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Students ‘disgusted’ by redistricting

Staff
Tuesday February 26, 2002

By Jia-Rui Chong 

Special to the Daily Planet 

 

Students at University of California, Berkeley were “disgusted and disappointed” by the rejection of their redistricting plan at last Tuesday’s city council meeting, said Josh Fryday, External Affairs Vice President of the Associated Students of the University of California (ASUC).  

The ASUC redistricting proposal, which would have made students 60 percent of the District 7 population, was part of the students’ long-term fight to elect one of their own to the Berkeley City Council.  

“The thing is, this is the first opportunity that has come up in years–because redistricting only comes up every 10 years–for a student to be elected to city council,” said Fryday. “My first reaction was that they’re scared of having a student sitting on city council.” Berkeley citizens were invited to submit their own proposals after the Citizens for Fair Representation successfully challenged the accepted redistricting plan last October. On Feb. 19, the city council decided to approve two of the five plans for further consideration.  

Modifications on the plans drawn up by Elliot Cohen of Nuclear Free Berkeley and Berkeley High School student Nick Rizzo will be heard tonight. 

The proposal drafted by the ASUC would have increased the student population in District 7 by four percent by incorporating part of District 8. Fryday said that this plan represented the best attempt to bring as many students as possible into one district under the constraints of the city charter. Their first proposal was rejected because it did not follow the charter, which says that new district maps must follow established lines as closely as possible. 

Fryday blasted the current plans for trying to divide and conquer students. “The simple truth is, students are just like any other Berkeley neighborhood. We want a chance to have our voice be heard. We want to be kept whole and united. We don’t want special treatment, but we do want fair treatment,” he said. 

“Some people tell me it’s not good for students, but I don’t buy that,” he said. Of the 1000 people moved into District 8 under his plan, he said, only 675 are students. All the proposals except the ASUC’s would also have moved the student-populated Foothill Dormitories into District 8. 

Councilmember Kriss Worthington, who represents District 7 and who is usually the most vocal in supporting student concerns, said that he did not support the ASUC proposal because it was not practical. 

“Someone who is not a good student candidate won’t get elected by four percent,” he said. “A good student could win in District 7 now. A good student could win in District 8 now.” 

Fryday, however, dismissed arguments that the ASUC plan was impractical.  

“The plan submitted met every redistricting criteria established by the city. The only criteria it didn’t meet was that it didn’t continue to promote the current undemocratic, disenfranchising status quo.” 

Mayor Shirley Dean, who said she thought the students’ plan was “fair” and voted for it last Tuesday, put the rejection down to politics.  

“Kriss Worthington doesn’t want a student running against him despite his statements that he wants students to run for council.” 

Worthington, however, defended his support of students and said that his opposition to the ASUC proposal had nothing to do with who would run against him.  

“In one month and in this last year, I’ve involved more students in Berkeley government than she [Dean] has in several decades,” said Worthington. He rejected the ASUC plan, he said, because it made it hurt students who might want to run for office in District 8, where there is a significant student population. 

Councilmember Linda Maio said politics had nothing to do with the way she voted. She abstained because she wanted to support the principle of student participation in local government without giving this particular plan the thumbs up.  

“I didn’t want to discount the students and say, ‘No, you don’t have a role.’ I’m glad they’re coming in and talking and participating. But I knew there were other proposals that kept working constituencies and neighborhoods together.” 

She said she did not like the way the ASUC plan split up the Bateman neighborhood in particular and supported the Nuclear Free Berkeley plan because it drew neater lines. 

“Someone’s ox is going to get gored because we have to balance all of these different interests,” Maio said. 

The ASUC is trying to roll with the punches. At tonight’s council meeting, it will propose revisions that bump up the number of students in District 7 while working within the basic accepted guidelines. It will also keep pushing for a ballot measure to amend the city charter so that completely new redistricting plans can be drawn. 

“Frankly, the reforms that the students want are going to have to go through the charter amendment, not this process,” said Cohen. “It’s really sad that the students are being used as pawns in a political game.” 


School district mismanagement similar to Enron’s

James K. Sayre Oakland
Tuesday February 26, 2002

Editor: 

 

Q: What's the difference between the top management of Enron Corporation and the administration of the Berkeley Unified School District?  

A: not much, apparently. In Berkeley, we have a top-heavy politically-correct administration made up of people who cannot add, cannot administer and cannot audit. 

How can you possibly spend seven million dollars that you don't have? Credit card bills? Cell-phone bills? 

