughter, the Paris production has Khaled’s horn section moving from funk to salsa, with plenty of electronic dance rhythms and string arrangements under the direction of New Wave producer Steve Killage (Simple Minds) and New York City’s acid jazzman Lati Krolund formerly of the Brooklyn Funk Essentials. 

Performing on the same bill, Hakim is likewise bringing the music of the back streets to a global audience by performing “al jeel” – for a new, young generation. His brand of shaa’bi music is fast with nearly delirious layers of percussion. 

Hakim grew up in Egypt the son of the mayor of Maghagha playing in bands of just tabla and accordion. He played shaa’bi, a form of lower-class music comparable to blues for its steady beats and freestyling vocals about hard times, poverty, and lost love. His father sent him to study in Cairo, where Hakim found himself immersed in the music scene on the city’s streets. 

After years of performing weddings and recording cassette tapes – the principle medium in Egypt for recorded music – Hakim has become the lion of his moniker, rivaling the sales of Egypt’s longstanding diva Oum Kathoum, who passed away almost 30 years ago and is still enormously popular. 

It’s hard to imagine cassette tapes blaring from boom boxes all over Egypt could respectfully replicate the nuanced percussive textures of Hakim’s newest release, “Yaho” (available on CD from the Mondo Melodia label). Several tracks are produced and mixed by Transglobal Underground, a group melding urban techno with instrument textures from cultures around the world. 

Both Hakim and Khaled have been wildly successful using dance beats and bass grooves to present their traditional musical heritage to a wide audience. Their live performance at the Berkeley Community Theater is presented by local DJ Cheb i Sabbah, who has been a Bay Area fixture for 10 years, championing not only Arabic, but Asian and African music in San Francisco clubs.


Arts & Entertainment Calendar

Staff
Friday February 15, 2002

 

924 Gilman Feb. 15: One Time Angels, Eleventeen, Audiocrush, Counterfit, Bikini Bumps; Feb. 16: Iron Vegan, Nigel Peppercock, Lost Goat, Iron Lung, Depressor; Feb. 22: Oppressed Logic, Deface, Edddie Haskells, Throat Oyster; Feb. 23: From Ashes Arise, Artimus Pyle, Brainoil, Down in Flames, Dystrophy, Scholastic Deth; All shows start a 8 p.m. unless noted; Most are $5; 924 Gilman St. 525-9926. 

 

The Albatross Feb. 18: Paul Schneider; Feb. 19: Carla Kaufman and Larry Scala; Feb. 20: Whiskey Brothers; Feb. 21: Keni “El Lebrijano”; Feb. 23: 9:30 p.m., Dave Creamer Jazz Quartet; Feb. 26: Mad & Eddie Duran; Feb. 28: Keni “El Lebrijano”; All shows begin at 9 p.m. unless noted. 822 San Pablo Ave., 843-2473, albatrosspub@mindspring.com. 

 

Anna’s Bistro Feb. 15: Ann’s Jazz Standards, Hideo Date; Feb. 16: Robin Gregory, Ducksan Distones Jazz Sextet; Feb. 17: Acoustic Soul; Feb. 18: Renegade Sidemen w/Calvin Keyes; Feb. 19: Ed Reed; Feb. 20: Bob Schoen Jazz Quintet; Feb. 21: Jazz Singers’ Collective; Feb. 22: Fourtet, Hideo Date; Feb. 23: Vicki Burns & Felice York, Ducksan Distones Jazz Sextet; Feb. 24: Christy Dana Jazz Quartet; Feb. 25: Renegade Sidemen w/Calvin Keyes; Feb. 26: Con Alma; Feb. 27: Mainstream Jazz Quintet; Feb. 28: Junebug; Music starts at 8 p.m. and 10 p.m., 1801 University Ave., 849-2662. 

 

Blake’s Feb. 15: KGB, Solemite, $7; Feb. 16: SFunk; Feb. 17: Roots Science; Feb. 18: The Steve Gannon Band, Mz. Dee, $4; Feb. 20: Hebro, $3; Feb. 21: Ascension, $5; Feb. 23: Tang; Feb. 24: Famous Last Words; $3; Feb. 25: The Steve Gannon Band, Mz. Dee, $4; Feb. 26: Boomshanka, Rare Form, $3; Feb. 27: Mindz Eye, $5; Feb. 28: Ascension, $5; 2367 Telegraph Ave., 877-488-6533. 

 

Cafe Eclectica Feb. 23: 8 p.m., Hip Hop show: Little Larry, with guest MCs and DJs. A teen cafe "for youth, by youth". All ages, $3 w/HS I.D., $5 w/o; 1309 Solano Ave., Albany, 527-2344. 

 

Cal Performances Feb. 17: 3 p.m., Opera vocalist, Ewa Podles, performs works by Rossini, Chopin and Brahms. $42. Zellerbach Hall, UC Berkeley, 642-9988 

 

Cato’s Ale House Feb. 17: Phillip Greenlief Trio; Feb. 20: Anton Schwartz Trio; Feb. 24: Blue and Tan; Feb. 27: Vince Wallace Trio 

 

Club Jjang-ga Feb. 16: Deducted Value, Dopesick, Luxt, Karate High School, Forcing Bloom; Feb. 23: Cheapskate, Eddie Haskels, Resiteleros, Dead Last; 261-1108, savageproductions1@yahoo.com. 

 

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 

 

Jupiter Feb. 15: Forest Sun; Feb. 16: Michael Bluestien Trio; Feb. 20: Joshi Marshall Duo; Feb. 21: Spectraphonic; Feb. 22: Ben Graves Group; Feb. 23: Brenden Millstein Quartet; Feb. 27: J Steinkoler Duo; Feb. 28: Spectraphonic; All shows are free and begin at 8 p.m., unless noted. 2181 Shattuck Ave., 843-7625, www.jupiterbeer.com. 

 

Live Oak Concerts Feb. 15: Merlin Coleman with Dan Cantrell, Darren Johnson and Ron Heglin, $10; Feb. 16: Marvin Sanders, Karen Ande, JungHae Kim, $12; All shows begin at 7:30 p.m. Berkeley Art Center, 1275 Walnut St., 644-6893. 

 

Old First Concerts Feb. 16: 8 p.m., The Duke and The Lady-Faye Carol, $12; Feb. 17: 4 p.m., Miriam Abramowitsch and George Barth, $12; Old First Church, 1751 Sacramento St., 415-474-1608. 

 

The Starry Plough Feb. 15: 9:30 p.m., Dickle Brothers, Rube Waddell, Brian Kenney Fresno, $6; Feb. 16: 9:30 p.m. Camper Van Chadbourne, Dandeline, $7; Feb. 17: 8 p.m., Irish Music Session; Feb. 20: 8:30 p.m., Poetry Slam, $5; Feb. 21: 9:30 p.m., Jon Langford, Rico Bell, $12; Feb. 22: 9:30 p.m., 20 Minute Loop, Kirby Grips, She Mob, $6; Feb. 23: 9:30 p.m., Eric McFadden Experience, Mark Growden, $6; 3101 Shattuck Ave., 841-2082. 

 

Tuva Space Mar. 21: 8 p.m., Blues Translation; Mar. 22: 8 p.m., Electro-Acoustic Quartet; Mar. 23: 8 p.m. Solo Guitar Performance, 9:30 p.m. Country, Folk, and Blues Standards. $8 All shows $8. 312 Adeline St. 649-8744, acme@sfsound.org 

 

“Concherto Night” Feb. 16: 8 p.m., Empyrean Ensemble perform new American and 20th Century works. $14 -$18. Julia Morgan Theatre, 2640 College Ave., 925-798-1300, www.juliamorgan.org 

 

“Love is in the Air” Feb. 16: 6 p.m., Oakland Lyric Opera presents an evening of dinner, candlelight and flowers accompanied by a musical showcase of Broadway tunes, Italian street songs and nostalgic cabaret music. $65 including tax and tip. Sequoya Country Club, 4550 Heafey Rd, Oakland, 836-6772 

 

“Judi Bari Takes on the FBI” Feb. 16: 7:30 p.m., Alice Littletree and Sherry Glaser perform separately in a benefit to raise money for Judi Bari’s suit against the FBI. $5 - $15 sliding scale. Unitarian Fellowship, Cedar & Bonita St., 415-927-1645 

 

“Bosch Sisters” Feb. 20: 7:30 p.m., Swiss sisters perform piano concert featuring music by Mozart, Schubert, Mendelssohn, Debussy and Poulenc. Donations suggested. UC Berkeley International House, 2299 Piedmont Ave. 642-9490 

 

“Free Men! Free Women!” Feb. 22 through Feb. 23: 8 p.m., Wing It performs a new a combination of dance, song and story. $12. First Congregational Church of Berkeley, 2345 Channing Way, 814-9584 

 

“John Glennon and Erika March” Feb. 24: 5 p.m., A program of French music including the works of Francois Couperin, Chambonnieres, and Muffat. $15 - $18. MusicSources, 1000 The Alameda, 528-1685 

 

“Cosi Fan Tutte” Feb. 22 through Mar. 3: The Berkeley Opera will perform Mozart’s classic opera. $10 - $30. Call for specific dates and times. Julia Morgan Theater, 2640 College Ave. 841-103, www.berkeleyopera.com 

 

 

“La Tania” Feb. 14 through Feb. 16, 6 p.m., 7:15 p.m., Acclaimed Flamenco Dancer, La Tania, performs with members of her dance company. $55 dinner included. Cafe de la Paz, 1600 Shattuck Ave. 843-0662, www.cafedelapaz.net 

 

“The Ravel Project and Other Performances” Feb. 15, Feb. 16: 8 p.m., Pascal Rioult Dance Theatre will premiere the Ravel Project on February 15th and perform separate selections on February 16. $24 - $46. Zellerbach Hall, UC Berkeley Campus, 642-0212 

 

“Here ... Now” Feb. 19 through Feb. 24: Tues. - Fri. 8 p.m., Sat. 2 p.m., 8 p.m., Sun. 3 p.m., 8 p.m., Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater performs three distinct programs featuring the West Coast premiere of “Here...Now”. $24 - $46. Zellerbach Hall, UC Berkeley Campus, 642-0212 

 

 

“Human Nature” Feb. 16: 8:30 p.m., X-plicit Players, $15; Art-A-Fact, 1109 Addison St., 848-1985, www.xplicitplayers.com. 

 

“Sisters” Through Feb. 16: Fri. and Sat. at 8 p.m., The Prozorov sisters look at the gap between hope and fulfillment in their lives. Live Oak Theatre, 1301 Shattack, www.actorsensemleofbkerkeley.com. 

 

“Night, Mother” Feb. 15 - 16, Feb. 22 - 23: 8 p.m., A drama exploring one young woman’s decision to take control of her life with one furious and heartbreaking act. Directed by Bahati Bonner. $12, $8 seniors. La Val’s Subterranean Theatre, 1834 Euclid Ave. 496-1269 x1950, nightmother@onebox.com 

 

“Culture Clash in AmeriCCA” Through Mar. 3: Check theater for specific dates and times. The comic trio Culture Clash present their latest collection of political, ethnological and socialogical humor written for and about Berkeley. $10 - $54. Berkeley Repertory Theatre, 2025 Addison St., 647-2949, www.berkeleyrep.org 

 

 

“Rhinoceros” Through Mar. 10: Check theater for specific dates and times. An absurdist tragic-comedy about a small provincial town whose citizens slowly but surely transform into large cumbersome rhinoceroses. Directed by Barbara Damashek. $38 - $54. Berkeley Repertory Theatre, 2025 Addison St. 647-2976 www.berkeleyrep.org. 

 

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

 

 

Pacific Film Archive Feb: 15: 7 p.m., Rendezvous in Paris, 9:05 p.m., Autumn Tale; Feb. 17: 3 p.m. The Testimony of Taliesin Jones, 5:30 p.m., The Atonement of Gosta Berling; Feb. 19: 7:30 p.m., Prisoners of War; Feb. 20: 3 p.m., The General, 7:30 p.m., Kristin Lucas Simulcast Town Meeting; Feb. 21: 7:30 p.m., Kristin Lucas Workshop; 2527 Bancroft Way, 642-1412. 

 

“Human Rights International Film Festival” Feb. 22 through Feb. 24: Nine provocative films will be shown, many followed by question and answer sessions with local and visiting filmmakers. Check theater for films and times. Pacific Film Archive, 2527 Bancroft Way, 642-1412  

 

 

 

“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.; Free. St. Mary’s Center, 635 22nd St., Oakland, 893-4723 x222. 

 

“Envisioning Ecology” Through Feb. 15: Paintings by Michelle Waters. Ecology Center, 2530 San Pablo Ave., 548-2220 x233. 

 

“The Other 364 Days: A Day in the Life of the Queer Community” 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.; Photolab Gallery, 2235 Fifth St., 644-1400, limor@indelible-images.com. 

 

“Adventures in La Land” Through Feb. 23: Installations by Suzanne Husky and Paintings by Amy Morrell. Tues. - Sat., 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.; 4920 Telegraph Ave., Oakland, 428-2349. 

 

“Transformations: Through the Eye of a Needle” Through Feb. 23: Two-person exhibition by Rebecca Bui and Linda Lemon including procelain and fabric dolls and mixed media works on handmade paper. Tues.-Sat., 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Ardency Gallery, 709 Broadway, Oakland, 836-0831, www.artolio.com 

 

“Ton of Joy” Through Mar. 1: Group show of twelve painters and sculptors: Simone Anders, Susan Brady, Erin Fitzgerald, Karen Frey, Kei Hanafusa, Nancy Legge, Burke Rainey, Robin Sebourn, Kristen Throop, Clay Vajgrt, Whitney Vosburgh, Ann West; Mon. - Sat., 8 a.m. - 6 p.m.; Hollis Street Project, 5900 Hollis St., Emeryville. 

 

“Celebrating the African Diaspora” Through Mar. 1: A Black History Month Exhibit celebrating the contributions of Africans in America and throughout the Diaspora. 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.; University of Creation Sprituality, 2141 Broadway, Oakland, 835-4827 x31 

 

“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; Through Mar. 24: “Migrations: Photographs by Sebastiao Salgado,” 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. 

 

“A Retrospective Show” Through Mar. 13: The Women’s Cancer Resource Center “The Art of Living Black,” an Open Studios event for local African American artists. The Gallery features a retrospective show of the work of the late Jan Hart-Schuyers. Mon. - Thurs. 9 a.m. - 3 p.m., Sat. 12 - 4 p.m., Women’s Cancer Resource Center, 3023 Shattuck Ave., 548-9286 x307, www.wcrc.org. 

 

The Richmond Art Center Through Mar. 16: “The Art of Living Black 2002: The sixth Annual Bay Area Black Artists Exhibition and Art Tour,” group exhibition of 81 artists; “Introspección Dual: Recent Painting by Verónica B. Rojas and Santiago Gervas”; “Transmutations: Recent work by Tim Jag”; “The NIAD` Family,” Artwork from the National Institute of Art and Disabilities; “Still Here,” collaborative art project about AIDS in the 21st century; “Girls in the Hall,” artwork by girls incarcerated in the San Francisco juvenile justice system; Tues. - Fri., 10 a.m. - 4:30 p.m., Sat. noon - 4:30 p.m.; The Art of Living Black Art Tour Weekend: Mar. 2 and 3, 11 a.m. - 5 p.m.; 2540 Barrett Ave., 620-6772, www.therichmondartcenter.org. 

 

“Stas Orlovski” Feb. 16 through Mar. 23: New work by Stas Orlovski featuring a series of large paintings and drawings examining the relationships between body and landscape and eastern and western aesthetics. Tues. - Sat. 11 a.m. - 6 p.m. Traywick Gallery, 1316 Tenth St., 527-1214 

 

“Average Female (Perfect)” Through Mar. 24: Manhattan-based artist Sowon Kwon projects footage of the first ever perfect-scoring gymnasts: Romanian, Nadia Comanece and Russian, Nelli Kim at the 1976 Montreal Olympics. Kwon superimposes over the gymnasts a hand-drawn outline of the “average” female body to direct the audience’s attention to the gymnasts’ movements throughout their performances. Wed. - Sun 11 a.m. - 7 p.m., $4 - $6. 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, Through March 30: 10 a.m. - 6 p.m., Mon. - Sat.; Sticks, 1579 B, Solano Ave., 526-6603.  

 

“Domestic Bliss” Through Apr. 4: Collection of abstract paintings and mixed medium by Amy St. George. Albany Community Center Foyer Gallery, 1249 Marin Ave., Albany, 524-9283. 

 

Trillium Press: Past, Present and Future Feb. 15 through April 13: Works created at Trillium Press by 28 artists. Tues. - Fri. noon - 5:30 p.m., Sat. noon - 4:30 p.m.; Kala Art Institute, 1060 Heinz Ave., 549-2977, www.kala.org.  

 

“The Legacy of Social Protest: The Disability Rights Movement” Through April 30: The first exhibition in a series dealing with Free Speech, Civil Rights, and Social Protest Movements of the 60s and 70s in California. Photograghs by: Cathy Cade, HolLynn D’Lil, Howard Petrick, Ken Stein. The Free Speech Cafe, Moffitt Undergraduate Library, University of California-Berkeley, hjadler@yahoo.com.  

 

“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. 

 

“Jurassic Park: The Life and Death of Dinosaurs” Feb. 2 through May 12: An exhibit displaying models of the sets and dinosaur sculptures used in the Jurassic Park films, as well as a video presentation and a dig pit where visitors can dig for specially buried dinosaur bones. $8 adults, $6, youth and seniors. Lawrence Hall of Science, Centennial Dr., above the UC Berkeley campus, 642-5132, www.lawrencehallofscience.org 

 

“The Image of Evil in Art” Feb. 7 through May 31: An exhibit exploring the varying depictions of the devil in art. Call ahead for hours. The Flora Lamson Hewlett Library, 2400 Ridge Rd., 649-2541. 

 

“The Pottery of Ocumichu” Feb. 7 through May 31: A case exhibit of the imaginative Mexican pottery made in the village of Ocumichu, Michoacan. Known particularly for its playful devil figures, Ocumichu pottery also presents fanciful everyday scenes as well as religious topics. Call ahead for hours. The Flora Lamson Hewlett Library, 2400 Ridge Rd., 649-2540 

 

Readings 

 

Black Oak Books Feb. 27: 7:30 p.m., Author & Activist Randy Schutt discussing his new book "Inciting Democracy: A Practical Proposal for Creating a Good 

Society." 1491 Shattuck Ave., 486-0698. 

 

Boadecia’s Books Feb. 9: 7:30 p.m., Loolwa Khazzoom reads from her new book “Conseqence: Beyond Resisting Rape” which takes a street savy look at street harassment. The evening will include a screening of the film “War Zone” and several spoken word presentations. Free. 398 Colusa, Kensington, 595-4642 

 

Cody’s on Fourth St. Feb. 15: Nuala O’Faolain talks about “My Dream of You”; Feb. 19: Tracy Hogg will tell “Secrets of the Baby Whisperer for Toddlers”; Feb. 21: Dan Bessie discusses Alvah Bessie’s Spanish Civil War Notebooks; Feb. 27: 6 p.m., Rodney Yee brings “Yoga: The Poetry of the Body”; Feb. 28: Rosemary Wells talks about children, children’s books, and the importance of reading; All events begin at 7 p.m. unless noted and ask a $2 donation. 1730 Fourth St., 559-9500, www.codysbooks.com.  

 

Cody’s on Telegraph Ave. Feb. 7: Mark Kurlansky considers “Salt: A World History”; Feb. 11: Edward O. Wilson discusses “The Future of Life”; Feb. 12: Frances Moore Lappé and Anna Lappé offer “Hope’s Edge: The Next Diet for a Small Planet”; Feb. 15: Cindy Engel describes “Wild Health: How Animals Keep Themselves Well and What We Can Learn From Them”; Feb. 19: Robert Cohen reads from “Inspired Sleep”; Feb. 22: “The Whole World is Watching,” a panel discussion with Harold Adler, Leon F. Litwack, Charles Wollenberg, Hollynn D’Lil, Ronald J. Riesterer and Cathy Cade; Feb. 25: David Henry Sterry describes “Chicken: Self-portrait of a Young Man for Rent”; Feb. 26: Carter Scholz reads from “Radiance”; All events begin at 7:30 p.m. unless noted and ask a $2 donation. 2454 Telegraph Ave., 845-7852, www.codysbooks.com.  

 

Coffee With a Beat Feb. 2: Julia Vinograd, Shauna Rogan; Feb. 9: Sydney Bell, Debrale Pagan; All readings 7-9 p.m., free and followed by open mike. 458 Perkins, Oakland, 526-5985.  

 

Easy Going Travel Shop & Bookstore Feb. 5: William Chapman presents slides and reads from his book, “The Face of Tibet”; Feb. 7: A panel of female travel writers read from their works published in “The Unsavvy Travelers”, a chronicle of hilarious tales of cathartic misadventures on the road; Feb. 19: Christopher Baker, author of “Costa Rica: Moon Handbook” presents a slide show demonstrating what makes the Central American country so appealing; Richard Sterling, author of Lonely Planet’s “World Food: Greece”, presents a culinary tour revealing the culture and character of Greece through the medium of her cuisine’s; Feb. 28: Terrence Ward reads from his book “Searching for Hassan: An American Family’s Journey Home to Iran”; All readings are free and start at 7:30 p.m., 1385 Shattuck Ave. at Rose, 843-3533. 

 

Shambhala Booksellers Feb. 3: 7 p.m., William Peterson will read from his latest book “Voices in the Dark: Esoteric, Occult & Secular Voices in Nazi-Occupied Paris 1990-1994”. Free. 242 Telegraph Ave., 848-8443 

 

 

Poetry 

 

Poetry Flash @ Cody’s Feb. 6: Adrianne Marcus, Diana O’Hehir; Feb. 10: Cathy Coldman, Judith Serin; Feb. 13: Murray Silverstein, Gillian Wegener, Helen Wickes; Feb. 17: Sharon Doubiago, Doren Robbins; Feb. 20: Linda Elkin, Steve Rood; Feb. 27: Stephen Kessler and John Oliver Simon; All events begin at 7:30 p.m., $2 donation. 2454 Telegraph Ave., 845-7852, www.codysbooks.com.  

 

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. 

 

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.  

 

Oakland Museum of California Feb. 14: 1 p.m., Diane Curry shares her experiences researching photographic archives for the history of Oakland, free; Feb. 17: 12 - 4 p.m., A family program in which artists engage families in creative projects inspired by the work of California African American artists; 2 - 3 p.m., Artist Raymond Howell discusses his creative process and artistic techniques. $6 general, $4 seniors and students with ID. 10th & Oak St., 238-2200, www.museumca.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.


Out & About Calendar

Compiled by Guy Poole
Friday February 15, 2002


Friday, Feb. 15

 

 

Berkeley Women in Black 

noon - 1 p.m. 

Telegraph Ave. and Bancroft 

Standing in solidarity with women in Israel and Palestine to urge the end of Israeli occupation of West Bank and Gaza. 548-6310, www.wibberkeley.org. 

 

Hip-Hop Music Workshop 

6 - 8 p.m. 

South Berkeley Community Church 

1802 Fairview Ave. 

Friday Night Art and Dinner Program for youths ages 5 to 14 years old. Hands on experience in various artistic styles. 6 - 7 p.m. art, 7 - 8 p.m. dinner. 652-1040. 

 

Still Stronger Women 

1:15 - 3:15 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

Life of Isadora Duncan, plus film on contemporary creative, therapeutic dances. 232-1351. 

 

 


Saturday, Feb. 16

 

 

Puppet Show 

1:30 and 2:30 p.m. 

Hall of Health, Children’s Hospital Oakland 

2230 Shattuck Ave. 

Includes puppets from diverse cultures and with such conditions as cerberal palsy, blindness, and Down syndrome. Free. 549-1564. 

 

Launch Party for War Times 

4 p.m. 

Mandela Village 

1357 Fifth St., West Oakland 

A new national anti-war newspaper covering an alternative truth. 869-5156. 

 

BANA, Berkeley Alliance of  

Neighborhood Associations 

9:30 - ll a.m.  

Live Oak Park, Fireside Room 

l30l Shattuck Ave. 

Neighbors are welcome to network and connect on issues with groups across the city. 848-3l75, HCMuir@mindspring.com. 

 

Judi Bari Takes on the FBI 

7:30 p.m. 

Unitarian Fellowship 

Cedar and Bonita St. 

Benefit for the Judi Bari suit against the FBI. $5 - $15. 415-927-1645. 

 

Habitual Avoidance of Intimacy? 

5 - 6:30 p.m. 

Twelve-step meeting for sexual, social, and emotional anorexia. Open to anyone who wants to recover from habitual avoidance of intimacy. Call first, 548-1285. 

 

Fund Raiser for BHS Common Ground Costa Rica trip 

9:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. 

1924 Cedar St. 

Humongous multi-family Berkeley High School indoor garage sale. Marciagoodman@aol.com. 

 


Sunday, Feb. 17

 

 

Jewish Learning Seminar 

10 a.m. - noon 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St. 

K’Tanim: A Celebration of Jewish Learning for Families with Young Children, Birth to 3. Family activities, songs, stories, crafts, and discussions. $10. To register call: 549-9447 x 104. 

 

Plant Meditations: Cultivating Your Relationship with the Healing Power of Herbs 

7:30 p.m. 

The Berkeley Psychic Institute 

2018 Allston Way 

Spend the evening exploring the many ways of communicating with the healing presence of the plants. $10 donation, 644-1600. 

 

 


Monday, Feb. 18

 

 

BART Operates Regular Saturday  

Service for “President’s Day” 

Beginning at 6 a.m. until midnight on all five lines. 465-2278. 

 

The East Bay Coalition Against the War Movie/Speaker and Discussion Night 

7 - 9 p.m. 

Fellowship of Humanity  

390 27th St., Oakland 

We will show the Noam Chomsky Video on 9/11 and the War on Terror. Plus guest speaker, Denny Riley, Vietnam Veteran and a member of the Veterans Speaker's Alliance. The film and speaker will take about one to one and a half hours. The rest of the time will be devoted to small and large group discussion about our current struggle in response to “the war on terrorism.” 

 

 


Tuesday, Feb. 19

 

 

Berkeley Garden Club  

Hosts “Crystal Palaces” 

1 p.m. 

Epworth United Methodist Church 

1953 Hopkins St. 

Ann Cunningham, author of “Crystal Palaces” will present slides of glass houses from the turn of the century to the present. Scott Medburry, Director Strybing Arboretum & Botanic Garden, will talk about the history of San Francisco’s Conservatory of Flowers including an update on its recent renovation. 524-4374. 

 

21st Century McCarthyism & The Rise of the Global Police State 

6 - 8 p.m. 

UC Berkeley 

Wheeler Auditorium 

The following speakers present their interpretations of September 11 and its aftermath: Angela Davis, Diane Clemens and Jennifer Terry. Sponsored by the Departments of Women's Studies, Peace and Conflict Studies, & Ethnic Studies, and Professors for Peace. xperales@uclink.berkeley.edu. 

 

Pioneering Woman Federal Judge 

4:30 p.m. 

UC Berkeley 

Boalt Hall, Room 100 

The Hon. Mary M. Schroeder, Chief Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals, 9th Circuit, speaks on “Justice and Mercy.” Inaugural event of American Constitution Society for Law & Policy, Boalt Hall Chapter. 642-1741, amconstsoc@law.berkeley.edu. 

 

Berkeley Camera Club 

7:30 p.m. 

Northbrae Community Church 

941 The Alameda 

Share your slides and prints and learn what other photographers are doing. 525-3565. 

 


Wednesday, Feb. 20

 

 

Staying Connected: Building A Secular Jewish Life 

7:30 - 9:15 p.m. 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St. 