Practicing "whole math"(where students were encouraged to invent their own answers in math, as: 2 + 2 = 7)? 

By hiding debt offshore in the Farallon Islands?  

These folks are trying to pass the blame onto “old obsolete computers,” but that argument won't wash. 

Spreadsheets, such as Lotus123 and Excel have been functioning perfectly well for the last fifteen or twenty years. Obviously, some Berkeley school administrators said, “Who cares? Let the good times roll. Its only public money and we can always get more of that from the suckers (tax payers).” 

Computers and computer software are dumb, blind machines. If you put garbage in, you get garbage out. 

Simple. It is obvious that the administrators of the Berkeley Unified School District could not be bother to add, check on software to see that it included all ongoing expenses and then audit the results at the end of each school year. Remedial arithmetic classes are indicated. 

 

James K. Sayre 

Oakland


Staff
Tuesday February 26, 2002


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. 

 


Friday, March 1

 

 

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. 

 


Sunday, March 3

 

 

Shaping a just U.S. Policy in the Middle East 

2 - 7:30 p.m. 

International House 

2299 Piedmont Ave. 

Join Bay Area peace, social justice and faith-based organizations for a two- day conference focusing on the Palestinian/Israeli conflict, Iraq, Afghanistan and the impact these policies on civil rights and democracy in the U.S. 415-565-0201 x26, www.afsc.org/wagingpeace. 

 

 

 

 


Young man wrongfully detained by BPD

By Devona Walker Daily Planet Staff
Tuesday February 26, 2002

It was not exactly the way Reza Mokhtari-Fox had planned to spend the better part of his Friday night. Eighteen-year-old Fox and his two friends went up to the corner store on University and Sacramento for chips and sodas. Shortly after leaving, they were accosted by approximately 13 police officers, six cars and immediately shuttled off to jail.  

The arresting officer, Fox said, though it was difficult to tell with a barrage of white lights in their face, told them they had been positively identified as perpetrators who had just robbed a senior by gunpoint. 

The suspects were three African American males. Fox is Mediterranean. The arresting officer Caucasian. 

“My son called me and told me to come help him,” said Mahmood Mokhtari, Fox’s father. “When I got there they said it was a ‘$20,000 bail.’ I called lawyers. I called bail bonds. I never had to deal with anything like this. I know my son, he would no hurt a fly, not to mention a robbery at gunpoint.” 

After three and a half hours, Fox and his friends were released much to the relief of their families. 

“At first I didn’t want to say anything. I didn’t want to make things worse for him, but afterwards I started to get angry. This is my son. He doesn’t even look like a black man. It’s like saying all Mexican’s, all brown people are black,’” Mokhtari said. 

“It makes me think they had just started arresting every group of black kids in the vicinity,” he added. 

Fox, a freshman at Vista Community College said that when the officers questioned him he and his friends combined had less than $30 on their person and no weapons. 

“I also had an alibi for the whole day but it didn’t matter,” Fox said. “When they finally let us go — I mean they didn’t even listen to anyone until my mother, a white woman showed up — they acted as if they were doing us a favor.” 

Berkeley Police Department could not comment yesterday on this incident. But police documents do verify that the three youths were detained and let go after approximately three and a half hours. 

At this point Fox and his father are looking for satisfaction.  

“We are contacting the Police Review Board. We’ve already contacted the NAACP and I’ve spoken with my councilmember Dona Spring. It’s not right,” Mokhtari said. 

“My friends were kind of traumatized by the whole thing,” Fox said. “It’s a real experience to be locked in a jail cell and not know when you are going to get out. 

You don’t think this kind of thing is going to happen, especially here in Berkeley. It is supposed to be the most liberal city — built on freedom or whatever.” 

Ironically enough the incident occurred weeks after Mokhtari had returned from visiting relatives in Iran — where he fled for the sake of freedom. 

“I had just came back from I ran, the Axis of Evil, right? And I come home to this. And of all places, in Berkeley, if a kid can not go down the street and buy a pack of chips without getting busted and humiliated where else do we have to go?” Mokhtari asked. 

 

Contact reporter: devona@berkeleydailyplanet.net 

 

 

 

 


Student no longer hearing city’s ‘lip service’

Josh Fryday University of California, Berkeley
Tuesday February 26, 2002

Editor: 

 

Last Tuesday night, some members of the City Council rejected the only redistricting plan that would have significantly increased the chance for a student to be elected to the city council. In doing so, they sent a message to nearly a quarter of the city’s population that politicians, who are only concerned with keeping themselves in power, run this city.  