An evening of discussion and song with a Klezmer/Yiddish musician. $5. 848-0237 x 127 

 

Institute of Government Studies 

4 p.m. 

119 Moses Hall 

UC Berkeley Campus 

Gerald Gamm lectures as part of the Historical Institutionalism Seminar. 642-4608, www.igs.berkeley.edu 

 

Colonial Courts, African Conflicts,  

and the End of Slavery in the French Souda 

4 - 6 p.m. 

UC Berkeley  

3335 Dwinelle, Level “C” 

A talk by Richard Roberts of Stanford University. Sponsored by Department of History, Department of African-American Studies, and Center for African Studies. 642-8338. 

 

Cultural Competency in Healthcare 

6 - 7:30 p.m. 

Berkeley YWCA  

2600 Bancroft Way 

Racial Justice Lecture Series and discussion on overcoming ethnic and gender differences to deliver healthcare in under-served populations. 848-6370, www.ywca-berkeley.org. 

 

East Bay Job Fair 

noon - 6 p.m. 

Henry J. Kaiser Convention Center 

10 10th St., Oakland 

The United Way of the Bay Area, Economic Development Alliance for Business, and Bay Area Works are hosting a job fair. Free and open to everyone. 238-2410, www.uwba.org.  

 


Thursday, Feb. 21

 

Barbara Lee 

8 p.m. 

UC Berkeley 

145 Dwinelle Hall 

Rep. Barbara Lee will be on campus. Sponsored by the Commonwealth Club and the Center on Politics. 642-9355, www.igs.berkeley.edu:8880/. 

 

Purim Lecture 

7:30 - 9 p.m. 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St. 

Discover the deeper meaning of Purim as Rabbi Alexander Sheinfeld uses the lens of Kabbalah to explore what Purim has to do with being Jewish and with being human. $10, $8 members. 848-0237 x127 

 

Zimbabwe Wildlife 

7 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment, Inc. 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

Julie Edwards of Rhino Girl Safaris gives a slide presentation showcasing Zimbabwe’s remarkable variety of birds and mammals, and discusses the future of wildlife and the safari industry in Africa. 527-7377 

 

Travel Photography Workshop 

7 - 9 p.m. 

Easy Going Travel Shop & Bookstore 

1385 Shattuck Ave. 

An intensive workshop that focuses on travel photography, with an emphasis on film and equipment security, light and weather conditions, methods to make the most of well-known sites, and ways to approach and photograph strangers. $15. 843-3533 

 

Simplicity Forum 

7 - 8:30 p.m. 

Claremont Branch Library 

2940 Benvenue Ave. 

"TV and Media” - Several people who have given up their TV's will talk about the difficulties and benefits. 549-3509, www.seeds of simplicity.org. 

 

Take the Terror Out of Talking 

noon - 1:10 p.m. 

Calif. Dept. Health Services 

2151 Berkeley Way 

Room 804 

State Health Toastmasters Club is presenting a six-week Speechcraft workshop to help you overcome your fear of speaking in public and improve your communication skills. Cost is $36 for six sessions, Feb. 21, 28 & March 7, 14, 21. 649-7750. 

 


Friday, Feb. 22

 

Grand Canyon Splendor: Rafting the Colorado 

7 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment, Inc. 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

Guidebook author and former river guide, Tyler Williams, presents the dramatic beauty of the Grand Canyon in his slide presentation on rafting the Colorado. 527-7377 

 

Still Stronger Women 

1:15 - 3:15 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave 

Short stories. 232-1351. 

 


Saturday, Feb. 23

 

Archaeological Institute of America 

3 p.m. 

Shorb House 

2547 Channing Way 

Lecture by Dr. Stuart Swiny discussing Cypriot rituals surrounding fertility, life and death from the Neolithic to the Roman era. 415-338-1537, barbaram@sfsu.edu. 

 

Paying for Public Education: 

Whose Job Is It? 

3 - 5:30 p.m. 

Ocean View Elementary School 

Multi-Purpose Room 

1000 Jackson St., Albany 

A forum with Kevin Gordon of the Education Coalition, who will explain state-level funding for K-12 schools. Candidates for the California Assembly 14th District seat Debate: Dave Brown (D), Loni Hancock (D), and Charles Ramsey (D). 524-7004, hao_kco@pacbell.net.  

 

 


Sunday, Feb. 24

 

 


Monday, Feb. 25

 

A Rose Grew in Brooklyn: Stories from a Jewish Girlhood 

7:30 - 9 p.m. 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St. 

Local author and therapist, Rose Fox reads from her memoir. 

 

Institute of Government Studies 

12 p.m. 

119 Moses Hall 

UC Berkeley Campus 

John Matsasuka presents a lecture entitled “For the Many or the Few: How the Initiative Process Changes American Government”. 642-4608, www.igs.berkeley.edu 

 


Tuesday, Feb. 26

 

Berkeley Camera Club 

7:30 p.m. 

Northbrae Community Church 

941 The Alameda 

Share your slides and prints and learn what other photographers are doing. 525-3565. 

 


Wednesday, Feb. 27

 

Berkeley Gray Panthers 

1:30 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

Defending and improving Medicare. 548-9696, graypanthers@hotmail.com.  

 

Berkeley Mental Health Commission 

6:30 p.m. 

2640 Martin Luther King Jr. Way 

Auditorium 

Berkeley mental health clinic. 644-8562. 

 


Thursday, Feb. 28

 

Cody's Evening for Parents and Teachers 

7 p.m. 

Cody's Books 

1730 Fourth St. 

Rosemary Wells, children's author of dozens of books including Max and Ruby and Noisy Nora, will discuss children, books, and the importance of reading to your children. 527-6667, www.parentsnet.org. 

 

Trekking in Bhutan 

7 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment, Inc. 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

Seasoned traveler, Ruther Anne Kocour will share slides and stories of her adventures trekking in this majestic country. 527-7377 

 

Take the Terror Out of Talking 

noon - 1:10 p.m. 

Calif. Dept. Health Services 

2151 Berkeley Way 

Room 804 

State Health Toastmasters Club is presenting a six-week Speechcraft workshop to help you overcome your fear of speaking in public and improve your communication skills. Cost is $36 for six sessions, Feb. 28 & March 7, 14, 21. 649-7750. 

 

The Writing Life 

4:30 p.m. 

North Branch Library 

1170 The Alameda 

Peter S. Beagle will discuss his works and the life and times of a professional writer. 649-3913, www.infopeople.org/bpl. 

 

Photographing the Famous 

7:30 p.m. 

College Preparatory School Auditorium 

1600 Broadway, Oakland 

Michael Collopy will talk about photographing the famous (Mother Teresa, Frank Sinatra, Mikhail Gorbachev, Nelson Mandela).


Tate carries sluggish ’Jackets past Gauchos

By Jared Green, Daily Planet Staff
Friday February 15, 2002

Sophomore pours in 34 points against El Cerrito 

 

This summer, Berkeley High sophomore Khion Tate was touted as one of the best boys’ basketball sophomores in the state. Tate, while a solid contributor so far this season, hadn’t had the impact many expected. But Thursday night that all changed. 

Putting the ’Jackets on his back after the first quarter, Tate scored 34 points against El Cerrito on Thursday, carrying the uninspired Berkeley squad to a 63-50 win. 

Tate was an amazing 17-for-19 from the floor and showed an all-around game that had previously eluded him. Aside from his stunning array of long jumpers, solid inside work and two ferocious dunks, Tate pulled down 7 rebounds and had 3 assists against the Gauchos, who held a 28-26 halftime lead before Tate took over in the second half. 

“We don’t win this game without Khion, plain and simple,” Berkeley head coach Mike Gragnani said. “We were stagnant, and we needed someone to come in and hit shots.” 

Tate did exactly that. He scored 10 of Berkeley’s 13 points in the second quarter to keep them close, then scored 14 in the first five minutes after halftime, including a breakaway dunk that put the ’Jackets up 42-32. El Cerrito would never get closer than 10 points the rest of the way. 

“This was the first time I put everything together in one game,” said Tate, whose previous high this year was 12 points. “I knew if I worked hard I’d break out eventually.” 

Tate said he took 200 jump shots before the game, and his stroke from the outside was clearly outstanding. But it was his final two points, a baseline jam over El Cerrito’s Dominique Thomas, that got the Berkeley crowd really pumped up. 

“I knew as soon as he came down the lane on me that I’d get over him,” Tate said of the play. “My confidence was sky-high.” 

Tate’s outstanding night offset a sluggish night for the rest of the ’Jackets. Tate’s teammates combined to shoot just 29 percent from the field against the Gauchos, with Nate Simmons the second-leading scorer with just 9 points.  

Center Damien Burns struggled on offense, shooting just 4-for-12 from the field. His usually dependable touch close to the rim was just a hair off, with several shots rolling around the rim before spinning out. But Burns still managed to grab 13 rebounds and 2 steals. 

“Damien just had an off-night tonight,” Gragnani said. “But he still got us some much-needed rebounds.” 

El Cerrito gave Berkeley fits with their mid-range game, with forwards Joe Fort and Brandon Jernigan scoring 20 and 13 points, respectively.


Claremont workers continue protests against management

By John Geluardi, Daily Planet staf
Friday February 15, 2002

Say problems persist with union contract negotiations 

 

About 100 union supporters protested at the entranceways of the Claremont Resort and Spa on Thursday to protest union problems with the exclusive hotel’s management.  

The protesters chanted: “No justice, no peace,” and carried signs in the shape of hearts inscribed with Valentine’s Day-inspired thoughts, such as “I’m in the mood for justice” and “Contract be mine” and “Besiege estoy con La Union.” 

Hotel Employee and Restaurant Employee Union Local 2850 organizers said the food and beverage workers’ contract expired in September, and negotiations have been especially difficult. They also said about 140 spa workers have indicated they want to join Local 2850, but hotel management has resisted the idea. 

A press statement issued by the hotel’s director of marketing, Denise Chapman, said the hotel has been working with the union. 

“We are in the process of re-negotiating a contract and we have been bargaining in good faith since of August of last year,” the statement read. “When it comes to our employees there is a lot of love.” 

At one point the crowd spilled off the sidewalk into the street prompting police officers to block the flow of traffic. 

“We’re in for a long struggle with the hotel and we just thought Valentine’s Day was a good time to start things off,” said union organizer Stephanie Ruby.


Education funding, corrections

John Selawsky
Friday February 15, 2002

Editor 

 

I am correcting some inaccuracies in a letter to the Planet dated Feb. 13 regarding the percentage and amount of public education funding in the state of California (both k-12 and university level). In fact, if one checks the Web site for the California state budget (www.dof.ca.gov/HTML/BUD_DOCS/Bud_link.htm), the figures indicate that the state General Fund would allocate 39.7 percent or $31.3 billion to k-12 education and 12.7percent or $10 billion to higher education. But when major state bond funds are included in the overall figures k-12 education funding drops to 31.8 percent or about $32 billion and higher education drops to 11.4 percent or about $11.5 billion. This is all much easier to read and comprehend on the web site pie charts and graphs. This from a proposed state budget, including bond funds, of about $100 billion. 

I also note that the projected revenue contributors to our state budget include personal income tax ($42.6 billion), sales taxes ($22.8 billion), Corporate taxes ($5.8 billion), and estate taxes ($615 million). 

 

John Selawsky 

Director, Berkeley School Board 

 

 

 

 


Taking on the medical insurance system with ‘John Q’

By David Germain The Associated Press
Friday February 15, 2002

It’s hard to knock Denzel Washington’s earnestness in “John Q,” the story of a desperate man who takes over an emergency room at gunpoint to force doctors to give his dying son a heart transplant. 

The preposterous excess of zeal the film oozes is another matter. 

In bashing a health care system that can leave a 10-year-old on his deathbed because of his family’s empty pockets, director Nick Cassavetes also repeatedly bashes the audience in the head, painfully instructing viewers how they must, must react at each silly emotional summit. 

Feel anger now (conk). Invoke your outrage here (thump). Weep in commiseration there (whack). Decry the heartless system throughout (crack, smack, thwack). 

Heart trouble is not the problem with “John Q.” The movie needs a brain transplant. 

“John Q” is not so much a film as a contraption: A collection of socially conscious widgets pieced together on a Hollywood assembly line, each moving part flailing a hanky bearing the title character’s image as poster boy for socialized medicine. 

Toss in some inane groaners in James Kearns’ script (like a TV reporter’s allusion to O.J. Simpson, saying that exclusive footage from the ER is “my white Bronco”), and “John Q” makes a C-SPAN hearing on HMO reform seem an appealing entertainment alternative. 

Overindulgence begins with the title, the first name and middle initial of Washington’s character, John Quincy Archibald. “John Q” looks good on a movie poster, but in their fervor to tell the story of an Everyman fighting the system, the filmmakers might as well have gone the extra few feet and made the last name “Public.” 

John is a doting husband and father, too saintly to believe, given his severe financial straits. His wife’s car has just been repossessed. He’s cut to half-time hours at the factory where he works. He practically grovels during an interview for a new job but is told he’s overqualified. 

Then John’s son (newcomer Daniel E. Smith) collapses on a baseball field. John and his wife (Kimberly Elise) rush him to the hospital. The parents meet with Doc Turner (James Woods), the resident maestro of heart surgery, and the hospital administrator (Anne Heche). The boy needs a new heart, and John’s health insurance won’t cover the operation. 

Friends raise money. The family’s church passes the collection platter. John sells everything he can. But it’s a fraction of what’s needed, and the hospital decides to send the boy home to die. 

“Do something!” John’s wife bellows at him. 

Next thing, we’re stuck in a bad variation of “Dog Day Afternoon” as John pulls a pistol on Turner and takes the emergency room staff and patients hostage, demanding that his son be put on the heart-transplant waiting list. 

Washington was far more believable as a bad cop in last year’s “Training Day” than as a good man doing bad things here. Still, his performance has great passion, sadly squandered in an undeserving story. 

Everyone else is a stereotype: The semi-compassionate hostage negotiator (Robert Duvall); the itchy-trigger-fingered police chief (Ray Liotta); the hostages who immediately bond with their captor; the adoring onlookers who cheer John on from outside. 

Heche comes off the worst as the cold, calculating administrator. She’s a miracle of medical science, a character who gets along just fine without a heart for most of the movie. 

“John Q” hits one of its many low points when John and his prisoners sit around the ER condemning the inadequacies of the health care system, with a brief side trip to gripe about the nation’s lax gun control. 

In painting John an outlaw hero, the movie conveniently sidesteps the possibility that his actions might deny another, equally deserving patient a life-sustaining heart. That would be too much moral ambiguity for this shameless piece of propaganda. 

The first rule of medicine is: Do no harm. Too bad filmmakers don’t have a similar code. 

“John Q,” a New Line release, is rated PG-13 for violence, language and intense thematic elements. Running time: 116 minutes. One and a half stars (out of four). 

——— 

Motion Picture Association of America rating definitions: 

G — General audiences. All ages admitted. 

PG — Parental guidance suggested. Some material may not be suitable for children. 

PG-13 — Special parental guidance strongly suggested for children under 13. Some material may be inappropriate for young children. 

R — Restricted. Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian. 

NC-17 — No one under 17 admitted. 


Cal men get past Cougars

Staff
Friday February 15, 2002

PULLMAN, Wash. – Jamal Sampson and Ryan Forehan-Kelly scored 11 points each Thursday night as California defeated Washington State 77-56. 

It was the most decisive Pacific-10 road victory for California (18-5, 9-4) since a 73-43 win over Southern Cal on Feb. 12, 1998. 

The Bears outrebounded the Cougars 44-37 and had six blocked shots, including four by Sampson. 

With Washington State’s top post player, J Locklier, sidelined by injury, California used its height advantage to good effect. 

The Bears played four players who were 6-foot-10 or taller. The Cougars’ 6-foot-11 Pawel Stasiak, making his first start of the season, was Washington State’s tallest post player and WSU had no other players taller than 6-7. 

Mike Bush led Washington State (5-17, 1-13) with 14 points. 

Stasiak scored just three points, while the Bears quartet of post players outscored the Cougars post players 36-10. 

The Bears never trailed. Washington State got as close as 27-26 with 4:32 remaining in the first half on a Thomas Kelati 3-point shot, but California responded with a 13-4 run to end the half ahead 40-32. 

California opened the second half with a 22-10 run to take a 62-42 lead with 8:37 remaining. 


Southside Plan pelted during public hearing

By John Geluardi, Daily Planet staff
Friday February 15, 2002

The public had a chance to weigh in on a preliminary draft of the Southside Plan and, as expected, debate focused on housing and traffic policies. 

This was the first public hearing on the proposed plan. Another will be held on March 13, and two others have been tentatively scheduled during May, June and July. According to Senior Planner Andrew Thomas, the earliest the plan will be approved by the City Council will be in September. 

The 20-year plan will set guidelines for development, traffic and transportation in a roughly 30-block area immediately south of campus. The area currently has about 12,500 residents, the vast majority of which are UC Berkeley students, according to Planning Commission Chair Rob Wrenn. 

Included among the plan’s 11 goals are the creation of more affordable housing, enhancing pedestrian uses and conservation of the unique architectural character of the area. 

The plan also seeks to designate certain areas for development, mostly along transit corridors, while restricting residential neighborhoods from growth that’s incompatible with the existing homes. 

About 12 people addressed the Planning Commission and the majortiy discussed housing.  

“There is still a housing crisis in Berkeley,” said Andy Katz, a member of the Associated Students of the University of California. “Students still pay 55 percent of their income for rent, the average housing search still takes two moths and the average rent is still $2,250 a month.” 

Wrenn pointed out that the university has already approved, as part of the Underhill Area Master Plan, 1,000 new beds for students. “In addition, the Southside Plan could potentially allow for a population increase of 20 percent in the area,” he said.  

The potential development would take place on parking and vacant lots as well on the sites of demolished buildings. 

Several public comments called for one-way streets, such as Telegraph and Durant avenues and Bancroft Way, to be returned to two-ways. Proponents said two-way streets are more conducive to a small town feeling as well as being safer for pedestrians and bicyclists. 

“Cities and towns all over the world are reverting back to one-way streets.” said Southside resident Martha Jones. “In 1974 the streets were all two-way and there we had a much higher population.” 

Jones said the one-way streets are dangerous because they attract more drivers who are able to drive at higher rates of speed. She added the existing situation is dangerous to drivers and pedestrians alike. 

But Thomas said changing one-ways back to two-ways would not be without impacts. 

“One of the advantages of one-way streets is that trucks delivering goods to the area’s businesses can double park and traffic still has plenty of room,” Thomas said. “Converting back to two-ways could mean huge traffic jams during delivery hours.” 

He added that going back to two-way streets could mean the elimination of street parking to create more room for traffic. “But then you get into the whole parking debate,” he said.  

 


Our health should not suffer because of city decisions

Michael Bauce
Friday February 15, 2002

Editor:  

 

The “communications” tower currently being debated in these pages has no place in a community that values the health and well-being of its citizens. Supportive scientific studies always add up to absolutely nothing in the face an increasingly toxic world that suggest otherwise. Modern science simply does not have the capacity nor the ability to explain the reality of life. It should not be given the right to be the sole determinant of city policy as it relates to health.  

A wider, more inclusive understanding is based on the natural order of the universal cosmos, not the failed approaches of the past which have certainly cost us all so dearly; physically, mentally and spiritual. In simpler words, let's realize and admit our own ignorance; we know very little about the effects of electromagnetic fields. Besides, any long-term effects can’t be measured. If you doubt that worshiping the mighty God modern science has failed us, take a quick look at the continuing spread of AIDS, cancer, heart disease, etc...etc... There remains no end in sight.  

So, whether it's building a children's field on a toxic site, throwing up a potential cancer nightmare, or demanding more parking; one thing remains clear: It should be our choice; after all, we'll be paying for it, physically, mentally and spiritually.  

 

Michael Bauce 

Berkeley 


Big Medicine surfaces as a new public enemy in movies and on TV

By Theresa Agovino, The Associated Press
Friday February 15, 2002

NEW YORK — There’s a new villain in Hollywood: the health industry. 

In the movie “John Q,” opening Friday, a bureaucrat refuses to place the title character’s son on the list for a donor heart because his family can’t afford the $250,000 transplant operation. The boy’s loving father, played by Denzel Washington, becomes a vigilante, taking the hospital’s emergency room hostage. 

Despite the melodrama and exaggeration of what patients and their families face, “John Q” resonates because we know the bad guy, too. We may not have a dying child, but who hasn’t had a health care claim denied? Who hasn’t worried about losing their job-based health insurance? Or filled an outrageously priced prescription? Or endured the rushed advice of a condescending doctor? 

In a society where some 45 million people have no health insurance, at least 39 million are underinsured and health care costs are primed to jump — once again — roughly 16 percent this year, anyone who takes on Big Medicine makes a great hero. 

It’s not just happening in movies. In hit television shows and best-selling books, the enemy these days is as likely to be the maker or dispenser of legal drugs as illegal ones. 

“Consumer concerns about health care and drug costs has reached a critical mass. Popular culture responds to changes and concerns in peoples’ attitudes,” said Robert Thompson, a professor of media and popular culture at Syracuse University. “Dealing with health care is an experience everyone has. It gets deep into our emotional being.” 

Money-hungry pharmaceutical executives take the place of Communist spies in John Le Carre’s most recent novel “The Constant Gardner.” 

On TV’s “Law and Order” last month, a father kills a health insurance executive who denies authorization to pay for a very expensive drug that could save the man’s dying daughter. (The program ends with a hung jury.) And a recent episode of “ER” highlighted questionable marketing practices of drug makers. A pharmaceutical company sends free food to the hospital, and a doctor chastises her colleagues for eating it, suggesting the freebees could influence prescribing habits. (A plot twist: those who dig in get food poisoning.) 

The health industry dismisses the new Evil Medicine story line as, at best, simplistic pandering. At worst, they say, it’s an incitement to violence. 

Still, the American Association of Health Plans, a Washington, D.C.-based trade organization, is opting for damage control. On Friday it will begin an advertising campaign to divert the anger away from the medical profession and toward other popular targets: politicians and lawyers. The ads say runaway litigation and government regulation contribute to skyrocketing health care costs and the growing number of uninsured. 

Karen Ignagni, the organization’s president, also noted that “laying down violence as a solution is completely irresponsible in light of what this country has been through.” 

“John Q” director Nick Cassavetes said his movie addresses an important issue but shouldn’t be seen as an apology of violence. 

“We don’t want people using guns to get what they want. It is wrong. John Q should go to jail and he does,” Cassavetes said. 

“We are facing an immediate crisis that we need to address before anything bad happens,” he said. “Once only the rich can afford health care, the poor are going to start making some noise so better we hear it now.” 

Cassavetes was drawn to the script because his 13-year-old daughter has heart disease and will eventually need a heart transplant. “I would pray I would never do what John Q does, but if someone could help my daughter and refused, well, those people would have a very serious problem on their hands,” he said. 

Not that you could tell by the movie, but Cassavetes said his experiences with the health care system have been reasonably good. He has excellent insurance, he said, and certainly can afford out-of-pocket costs. 

He’s no John Q, a factory worker whose insurance doesn’t cover transplants. Even when he sells everything he owns and his church pitches in, he can’t afford the operation. 

John Q has to be the kindest vigilante in movie history. It’s the doctors who are portrayed as greedy, failing to conduct tests to secure big bonuses from HMOs. 

Anne Heche, as the coldhearted hospital administrator, may be the nastiest person in health care official since Nurse Ratched in “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest.” Her worldview: People get sick; they die — that’s the way it goes. 

The “Law and Order” episode focused on an actual drug called Gleevec. Hailed as a breakthrough cancer treatment when it was approved last year, the drug costs between $2,000 and $2,500 a month. 

The episode does its best to portray the slain insurance executive as a man trying to give care within the confines of his company’s resources. But the father who kills him also is portrayed sympathetically. 

“I didn’t want to indict the health insurance industry,” said the show’s head writer, Barry Chindel. “The industry has to say no sometimes. If there is only $1 you can only spend it once. Sometimes people get the short end of the straw.” 


Prep Scores

Staff
Friday February 15, 2002

Prep scores 

Girls’ Basketball – Berkeley 73, El Cerrito 25 

The Lady ’Jackets win their 13th straight game with an easy win over the Gauchos. Berkeley heads to Pinewood High for a tough game this Saturday at 6 p.m., then faces ACCAL champ Encinal next Saturday for an automatic bid to the North Coast Section playoffs.


Chocolate is not so sweet a valentine for child labor protesters

By Claudine LoMonaco, Special to the Daily Planet
Friday February 15, 2002

While customers at See’s Candies on Shattuck Avenue crammed in line to purchase valentines for their sweethearts this year, protesters outside drew attention to the bitter reality of child slavery half a world away.  

The protest, together with 31 similar events across the nation, launched the San Francisco-based human rights organization Global Exchange’s Fair Trade Cocoa campaign to help end child slavery and poverty wages in the cultivation of cocoa.  

 

43 percent of the world’s cocoa supply comes from Africa’s Ivory Coast, where the U.S. State Department estimates 15,000 children between the ages of nine and twelve are 

working as forced, unpaid laborers. 

 

Like "fair trade" coffee, now widely available at establishments such as Starbuck’s, Global Exchange wants to promote "fair trade" chocolate- chocolate produced on farms that 

insure fair wages, environmental sustainability and safe working conditions within the local context.  

 

"We want See’s to sell five percent fair trade chocolate," said protest organizer and U.C. Berkeley Development Studies junior, Bridget Meyer, 20. "We in U.S. are the 

consumers for this chocolate, and so it’s up to us to demand fare wages."  

 

Although See’s, along with other chocolate manufacturers, has signed on to a plan to improve the status of children and end slave labor by 2005, protester’s contend that the 

plan will do nothing to address the fundamental cause of child slavery: record low cocoa prices. 

 

"There’s a glut in the market," said nationwide campaign organizer Deborah James, "due to IMF and World Bank policies which have forced these countries into production for 

export to pay off their national debt." That glut, she says, has driven down the price of cocoa so that farmers can no longer afford to hire workers. Instead, they enslave them.  

 

With fair trade chocolate, farmers are insured 80 cents a pound, versus the 40 cents a pound regular farmers receive. At its height, chocolate fetched nearly $2.50 a pound. Since 

1996, the price of chocolate has gone down 25 percent, a savings largely pocketed by the chocolate companies.  

 

Organizers launched the campaign at See’s because of its high sales and visibility on Valentines Day. But, says campaign director Deborah James, Global Exchange plans to 

extend the pressure to all major U.S. chocolate producers. Their next event will target chocolate giant M&M/Mars over the Easter holiday. 

 

Widespread news of child slavery reached the United States in the summer of 2001 when the Knight Ridder news paper chain published a series of exposes documenting the 

use of forced, unpaid labor by children as young as nine. They were enticed to cocoa farms by promises of work to help their impoverished families. Once lured, often far from 

their homes in neighboring countries, the children were forced to work up to 12 hour a day, received frequent beatings, and slept, locked up at night, on wooden planks.  

 

Protester Joshua Grossman, a Berkley entrepreneur, first learned of the issue from reading a New York Times profile of a young boy who had been enslaved.  

 

His participation, he said, "is a little Valentine to some 13 year old kid I’ll probably never meet. But if I can do something here to improve his life, I figure that’s worth my lunch 

hour." 

 

See’s workers distributed flyers prepared in anticipation of the protest. The flyers stated that while See’s was concerned about slave labor, there was little the company could do 

due to "remoteness from the problem." Company headquarters in South San Francisco declined a request for further comment.


We don’t spend nearly enough on education

Trina Ostrander
Friday February 15, 2002

Editor:  

 

Michael Larrick hit the nail on the head today when he complained that “for all our billions of dollars, our education system is at the bottom of the heap.” But he’s wrong when he suggests that the $58.4 billion California spends on public schools is too much. On the contrary, it’s not nearly enough. 

In “The State of the States,” a report published in the Jan. 10 issue of Education Week, a national journal for educators, California gets an “F” for school funding this year. We spend just $5,845 per pupil, compared to the national average of $6,408. New Jersey spends the most, at $9,986. We’re 48th in the nation for school spending! 

The article also reports on a federal survey of student achievement for the most recent school year. Guess what: the top-spending states have double the number of students scoring at or above grade level in reading, writing, math, and science, compared to California. When I was educated in California public schools, in those wiser days before Proposition 13, California school spending was among the highest in the country, and so was our achievement. I submit there's a correlation here. 

 

Trina Ostrander, Associate Director  

Berkeley Public Education 

Foundation


Bears beat WSU for second time

Daily Planet Wire Services
Friday February 15, 2002

The California women’s basketball team (7-17, 2-13 Pac-10) got back on track Thursday night in its return to Haas Pavilion, setting a number of individual career highs and team records en route to a 76-63 romp over the visiting Washington State Cougars (2-23, 0-15). With the win, Cal sweptthe season series for the first time since the 1992-93 campaign.  

Three different players set career highs on the night, which was Cal’s first win in front of the Bear faithful since December 1 of last year. Senior forward Ami Forney posted a near triple double on the night, notching a career best in assists with 7 to go with 13 points and 10 rebounds for her fifth double-double of the season and 12th of her career. Not to be outdone, freshman Kristin Iwanaga exploded for a career high of 18 points, and LaTasha O’Keith dropped 13 on the Cougars, including 10 in the first half. Junior Amber White also tallied a career-high 10 rebounds in the effort, and freshman Kiki Williams posted her fourth consecutive game of double-digit scoring with 13 off the bench.  

“I thought we played really well as a team tonight,” said Cal head coach Caren Horstmeyer. “We’ve talked about making improvements. We had 19 assists on 22 baskets. That tells me that we had a very good team game. I’m really excited about the way that K.I. (Iwanaga) and Ami played.”


Today in History

Staff
Friday February 15, 2002

Today is Friday, Feb. 15, the 46th day of 2002. There are 319 days left in the year. 

 

Today’s Highlight in History: 

On Feb. 15, 1898, the U.S. battleship Maine mysteriously blew up in Havana Harbor, killing more than 260 crew members and bringing the United States closer to war with Spain. 

 

On this date: 

In 1564, Italian astronomer Galileo Galilei was born in Pisa. 

In 1764, the city of St. Louis was established. 

In 1820, American suffragist Susan B. Anthony was born in Adams, Mass. 

In 1879, President Hayes signed a bill allowing female attorneys to argue cases before the Supreme Court. 

In 1933, President-elect Franklin D. Roosevelt escaped an assassination attempt in Miami that claimed the life of Chicago Mayor Anton J. Cermak. 

In 1942, the British colony Singapore surrendered to the Japanese during World War II. 

In 1961, 73 people, including an 18-member U.S. figure skating team en route to Czechoslovakia, were killed in the crash of a Sabena Airlines Boeing 707 in Belgium. 

In 1965, Canada’s new maple-leaf flag was unfurled in ceremonies in Ottawa. 

In 1982, 84 men were killed when a huge oil-drilling rig, the Ocean Ranger, sank off the coast of Newfoundland during a fierce storm. 

In 1989, the Soviet Union announced that the last of its troops had left Afghanistan, after more than nine years of military intervention. 

Ten years ago: A Milwaukee jury found that Jeffrey Dahmer was sane when he killed and mutilated 15 men and boys. Benjamin L. Hooks announced plans to retire as executive director of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Pulitzer Prize-winning composer William Schuman died in New York at age 81. 

Five years ago: North Korean defector Lee Han-young was shot and mortally wounded in South Korea, three days after another North Korean defected in Beijing. Fourteen-year-old Tara Lipinski upset Michelle Kwan at the U.S. Figure Skating Championships in Nashville, Tenn., becoming the youngest gold medalist at nationals. 

One year ago: President Bush said the Pentagon should review its policy on civilian participation in military exercises like the emergency ascent drill a Navy submarine was performing when it sank a Japanese fishing vessel off Hawaii. Hans-Joachim Klein, a former German terrorist, was sentenced to nine years in prison by a German court for killing three people in a 1975 attack on an OPEC meeting in Vienna, Austria. 

 

Today’s Birthdays: Actor Kevin McCarthy is 88. Country singer Hank Locklin is 84. Former Illinois congressman John Anderson is 80. Comedian Harvey Korman is 75. Actress Claire Bloom is 71. Author Susan Brownmiller is 67. Songwriter Brian Holland is 61. Rock musician Mick Avory (The Kinks) is 58. Actress Jane Seymour is 51. Singer Melissa Manchester is 51. “Simpsons” creator Matt Groening is 48. Actor Christopher McDonald (“Family Law”) is 47. Reggae singer Ali Campbell (UB40) is 43. Musician Mikey Craig (Culture Club) is 42. Actor Michael Easton is 35. Actress Renee O’Connor is 31. Rock singer Brandon Boyd (Incubus) is 26. Actress Ashley Lyn Cafagna is 19.


Environmentalists sue DOE over radioactive material

By Jessica Brice, The Associated Press
Friday February 15, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — A San Francisco Bay area environmental advocacy group sued the Department of Energy Wednesday, claiming the department plans to ship radioactive material in unsafe containers to Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. 

Tri-Valley Communities Against a Radioactive Environment filed the lawsuit in U.S. District Court in San Francisco. 

DOE spokesman Joe Davis would not comment Wednesday on the lawsuit or the shipment specified in the suit, but said that, in general, the DOE follows strict guidelines whenever shipping radioactive materials. 

“We have an incredible safety record,” he said. “We will only transfer if we can do so safely.” 

The suit alleges the DOE has “improperly granted itself a national security exemption” in order to bypass laws requiring it to study the potential environmental impacts of transporting plutonium in the proposed containers. 

The DOE wants to ship the plutonium as part of the massive cleanup of the Rocky Flats Technology Site in Colorado, a facility that was once used to produce components for nuclear weapons. The facility, which was shut down in 1989 after 40 years of production, is scheduled to be cleaned up by 2006. 

The group, represented by the nonprofit environmental law firm Earthjustice, argues the plutonium should be shipped in containers that could withstand an accident that might occur during transport. 

Trent Orr, lead attorney in the suit, said the group hopes to get a ruling restricting the DOE from making the shipments until an environmental impact study is conducted, determining the safest way to transport the plutonium. 

“The chances of an accident are relatively remote,” Orr said. “But if it does happen...potentially hundreds or thousands of people could be exposed.” 


Schools, health care top issues for California voters

The Associated Press
Friday February 15, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Health care costs and the quality of schools are the most important issues for California voters, not gubernatorial candidates’ views on abortion, according to a Field Poll released Thursday. 

Sixty-nine percent of registered voters questioned by the Field Institute said they were extremely concerned about health care costs. Sixty-eight percent put public schools on the same anxiety level. 

Only 33 percent said they were extremely concerned about abortion, which has been the most visible issue so far in clashes between Democratic Gov. Gray Davis and his top Republican opponent, former Los Angeles Mayor Richard Riordan. 

The public health system (57 percent), higher education (55 percent), cost of electricity (53 percent), illegal drug use (53 percent), crime and law enforcement (52 percent), the cost of living (52 percent), taxes (51 percent), creating jobs in new industries (50 percent) and protecting the environment (50 percent) also ranked high among voters’ concerns. 

The poll questioned 1,022 voters between Jan. 23 and Jan. 27 about how concerned they were about 28 issues and problems facing the state. The poll has a margin of error of plus or minus 4.5 percentage points. 

Democrats and Republicans had somewhat different priorities. 

Democrats ranked health care costs, public schools, the public health system, protecting the environment, air and water pollution and homelessness and poverty as their most important concerns. 

Republicans listed public schools, crime and law enforcement, illegal drug use, health care costs and illegal immigration as their top issues. 

Voters’ concerns about several issues declined since the Field Poll’s last issues survey, in November 1997. Illegal drug use, crime and law enforcement, illegal immigration, air and water pollution, race relations, unemployment and welfare were among those issues that dropped in importance. 

Concerns about health care costs jumped from 55 percent in 1997 to 69 percent this year, although in the earlier survey voters were asked about health care, not health care costs in particular. 

The concern about public schools remains about the same, with 69 percent expressing extreme concern about that subject in the 1997 poll. 

The poll questioned voters about several issues for the first time, including the public health system, the cost of electricity, and terrorism and security, which was of extreme concern to 47 percent of those questioned. 


Click and Clack Talk Cars

by Tom and Ray Magliozzi
Friday February 15, 2002

Stop the insanity – Don’t use your mouth to siphon  

 

 

Dear Tom and Ray: 

 

Is there a way to siphon liquids – like gasoline and antifreeze -- from a car without putting your mouth on the siphoning tube? – Joyce 

 

RAY: Yes. When you're siphoning a fluid, you need a way to fill the siphon tube to get the flow started. And while it's tempting to put your mouth on the tube and suck the fluid into it, when you're dealing with toxic substances, that's a very, very bad idea. If you need evidence why, look no further than my brother. 

TOM: Yeah. They had me do all the siphoning at the garage until I figured out that it wasn't the pork sandwiches from Izzy's that kept causing me to excuse myself during tune-ups. 

RAY: The only realistic approach is to buy a ready-made siphoning tube that has a squeezable vacuum pump at the end. You put one end of the clear tube into the gas tank or the radiator overflow tank, and then you squeeze the pump at the other end to create suction. The pump has a check valve, so each time you squeeze, the tube fills up a little more. Once the tube is full and the liquid is flowing, it should keep flowing for as long as the receptacle remains lower than the reservoir you're drawing from and as long as the flow is uninterrupted. 

TOM: You can get these "siphons" in any auto-parts store or the auto-parts section of a jumbo mart. They cost a buck or two, and they're cheap junk, but you use them once and then throw them away. 

RAY: And if you have any brains at all, you won't need them more than once, because after having to use one once, you'll always remember to look at your gas gauge.  

 

 

 

 

Dealer’s explanation sounds fishy 

 

 

Dear Tom and Ray: 

 

About a month ago, we bought a new Ford Taurus wagon from a local dealer. It was a demonstrator model and had about 6,000 miles on it. The dealer agreed to do some minor repairs that we noticed, and he said that if we noticed anything else in the next few weeks, to bring it to his attention. After about two weeks of driving, I saw that moisture kept forming on the inside of the right front headlight. My husband talked to the salesman about it, and the salesman said that because it is a halogen bulb, the headlight can't be sealed too tightly. He said that otherwise, it would heat up so much that the inside of the headlight would melt. When my husband related this story to me, I asked "Well, does that mean the other headlight is going to melt, since it's obviously sealed tightly enough to keep out water? And shouldn't other people's headlights be melting, since I don't see moisture forming in their headlights?" Could you please explain what's going on? – Susie 

 

RAY: I guess you didn't hear the end of the dealer's sentence, Susie. He said, "If you notice anything in the next few weeks, bring it to our attention. And THEN we'll tell you to get lost." 

TOM: The salesman was either lying to you, or he's afflicted with Male Answer Syndrome: the need by many men to provide an authoritative-sounding answer despite the fact that they have no idea what they're talking about. My brother and I both have it (as you shall see below). 

RAY: This might have been exacerbated by Commissioned Salesperson Syndrome: the willingness of a salesperson to do or say anything to make a sale. And conversely, to do or say anything to get rid of anyone not actively involved in buying something. 

TOM: The salesman has got his headlight in his taillight socket, Susie. The entire headlight fixture is sealed tight at the factory. Why is it sealed? So moisture won't get in and shorten the life of the bulb! 

RAY: My guess is that you need a new headlight lens, Susie. What happens sometimes is that the headlight lens gets cracked. The cracks are usually very small and difficult to see. They usually come from pebbles and other debris that come up off the road. You often see this in older cars that have been pounded by road debris for years, but it can happen to a car of any age. 

TOM: When you drive at 60 mph in the rain, water gets forced through those invisible cracks, and it forms a film of moisture on the inside of the lens. Once it's in there, it can't escape, because there's no equivalent force pushing it out from the inside. 

RAY: So here's what you do, Susie. Drive backwards at 60 mph ... 

TOM: No. Go back to the dealer and ask him to replace the headlight lens on the right side. Insist on it. He owes it to you.  

 

Having dealer fix  

throttle vs. throttling dealer 

 

Dear Tom and Ray: 

 

Our 1999 Cadillac DeVille is subject to the accelerator sticking in the "up" position. The service technician tells me it happens because of carbon buildup in the throttle body. Supposedly, cleaning of the throttle body is a maintenance item (at $110 per). I had the 15,000-mile maintenance performed at 12,800 miles, and the accelerator began to stick again at 20,000. Am I faced with a $110 bill for cleanup every 8,000 miles? – Jacque 

 

TOM: Well, one possibility is that if the dealer says it's a $110 maintenance item every 8,000 miles, then that's what it is. And I'm sure everyone considering buying a Cadillac would be interested to know that this is a scheduled maintenance item that was accidentally left out of the owner's manual. 

RAY: On the other hand, there might just be something wrong with your particular car, Jacque. It's possible that your throttle plate is particularly tight, and that when even a small amount of carbon builds up (which it does on all cars), the plate starts to stick. So one solution would be for the dealer to replace the throttle body – under warranty. He'll be reluctant to do that, I'm sure. 

TOM: The other solution would be to take the dealer's advice and have the throttle body cleaned every time you change your oil. But I wouldn't pay the dealer $110 to do it. Cleaning the throttle body involves removing the air cleaner and spraying the inside of the throttle body with a life-threatening solvent. We charge $20 for that. 

RAY: So if your dealer can't provide a more permanent -- or at least longer-term -- solution, I'd take it to an independent shop that won't overcharge you.  

 

 

 

Shedding light on a foggy issue 

 

 

 

Dear Tom and Ray: 

 

Do fog lights work? Do they help you see through the fog, or do they just light up the fog? Are yellow fog lights better than clear fog lights? Should they be mounted low on the vehicle to search forth underneath the fog cloud? I am so confused – you might even say I am "foggy" on the fog-light issue. Therefore, I ask you to search through the fog of your collective brain cells and enlighten the world to the truth about fog lights. – Pat 

 

RAY: Great question, Pat. How I wish this were the only subject we were foggy on! 

TOM: There are many different kinds of lights that people put on the front of their cars these days. There are driving lights, fog lights, Velux motorized sky lights ... we've seen 'em all. Most of them are purely decorative. And many are used and/or aimed incorrectly, and they simply blind oncoming drivers. 

RAY: But fog lights, when used and aimed correctly, might be useful to some drivers. As you probably know, if you project light directly into the fog, it bounces off the fog droplets and reflects in all directions, making it even harder to see. That's why you use your low beams in fog rather than your high beams. 

TOM: Fog lights are low-mounted lights (bumper level or below) that project light that's cut off at the top. So the light pattern on a good-quality fog light goes straight out at bumper level and down, but not higher than that. 

RAY: The reason for this is that fog tends to hover about 12 to 18 inches off the ground. So by projecting light in that fog-free pocket, you can illuminate the road a greater distance from your car and therefore see farther ahead. Some people swear by fog lights. Others claim that they don't really make much difference. 

TOM: So the question becomes, to yellow or not to yellow? There's a lot of debate about this, but the research says that yellow lights are no better than white lights at penetrating fog. The theory bandied about was that yellow light has a longer wavelength and is therefore less likely to be reflected by the fog particles. Turns out, this is complete poppycock. 

RAY: Apparently, the fog particles themselves are so big that they reflect all colors of light. Basically, all light bounces off of them, so using yellow light instead of white light gives you no advantage. 

TOM: Plus, in order to get yellow light, what fog-light manufacturers do is put a yellow lens over a white light. That cuts your light output by 20 percent to 30 percent, which is counterproductive. 

RAY: So if you live in a coastal area where fog is a real problem and you want to give fog lights a try, we'd suggest a set of high-quality, white fog lights that are professionally mounted to be sure they're aimed correctly. And don't forget to check their aim periodically. Since they're mounted low, they can be knocked out of alignment when you run over things like snow banks and stalled Toyotas.


Installing a suspended ceiling

James and Morris Carey
Friday February 15, 2002

When you walk into a store or some other commercial building and look up at the ceiling and see something that looks akin to a tic-tac-toe board, chances are you are looking at a suspended ceiling. 

It gets its name from the way it is held in place. Some refer to it as an acoustic ceiling, because it contain panels that “deaden sound.” Another term is a “T-bar ceiling.” The channels that make up the grid that hold the panels in place are T-shaped. 

The suspended ceiling is one of the easiest and inexpensive ceilings to install — especially when the task calls for a flat surface that can be used to hide an existing ceiling or unsightly building components at roof or ceiling level. 

Although suspended ceilings are typically used in commercial applications, you can take advantage of one in your home if, for example, you are building a music studio, a hobby center, a computer room or office or for some other use where a quick and easy to install a ceiling is needed to lower a higher ceiling or is needed to conceal mechanical devises, cables, piping, ducts or other overhead equipment or machinery. The neatest thing about a suspended ceiling is that it can be removed without major damage to the existing structure. 

Installing the ceiling is easy. But first you will need the following tools: 

—A long level (a 3-footer will do, but the longer the better). 

—Hammer and nails or a screw gun and screws. 

—A measuring tape. 

—A razor knife. 

—A hacksaw. 

—Wire cutters and a pair of pliers. 

The suspended ceiling materials you will need include: 

—Three kinds of track. 

—Runners. 

—Wall angles. 

—Crossties. 

—Bailing wire and hooks or eyes. 

—The panels of your choice. 

Before purchasing the track, you will need to select the panel style, color, and the panel size. When it comes to suspended ceilings, size is really important. The bigger the panel, the fewer tracks are needed and the quicker the installation. However, keep in mind that in small rooms large ceiling panels can make the room seem smaller. There are two basic sizes that are readily available: 2x2 foot and 2x4 foot. As you might have already guessed, the 2x2 panels take twice as many crossties as the 2x4 panels. Keep in mind that the most popular light fixtures for suspended ceilings are 2x4. Loudspeakers, smoke alarms, heat register supplies and returns all fit into any size. 

Wall angle pieces are attached to the wall, continuously, all the way around the room at the exact same height. Professional installers use laser levels to establish a height (elevation), but you can get away with a regular level or a measuring tape. Once the perimeter is attached, then the runners are placed. Placing runners is simple if you hang wires above each course first. Wires are attached to the existing ceiling by twisting each one around a screw eye. Runners interlock with the perimeter track and each other end to end while the wires are threaded through the track to raise or lower them, maintaining a level plane. 

You can install all of your runners first and then the crossties. But we like to complete the grid as we go installing light fixtures, ducting and other elements that will connect to the grid. 

The last step is to install the panels. Sliding them into place is a bit tricky at first time but once you get the hang of it, the process goes quickly. 

Keep in mind that installing a suspended ceiling is like installing floor tiles. Some measuring is appropriate so that perimeter panels will be reasonably uniform in width. Without this consideration, a course of full tiles could exist at one side of the room with just a narrow slit at the other side. Planning is important here. 

When we did the ceilings in the showroom of our remodeling company offices, we used wallboard everywhere except in the main area where the ceiling was 20 feet tall. We selected 2x2 panels with a deep texture because we wanted an interesting look. However, fancy suspended ceilings aren’t one bit better than the simplest ones. Not in any way. So, choose what makes you happy and enjoy. 

 

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


Tip of the week: Bee Attacks Facts

James and Morris Carey
Friday February 15, 2002

We’re outdoors a lot — in the yard, on picnics, hiking and camping. Those are places where it’s easy to accidentally disturb a beehive. Such an accident can be serious, especially when bees attack in numbers. You can spot, avoid and survive killer bees the same way you do less-violent common honeybees. At home, fill open cracks with steel wool or caulk, and cover larger holes with window screen. Outdoors, expect to find them in places such as holes in trees or in wood piles or rock piles. Also, under picnics tables, in drain pipes, sheds and in water meters. Watch for bee activity and listen for the buzzing that tells a hive is near. Watch children and keep pets on a leash. If you are attacked, don’t flail or run. Hide in a dense bush instead.


Questions and Answers

James and Morris Carey
Friday February 15, 2002

Q. Gary asks: Why is water seeping around the bottom of the water closet and how do we remedy it? 

A. With a toilet, if water is anywhere but in the tank or the bowl it’s reason for concern. Water at the base of a toilet can be caused by a hairline crack in the tank or bowl; a sweating tank due to condensation; leaking supply water (valve, hose or connections); leaks where the tank connects to the bowl or a faulty wax ring. The wax ring is used as a water seal between the discharge port at the underside of the toilet and the toilet flange connected to the sewer pipe. Over time the wax ring can become compressed — especially if the toilet is not securely anchored to the toilet flange — and a leak results. 

Use a few drops of food coloring in the tank and bowl to determine if the toilet is cracked. If the dye test reveals a crack, replace the tank or the entire toilet. If the leak is confined to the area immediately around the base of the bowl, chances are good that a new wax ring is needed. You’ll need to remove the toilet to replace the wax ring. 

Begin this project by arming yourself with an open-ended wrench, a crescent wrench, a pair of pliers, a screwdriver and a hacksaw. Turn off the water supply to the toilet. Turn the little valve that is located below and behind the toilet clockwise until it stops. Flush the toilet and remove any water that may remain in the tank or bowl with a small cup and a sponge. Once all the water has been removed, disconnect the water-supply line at the base of the tank. This can be achieved by backing off the nut in a counterclockwise direction. 

Unfasten the toilet from the floor. Most residential toilets are anchored with a couple of fasteners called closet bolts. You might find that your toilet has four of these. They are concealed with either porcelain or plastic caps. A toilet rarely is anchored to the floor. In most cases, it is bolted to the toilet flange. 

Pry the closet bolt caps off with a screwdriver and remove the nuts that remain with an open-ended wrench, turning counterclockwise. We suggest you have another person help you lift and carry out the toilet. 

What remains on the floor will be some of the wax ring. Remove it with a putty knife. 

With the toilet on its side, affix the new wax ring to the exhaust port of the toilet with the plastic throat facing away from the toilet. Replace the old and rusted closet bolts with news ones. Attach the new ones to the closet flange in an upright position. 

Pick the toilet up and, without allowing the bottom to touch the floor, align the holes in the base of the toilet with the closet bolts, and gently lower it until it completely seats. Install the nuts onto the closet bolts being careful not to tighten them too much; doing so could result in a broken toilet.  

Place the bolt caps over the nuts. If the bolt caps don’t properly seat, chances are the bolts are too long. Shorten them by cutting with a hacksaw. Reattach the water supply line to the tank with the new nut and washer provided with the toilet and turn the water on. 

——— 

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


A pineapple plant brings the tropics up north

By Lee Reich, The Associated Press
Friday February 15, 2002

 

Despite its tropical origins, pineapple is easy to grow indoors A fresh pineapple fruit brings a bit of the tropics into your home. And the plant will keep it there long after you’ve taken your last bite of the fruit. 

Despite its tropical origins, pineapple is easy to grow indoors. It is a bromeliad, a plant family that well adapted to the parched conditions of most homes in winter. 

Start your plant from the leafy crown capping the fruit. Give it a twist, peel off a few lower leaves to bare the base of the central stem, then set it aside to dry out and heal over. 

Pineapple thrives in very porous soil.  

Make whatever potting soil you use for your other plants more porous by mixing it with equal parts of perlite or coarse sand.  

Or concoct your own mix using three parts of perlite or sand to one part of peat, with a little garden soil thrown in. Also add some sulfur or coffee grounds to make any potting soil more acidic. 

When you’re ready to plant, cover the drainage hole of a flowerpot with a square of window screen, then fill the pot with the potting soil. A clay pot is better for a pineapple than a plastic pot because clay pots “breathe” through their pores and they’re heavier, and thus less likely to topple with a leaf-heavy pineapple plant. 

Stick the base of the leafy crown into the potting soil just deep enough to hold it upright. Top the soil with a thin layer of gravel to prevent the soil from washing around as you water, and to provide a decorative backdrop for those bluish leaves.  

Water thoroughly, but don’t do it again until the soil is bone dry.  

Roots eventually will start to grow. Then fill the pot. 

Treat your plant well and it can bring a taste of the tropics to you again — by eventually bearing fruit.  

Good treatment means, in part, periodic fertilization. Splash some diluted fertilizer solution on the leaves also; pineapple plants love to “eat” with their leaves.  

Also keep the plant in bright light: a sunny window indoors in winter, and dappled shade outdoors in summer.  

And be careful not to over-water. 

Sometimes a healthy plant needs to be coaxed into bearing fruit.  

Do this by putting the plant into a bag with a ripe apple or banana for a week.  

Ethylene gas released by the ripening fruit induces flowers which can eventually ripen into delectable fruits.


Couples swarm Vegas for quickie Valentine’s Day nuptials

By Angie Wagner, Associated Press Writer
Friday February 15, 2002

LAS VEGAS — In jeans or in white, pregnant or pushing a suitcase, brides and their grooms rushed to the county courthouse on Valentine’s Day, eager to exchange vows in the city of quickie, no-frills weddings. 

“We just came in off the plane,” David Lendosky, 48, of Turtle Lake, Wis., said Thursday, hauling two bulging suitcases up the stairs of the Clark County Courthouse. 

Lendosky and his bride, Mary Eichholz, 45, skipped hotel check-in and went straight to the long line at the Marriage License Bureau. 

“We thought it’d be different,” Eichholz said of marrying in Las Vegas. 

That’s a sure thing in a city where you can wed in a taxi at a drive-up window, get a marriage license any hour of the day on weekends and holidays and take advantage of the most liberal marriage laws in the nation — no blood tests or waiting period for the $50 license. 

“No movie stars came,” said Cheryl Vernon, license bureau supervisor. “Actually we’re kind of slow today. Yesterday was horrendous.” 

Last year, 1,065 marriage license were issued on Valentine’s Eve and Day in Las Vegas. Vernon expected this year’s total to be lower. 

“They’re all crazy,” she said. 

Wesley Williford, 38, of Temple, Texas, and his bride, Amber Pollitt, were hoping a Las Vegas wedding would bring them some luck. It’s the third marriage for each. 

“Quick, easy and we had to get away,” Williford said. “We brought some friends to gamble with. Marriage is a gamble, isn’t it?” 

Pollitt, 28, wasn’t paying attention. She was too busy filling out paperwork. 

“Let’s see, my divorce was final, March?” she asked. 

Wedding chapels lining Las Vegas Boulevard put out red ribbons, balloons and signs advertising “I do” specials. 

“We are just having a wonderful, awesome time,” said Charolette Richards, a minister and president of A Little White Wedding Chapel. “I just married this couple in their car!” 

The chapel booked 150 weddings for Thursday, each lasting a few memorable minutes. “We are into the serious part of marriage,” Richards said. 

On the Strip, 107 couples brought to town by a Los Angeles radio station exchanged nuptials at the same time under the Eiffel Tower at the Paris Las Vegas hotel-casino. 

Ryan Fender, 36, and his bride, Penny Saylor, 28, of Dallas opted for a wedding in the sky with a minister and, of course, Elvis. 

“We are a fun-loving couple, thrill-seekers if you will,” Fender said after the couple’s hot-air balloon wedding. 

And in the city of assembly line nuptials, why not a mass wedding reception? 

A local company, Vegas Receptions, recruited brides waiting at the license bureau and invited them to toast to their future with fellow brides in a banquet room at the Greek Isles hotel-casino. 

For $35 a person, newlyweds get a first dance, bouquet and garter toss, a cake and Elvis. 

“Instead of them going to a buffet in their wedding dress, we’ve developed a place where they can all party together,” said Brian Mullin, company president. 

But even in the self-proclaimed wedding capital of the world, love isn’t always in the air. 

“You don’t want to get married?” a woman asked her boyfriend after he walked away from the waiting line at the courthouse. “It’s Valentine’s Day!”


President’s Day weekend could mean full house for Las Vegas

By Lisa Snedeker, The Associated Press
Friday February 15, 2002

LAS VEGAS — One of the busiest holiday weekends on the Las Vegas Strip could get an extra boost this year thanks to Chinese New Year and Valentine’s Day, tourism officials say. 

“President’s Day weekend is typically one of the strongest holiday weekends in Las Vegas,” said Kevin Bagger, senior researcher for the Las Vegas Visitors and Convention Authority. 

The authority predicts an estimated 278,000 visitors will come this weekend to gamble, eat and shop — comparable to the 2001 holiday. 

“Having all those dates — Chinese New Year’s, Valentine’s Day and President’s Day — close together makes for a good week in Las Vegas,” said Rob Powers, authority spokesman. Chinese New Year began Tuesday. 

The steady year-over-year number is good news for the tourism-dependent city that saw a dramatic drop in visitation after Sept. 11, in part because of a drop in commercial airline travel and a weak economy. 

“If we end up attracting the same number as last year, we’d be happy with that,” Powers said. “We’re still in a recession, so if we can say we’re looking for the same size crowd in town as we were a year ago, that would be a very good sign.” 

Hotel room occupancy is expected to be down about 2 percent to 96 percent, visitors authority figures show. 

“But we have 1.9 percent additional rooms this year,” Bagger said. 

Park Place Entertainment Inc., which owns and operates Caesars Palace and Bally’s/Paris Las Vegas hotel-casinos, among others, says its five Las Vegas resorts should be full this weekend. 

“A lot of people get married on Valentine’s Day and stay the weekend or they got married on Valentine’s Day and come for their anniversary,” said Debbie Munch, Park Place spokeswoman. 

The economic effect of last year’s holiday weekend was $186.4 million, not including gambling. The authority isn’t predicting this weekend’s impact because visitor spending has changed since Sept. 11, Bagger said. 

“Spending patterns among our visitors continue to fluctuate,” he said. 

And while many of the city’s nearly 127,000 rooms remain empty on weekdays, Bagger said signs point to recovery. 

More visitors are expected to continue to arrive by car than by air as McCarran International Airport’s numbers indicate. 

Over the holiday weekend, the airport is expecting a slight decline in passengers — about 80 percent of which are visitors, spokeswoman Debbie Millett said. 

“Right now we think we’re down a little bit from last year, but it’s hard to predict,” she said. 

In December 2001, there were 6.4 percent fewer seats on airplanes — 63,194 each month — coming into Las Vegas than there were a year ago, according to the airport’s Web site. 

What’s not hard to predict are long lines at the airport’s security checkpoints during peak travel days. 

“We’re telling passengers to arrive at least two hours early during peak times, but it’s going to fluctuate,” Millett said.


Court nullifies logging permits in Tongass National Forest

By David Kravets, The Associated Press
Friday February 15, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — A federal appeals court nullified as many as 100 logging permits, a decision mainly affecting tree harvesters in the Tongass National Forest in southeastern Alaska. 

The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said Wednesday that environmentalists and others should have been given a legal forum to protest new rules allowing the companies to produce more wood waste in estuaries and coastal zones than previously permitted. 

At issue are the federal permits to run so-called “logging transfer facilities.” The facilities are estuaries or other coastal areas into which harvesters dump their logs before they are shipped away. The logs are tied together to form log rafts and they are transported floating in the water to market, a process that can cause pollution from bark and other wood debris in coastal inlets. 

Two years ago, the Environmental Protection Agency issued new guidelines that permitted harvesters to increase the amount of waste, but did not give environmentalists an opportunity to oppose the new measures. The three-judge panel pointed out that, had the government imposed stricter rules, logging interests would be making the same argument. 

“If the EPA had reached the opposite conclusion, and had added additional requirements to the final permits, Alaksan logging interests would surely have taken the position that notice and comment had been inadequate,” Judge Sidney R. Thomas wrote for the San Francisco-based court. 

Sharon Buccino, a Natural Resources Defense Council attorney, said that the transfer facilities, which she called “logging dumps,” kill marine life and ruin coastlines. 

“The ultimate goal is to preserve the ability of Alaskan natives and others to continue to use these waters for a variety of uses: subsistence fishing, commercial fishing, recreation and ecotourism,” she said. “The timber companies should not be allowed to monopolize this public resource.” 

The permits in question will not be voided until the court’s decision becomes final in about a month or so. The court instructed the EPA to renew the permit-formulating process and allow the public the “ability to comment on whether the proposed permit complied with water quality standards.” 

Bill Dunbar, an EPA spokesman in Seattle, said the agency was reviewing the decision and declined comment. 

John Peterson, a Ketchikan, Alaska, attorney representing the pro-logging group, Alaska Forest Association, which opposed the environmentalists in the case, declined comment. John Tillinghast, a Juneau, Alaska, lawyer for logging concern Sealaska Corp., which sided with the forest association, did not return phone calls. 

Generally, under most of the previous permits, logging groups were allowed to cover one acre of an estuary’s floor with up to 10 centimeters of waste. The new rules eliminated the one acre rule and said the so-called “zone of deposit” could comprise a company’s “project area,” which could be several acres. 

The case is Natural Resources Defense Council v. EPA, 00-70890. 


Construction activity down in California

The Associated Press
Friday February 15, 2002

LOS ANGELES — Construction activity in California declined 13.1 percent last year as the slumping economy scared off lenders, an industry report shows. 

Builders received $20.4 billion in funding for residential and commercial projects in 2001, compared to $23.5 billion a year earlier, according to a report released Thursday by DataQuick Information Systems, a La Jolla-based real estate information service. 

Demand for new homes and commercial buildings remained firm, especially with interest rates low. But the sagging economy has made banks and other lenders more cautious, DataQuick said. 

In the early 1990s, lenders supported many projects only to see the market crash during that recession. 

“They burned themselves back then with ... overexuberance,” said John Karevoll, a DataQuick analyst. 

Today, builders are selling nearly everything they’re putting on the market but didn’t know the market would stay so strong when they did their planning, said Mike Ela, DataQuick’s president. 

“There’s a good chance building activity will pick back up this year,” he said. 

The San Francisco Bay area, where the collapse of Internet companies ended a frenzied few years of construction, returned to a more normal pace ln 2001, said John Karevoll, a DataQuick analyst. 

Construction activity in the nine-county area fell 28.4 percent last year from the 2000 figure. 

San Francisco County’s 59.2 percent decline led the state, followed by Marin County at 54 percent and San Mateo at 50.8 percent. 

Santa Clara County, the heart of Silicon Valley, saw construction activity dip 26.7 percent to a still-sizable $1.39 billion. 

In Southern California, Los Angeles County dipped 10 percent while neighboring Orange County saw a 32.2 percent decline, partially because of the tech industry decline. 

However, counties bordering those dense urban regions continued to grow, attracting people unable to afford homes in the more expensive markets. 

For example, San Bernardino County east of Los Angeles reported a 25.3 percent jump to $1.16 billion. 

In the farming areas of the Central Valley, Merced County’s construction activity jumped 57.3 percent to $153 million and Madera County’s total increased 50.7 percent to $53 million. 

North of San Francisco, Napa County, center of the state’s wine industry, reported a 51 percent jump in construction activity to $124 million. 

DataQuick’s figures are based on analysis of loan deeds filed for residential and commercial projects. 


East Bay MUD may bypass PG&E and sell its own electricity cheaper

The Associated Press
Friday February 15, 2002

OAKLAND — After a report suggested the East Bay Municipal Utility District could beat Pacific Gas and Electric Co.’s rates, the public utility is considering adding electricity to the water and sewer service it provides to 1.3 million customers. 

The EBMUD board voted unanimously Wednesday to continue its expansion study to determine whether it should resemble utilities that provide residents with a variety of services, such as the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power and Alameda Power and Telecom. 

The study, by consultants R.W. Beck, Inc., proposed three pathways EBMUD could take. 

—It could buy electricity and use PG&E to deliver it, though the arrangement called aggregation, is currently prohibited by state law. 

—It could offer renewable sources of electricity, such as wind and solar power. 

—It could take over PG&E’s East Bay infrastructure and generate and sell its own electricity. 

PG&E would support the first two efforts but opposes the third, said PG&E spokesman Jason Alderman. The utility helped defeat two ballot measures in San Francisco last year that would have created public power agencies. 

The board has spent $100,000 studying the issue, but still has no estimates of how much the undertaking would cost or how it could be financed. Critics urged EBMUD to stop spending money and focus on its current role — providing water to much of Alameda and Contra Costa counties. 

“Others have tried this and failed miserably,” William Glass, a San Leandro developer, told the board. “Focus on what you do best.” 

Customers have asked EBMUD to consider becoming an electricity provider rather than relying on PG&E after soaring power costs last year prompted state energy regulators to issues record electric rate hikes. 

“There is no better institution to do this than EBMUD,” said Cynthia Cohen of Berkeley, a longtime public power advocate. “They’ve got the experience.”


HP heir and dissident director hopes to be deal breaker

By Brian Bergstein, The Associated Press
Friday February 15, 2002

PALO ALTO — They share a name, but that’s about it. Hewlett-Packard Co. wishes Walter Hewlett would just go away. 

The eldest son of one of the company’s revered co-founders, the 57-year-old Hewlett has picked a fight with fellow HP board members over its $23 billion plan to buy Compaq Computer Corp. 

The battle by Hewlett and other family members to torpedo the merger — one of the most intriguing episodes in Silicon Valley history — goes to a shareholder vote on March 19. Both sides are campaigning for support with full-page newspaper ads, letters, charts — and some unkind words. 

The company has dismissed Hewlett as an “academic and musician” with no real business experience. HP insiders complain that the usually reserved Hewlett surprised them by turning so vigorously against the rest of the board. 

The first part of the characterization is a big understatement: Hewlett earned master’s degrees in engineering and operations research at Stanford and a doctorate in music. He plays 10 instruments and writes software that digitizes classical scores. 

With the determination he has shown in several marathons and a 139-mile “Death Ride” bicycle race in the Sierras, Hewlett is not backing away from his attacks on the deal, even as some analysts now predict it will succeed. 

In an interview this week, Hewlett was tough as usual on HP chairwoman and chief executive Carly Fiorina, whose fate hinges on the hotly contested merger. 

“I think that Carly has been overly optimistic about what she can do with Hewlett-Packard,” he told The Associated Press. 

“She first proposed that we expand the company by buying PricewaterhouseCoopers, now she’s proposing that we expand the company by buying Compaq. I think she’s trying to build the company with some large-scale strategy plan instead of blocking and tackling and building the company the way it should be built.” 

Hewlett’s criticism of the PricewaterhouseCoopers bid — which ended in 2000 when Fiorina and the consulting firm could not agree on a price — is curious, since he supported that move. 

It is not the only contradiction surrounding Hewlett, a multimillionaire who lives in a modest Palo Alto neighborhood not far from the small garage where his father, William Hewlett, and partner David Packard launched their pioneering company in 1938. 

For one, Hewlett originally voted for the Compaq deal before it was announced on Sept. 3. He has said he was told that a non-unanimous board vote might force HP to pay more for Compaq. 

HP attorney Larry Sonsini said Hewlett was never told that. 

Hewlett also helped the merger plans along by helping to craft the $370 million package of bonuses that important HP employees can get over the next two years if they stay with the company after the deal closes. 

The plan calls for Fiorina to get an $8 million post-merger bonus, though she has turned it down. 

Hewlett said he was merely doing his job as one of the three HP directors on the board’s compensation committee. 

Even so, Hewlett’s diligence as a director is in dispute. HP has chastised him for missing three board meetings last July. 

In one meeting, while Hewlett was fulfilling a long-held commitment to play the cello at an exclusive retreat, HP’s bankers made a financial case for buying Compaq. Several directors began that day with serious doubts about the wisdom of the deal but hashed it out in detail and emerged with a positive opinion, according to people who were there. 

“I don’t even think Walter understands how much work went into this,” said George Keyworth, HP’s longest-serving director. “The truth is, Walter wasn’t there during the crucial parts of the discussion.” 

Hewlett counters that he has done ample research to conclude that the Compaq deal is too risky and would increase HP’s exposure to the weak personal computer market and low-margin technology services business. 

“I’ve been a close observer of Hewlett-Packard for more than 50 years and I’ve been on the board of directors for 15 years,” he noted. “I can say that I really understand HP and the businesses it’s in.” 

He advocates taking smaller steps, investing more heavily in digital imaging, the company’s core business, and finding other ways to make PCs profitable — ideas HP dismisses as “platitudes.” 

Asked whether he is driven partly by a sense — voiced by David Packard’s son — that the founders would not have approved of such a blockbuster move, Hewlett said his only motivation is that the deal is bad for shareholders. 

Beyond the handful of large investors who have spoken out against the deal — including the Hewlett and Packard families, who collectively control 18 percent of HP stock — Hewlett says six others have privately told him they also will vote it down. 

Only two big investors have told him they support the acquisition, he said. 

Fiorina says quite the opposite: that investors and analysts are beginning to understand the deal is motivated by long-term trends that will force HP to dramatically improve its position in business computing and high-tech services. 

People who know Hewlett say HP may be underestimating him. 

“He’s very smart, very up to date on what’s going on in the business world,” said Dick Jenrette, who co-founded the Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette investment firm and serves with Hewlett on Harvard’s board of overseers. “He’s got very deep convictions.” 

——— 

On the Net: 

Pro-merger site: http://www.votethehpway.com 

Opposition site: http://www.votenohpcompaq.com 


Opinion

Editorials

Oakland to pay off man arrested by pair of ‘Riders’

Daily Planet Wire Report
Thursday February 21, 2002

OAKLAND — City of Oakland officials have decided to pay $195,000 to a man who spent 287 days in custody after he was arrested by a pair of officers who have been accused of criminal misconduct in a case against the so-called “Riders.” 

In November 1998, Clarence Mabanag and Matthew Hornung arrested Kenneth Davis and booked him for possession of crack cocaine, jaywalking and for being under the influence and unable to care for his safety. He was prosecuted by the Alameda County District Attorney’s Office and sentenced to spend 16 months in prison. 

While Davis was serving time, Mabanag and Hornung were caught in the middle of allegations of police corruption. Along with two other officers – Jude Siapno and Frank Vazquez – the pair involved with Davis were accused of beating suspects and falsifying evidence. They were known as “The Riders.” 

Mabanag, Siapno and Hornung have pleaded innocent to dozens of charges, while Frank Vazquez fled the country and remains at large. 

In the course of investigating the officers, the District Attorney’s Office conducted inquiries into hundreds of cases in which suspects were prosecuted based on police reports filed by the Riders officers. 

As a result of the review, the District Attorney requested that the court throw out more than 100 individual cases, including the case against Kenneth Davis. 

The Davis case was submitted to Alameda County Superior Court for dismissal on Jan. 20, 2001, and the court immediately released the defendant from prison. 

City Attorney’s Office spokeswoman Karen Boyd said approximately a dozen cases involving some 105 plaintiffs are pending in connection with the Riders. 

“We are looking at settling (those cases),’’ Boyd said today. “We’re evaluating them now.’’


News of the Weird

Staff
Wednesday February 20, 2002

The science of pot 

 

SANTA CRUZ — School officials are considering whether to yank a 13-year-old’s science project because it examines medical uses for marijuana. 

The junior high school student was allowed to present her “Mary Jane for Pain” project to classmates Thursday, but school officials later confiscated her props — including a marijuana-laced muffin and a spray bottle of pot-steeped rubbing alcohol. They returned the props to the girl’s father, Joe Morris, rather than call law enforcement. 

Morris said Mission Hill Junior High officials gave initial clearance for the project and should have said something earlier if they objected. 

“Don’t children have constitutional rights?” Morris said. “In a way, it’s censorship and that’s not acceptable.” 

Morris said his daughter became interested in the subject because her aunt is a caregiver for a woman who uses marijuana as a medicine. 

School officials haven’t yet decided if the girl can display her project next week at a prize competition. 

 

Running with his pants on fire 

 

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — A 30-year-old man left a trail of smoke as he fled from police with his pants on fire. 

Police said they spotted Carl Franklin with his pants down and his hands in front of him near a fence. They suspected he was going to relieve himself. 

When Tallahassee Police Officer Seth Stoughton shouted, Franklin ran. 

Apparently Franklin had been smoking and put the cigarette in his pocket, police said. 

Franklin ran until he lost his grasp and the pants dropped to his ankles. Stoughton said he tried to slap out the fire until another officer came and cut it away. 

Stoughton said Franklin smelled of alcohol and appeared to be intoxicated. 

He was charged with resisting arrest Sunday. 

 

Pot busted 

 

FARMINGTON HILLS, Mich. — A man is facing a felony drug charge after his truck loaded with marijuana struck a police officer, authorities said. 

Scott Manciero, 29, was charged with delivery and manufacture of marijuana, a felony punishable by up to seven years in prison. He could also face other felony charges pending the outcome of the accident investigation. 

Officer Anthony Bateman, 26, was retrieving road flares late Saturday on a state road when he was struck by Manciero’s vehicle, Police Chief William Dwyer said. Manciero stopped after the crash, and officers found 14 pounds of marijuana in the truck, Dwyer said. 

Bateman was being treated for a chipped vertebrae and injuries to his shoulders, knees and head. 

A breath test showed Manciero was not intoxicated, police said. 

——— 

GALVESTON, Texas (AP) — A man who becomes upset when he hears certain words was sentenced to six years in prison for shooting his girlfriend because he thought she was about to say “New Jersey.” 

Thomas Ray Mitchell, 54, was convicted earlier this month of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon for shooting Barbara Jenkins outside his apartment in March 1999. He faced up to 20 years. 

Jenkins died recently but it was not connected to her injuries from the shooting. 

During the trial, his relatives testified that Mitchell gets angry, curses and bangs on walls when he hears certain words or phrases, including “New Jersey,” “Snickers,” “Mars” and “Wisconsin.” 

Mitchell flew into an expletive-laden rage during a pretrial conference when he saw the word “Snickers” printed on a card. 

His attorney argued that Mitchell suffered from a mental disorder. Psychiatrist Victor Scarano testified that Mitchell suffered from persecutory delusions. 

——— 

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) — Directions to Gucci in Japanese? Not a problem for Gregg Donovan. 

Nor is “Welcome to Beverly Hills” in dozens of other languages for the 42-year-old, who has been hired as the city’s first official greeter. 

“I’m waiting for the Dalai Lama to come to town so I can say it in Tibetan,” said Donovan, who greets shoppers along Rodeo Drive and adjacent streets. 

Clad in a red coachman coat from Sulka, Bally shoes, Versace sunglasses and sporting a Tiffany & Co. gold badge, Donovan looks the part. 

That’s the point, say officials with the city’s conference and visitors bureau, who hope Donovan will help lure back shoppers to some of the nation’s ritziest stores, ending an economic slump that hit after Sept. 11. 


‘Less is More’— Take the Berkeley Unplugged challenge

By Alice La Pierre Berkeley Energy Analyst
Tuesday February 19, 2002

Are you a Berkeley resident who has devised some very creative ways to reduce your electricity consumption? Do you typically spend less than $10.00 on electricity each month? If so, you may qualify to enter the City of Berkeley’s new energy conservation contest, "Berkeley Unplugged". 

There are several categories from which Berkeley residents may win. Judges are looking for Berkeley residents who have reduced their energy consumption by at least 40% from last January, or who consume less than 3.8 kilowatt hours per day, or who have devised successful energy conservation strategies, from using power strips for turning off remote-controlled appliances such as TVs and VCRs, to installing solar panels or windmills. 

Ten of the selected contestants will receive Certificates of Achievement from the City of Berkeley. Each will also receive a $75.00 Gift Certificate for energy-conserving products from the Berkeley Conservation & Energy Program (BC&E), including compact fluorescent lamps, pipe insulation, torchiere lamps, programmable thermostats and weather stripping. BC&E products are available at wholesale prices from a variety of locations, including all Berkeley Farmer’s Markets, the Ecology Center on San Pablo Avenue, Berkeley Bowl, Whole Foods Market, Mi Tierra Foods and Mi Ranchito Bayside Market on San Pablo Avenue, Berkeley Natural Grocery on Gilman St., the Sierra Club Bookstore, Truitt & White Lumber Company, and Bolfing’s Elmwood Hardware on College Ave. These retailers have agreed to supply BC&E products at below-retail prices to help people save both money and energy. 

To enter the contest, have your energy bill for the month of January and go to www.ecologycenter.org/BerkeleyUnplugged and use the online form. The contest ends March 20th, and prizes will be awarded at Berkeley’s Earth Day celebration on April 20th. 

Many people saw this as the catalyst needed for developing renewable energy sources, such as solar, wind and geothermal energy. President Carter installed solar hot water panels on the White House roof, and the fledgling renewable-energy movement began in earnest.  

 

 


Cabinet member, trailblazing Common Cause founder dead at 89

Staff
Monday February 18, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — John W. Gardner, a trailblazing advocate of democratic participation and volunteerism who became known as “the father of campaign finance reform,” died Saturday. He was 89. 

Gardner helped launch Medicare, founded Common Cause, led the Carnegie Corporation and kept engaged in the nation’s intellectual life until he was bedridden in January from complications with prostate cancer was first diagnosed two years ago. 

He died about 3:30 p.m. at his home on Stanford University’s campus, according to his daughter, Francesca Gardner.Gardner was secretary of health, education and welfare at the height of President Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society and the cabinet’s token Republican. It was a post he occupied from Medicare’s first year in 1965 until he resigned in 1968 after concluding Johnson should not run again. 

“We are going to build a true ’citizens’ lobby — a lobby concerned not with the advancement of special interests but with the well-being of the nation,” Gardner said in 1970 as he introduced a group that quickly became a player in national politics. 

Gardner was secretary of health, education and welfare at the height of President Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society and the cabinet’s token Republican. It was a post he occupied from Medicare’s first year in 1965 until he resigned in 1968 after concluding Johnson should not run again. 

Gardner said that in his youth he preferred reflection to action. But World War II — he served as a Marine officer in Europe — jolted him into a more activist role. Gardner is survived by his wife of 67 years, Aida; two daughters, Stephanie Gardner Trimble and Francesca Gardner and his brother, Louis. 

 


Ask the Rent Board

Staff
Saturday February 16, 2002

 

Question: 

I moved out of my apartment last month after living there almost three years. My roommate – who also signed the lease – stayed and found someone to replace me. Although the landlord has approved of my replacement, he refuses to take my name off the lease and put the new person on. Am I still responsible for rent if the new person fails to pay? Doesn’t the landlord have to put the new person’s name on the lease? 

 

Answer: 

If the lease you refer to is the one you signed three years ago, and assuming it is for the typical one-year term, it has converted to a month-to-month rental agreement. This means once you give your landlord 30 days’ notice that you’re moving, you are free from your obligation to pay rent when the 30 days are up, even if you are still named on the original lease. If the landlord accepts rent directly from the new person, she has gained all rights and assumed all obligations under the rental agreement, even if she is not acknowledged as a tenant in an amendment to the agreement. 

However, if you signed annual leases each year, then you remain liable (with your roommate) for rent payments until the lease ends. By approving a replacement, your landlord has agreed to either a sublease or an assignment of the lease. Under a sublease, your replacement is a subtenant who pays her share of rent to you or your roommate; but you remain responsible for paying the full rent to the landlord, even if the subtenant doesn’t pay you. Under an assignment, you have given the new person all your rights to live in the apartment for the rest of the lease term. Your replacement will pay rent directly to the landlord, but unless the landlord releases you in writing (which effectively takes you off the lease), you are still liable for rent if she defaults.  

 

Question: 

I’ve been paying rent to my landlord by check since I began renting from her two years ago. Yesterday my landlord called to tell me that she wants me to start paying rent with a cashier’s check, even though I’ve never bounced a check. She says she has had problems with other tenants’ checks so she wants everyone to pay the same way. Can she require this of me? 

 

Answer: 

It depends. In Berkeley, a landlord cannot make a substantial change in the terms of a lease or rental agreement, so if your agreement allows for rent to be paid by personal check, the landlord cannot change that provision. But if your agreement requires payment by cashier’s check, the landlord may be able to enforce the original terms of the agreement. 

 

You can e-mail the City of Berkeley Rent Stabilization Board at rent@ci. berkeley.ca.us with your questions, or you can call or visit the office at 2125 Milvia Street, Berkeley, CA. 94704.


UC class debates Prop. 45, term limits ballot measure

By David Scharfenberg, Daily Planet staff
Friday February 15, 2002

Experience or new blood? That was the question at the heart of a debate on Proposition 45 in Professor Alan Ross’s “Election 2002” class at UC Berkeley Wednesday. 

The measure on the March 5 ballot would allow termed-out state legislators to seek four more years in office if a number of voters in their district, equivalent to 20 percent of those who voted in the last general election, sign a petition to get the incumbent on the ballot. 

Members of the state Assembly are now limited to three, two-year terms and state senators are limited to two, four-year terms. 

Mary Bergan, president of the California Federation of Teachers, which is supporting Prop. 45, said the measure is important because it would create a more seasoned legislature. 

“Just as in teaching, we think that in legislating, experience counts,” said Bergan. “We have, in many ways, a real revolving door in Sacramento. 

“(The state legislature) deals with a lot of very, very complex issues,” she continued. “They’re not mastered overnight.” 

But Dan Schnur, a political science professor at UC Berkeley and spokesman for the “No on 45” campaign, said the measure is simply designed to prolong the careers of out-of-touch career politicians. 

“A career politician can’t understand, like a citizen politician can understand, the wants and needs and dreams of ordinary people,” he said, arguing that the legislature benefits from a regular influx of community activists and businesspeople with recent, “real life” experience. 

Schnur cautioned that, if voters pass Proposition 45, politicians will only seek further term extensions. 

“They’re asking for four years,” he said. “But do you think someone who’s been in office since 1964 is going to say, ‘thanks for the four years, I’m going home to find a regular job?’ ” 

According to a Field Poll released last week, only 19 percent of California voters said they had heard anything about Proposition 45. 

When they were read the measure, 52 percent supported it and 37 percent opposed. But when they were told that Proposition 45 might cost California counties several hundred thousand dollars to implement, the numbers changed dramatically. Only 40 percent supported and 45 percent opposed. 

The Field Poll also recorded continued support for the concept of term limits, first enacted in California in 1990. Sixty-four percent of respondents said they like the idea of term limits, with 31 percent opposed. 

After the debate, Schnur said public support for term limits will work in his favor, but acknowledged that a massive fund-raising deficit could work against the “No on 45” campaign. 

“If we only get outspent four to one, we can beat this thing,” he said. “If we get outspent seven or eight to one, it’s going to be tough.” 

According to the latest figures available from the state, proponents of Proposition 45 have a multi-million dollar advantage, and are outspending the opposition by well over the eight to one ratio cited by Schnur. 

Charles Ramsey, running for the 14th District state Assembly seat to replace termed-out legislator Dion Aroner, said he supports Proposition 45. 

“I think term limits have been a disaster for the citizens of California,” he said, arguing that veteran lobbyists know more about the ins and outs of the legislature than representatives. 

But Schnur argued that when both legislators and lobbyists have been around for a long time, they tend to develop cozy relationships. 

“People who find that a compelling argument can vote people out,” said Loni Hancock, another candidate for state Assembly who supports Proposition 45. “Now, you have a situation where legislators are learning on the job and lobbyists are the ones with the institutional memory.” 

Dave Brown, the third candidate for Aroner’s seat, also supports the ballot measure, arguing that it may represent “the best of both worlds.”  

With more terms, Brown noted, a legislator could serve 10 years in the Assembly and 12 years in the Senate, for a full 22 years in office, creating a number of legislators with extensive experience. 

At the same time, he argued, there would be a consistent flow of new voices into the chamber.