Kriss Worthington, who likes to call students one of his closest political allies, justified voting against those same students by saying the plan wasn’t "practical."  

In fact, the plan submitted met every redistricting criteria established by the city. The only criteria it didn’t meet was that it didn’t continue to promote the current undemocratic, disenfranchising status quo.  

While Worthington accused other members of the council of paying "lip-service" to the interest of students, his vote sent a message loud and clear that issues students care about – low-income housing, safer streets, and a cleaner city – are not priorities. 

Through their actions, the members of the council have essentially disenfranchised 22% of the city for the next ten years. Even more disgraceful, they have argued that students are actually better off divided and diluted among several districts. It is a sad comment that in one of the most progressive cities in country, members of our city council actually feel comfortable using the same arguments that have been used to fight the Voting Rights Act and to disenfranchise racial and ethnic minorities for decades.  

The simple truth is, students are just like any other Berkeley neighborhood. We want a chance to have our voice be heard. We want to be kept whole and united. We don’t want special treatment, but we do want fair treatment. 

Though individual students come and go from Berkeley, the student commitment to this city has never left. We have to worry about the same tight housing market that forces many to choose between paying the rent and eating dinner. We have to worry about driving on and walking across the same busy streets. We have to worry at night that we may one day become another crime statistic. And just like every other resident in Berkeley, we want to participate in the process of solving these problems. 

Hopefully, in the weeks ahead, the council will teach students a better lesson. They will be able to show that politicians can get beyond petty political gamesmanship. They will be able to show that elected officials can learn to put their own interests after those of the citizens who put them into office. And if they don’t, those same officials may have to learn the lesson that those same citizens can vote them out of office too.  

As a representative of 31,000 students, and 22,000 members of the Berkeley community, I have been fighting throughout this whole re-districting process for fair representation of students. I only hope that now, members of the city council don’t relinquish their responsibility to represent Berkeley students and citizens too. 

 

Josh Fryday 

University of California, Berkeley 


Library Gardens may top last hurdle

By Devona Walker Daily Planet Staff
Tuesday February 26, 2002

Tonight a packed City Council agenda includes the appeal of the proposed Library Gardens development and at least one councilmember is saying there’s a good chance the project will soon top its last hurdle towards breaking ground. 

The five-story, 176-unit downtown residential development has been proposed by TransAction Companies.  

The road thus far has been paved with obstacles for the project.  

It had to clear the Landmarks Preservation Commission and Design Review Committee before going to the Zoning Adjustments Board. It also faced some formidable citizen opposition. In addition, this process has been criticized by at least one councilmember. TransAction Senior Vice President John DeClercq, who originally proposed a mix of 196 one- and two-bedroom units of undisclosed rents last June, was originally turned down. Later, he was told by a councilmember, according to Worthington of a decision that was made behind closed doors. 

Six months later, 20-units shy of the original proposal and time for public comment on the proposal, it appears that the city and the developer have come up with something both parties can agree upon. 

“This appears like it is going to be the last hurdle for this project,” said Councilmember Dona Spring. “I think we might be able to finally move forward on this and that will mean 176-units downtown. 

Councilmember Kriss Worthington said that DeClercq would also include a public plaza, an outdoor children’s’ play area, ground-level retail space and expanded parking underground. 

With its 176 units, the complex would contain nearly twice as many apartments as the recently-approved Gaia Building, which Patrick Kennedy’s Panoramic Interests is building almost directly across Shattuck Avenue. 

In fact, it will be one of the largest housing developments ever built in Berkeley. Twenty percent of the project will be affordable to low and moderate income people.


Last ZAB meeting was a real heartbreaker

David Olson Berkele
Tuesday February 26, 2002

Editor: 

 

The recent Zoning Adjustments Board public hearing on Valentines Day evening apparently lasted a "heartbreaking" seven plus hours until well past 2:00 a.m. the following morning. When meetings involving complex civic issues last longer than 4-5 hours, the quality of discourse between board/commission members and with the public is inexorably subject to the law of diminishing returns. 

Most board/commission members, the public at large, and the press are not retired or independently wealthy and therefore work for a living and have worked the day of the meeting and will no doubt work the next day 

-- exhaustion leaps to mind. If a meeting that begins at 7:00 p.m. cannot be completed by approximately 11:00 p.m., then there are too many agenda items prepared for the meeting by City staff. Barring any other rational explanation, then one must question whether this frequent breakdown in process at public meetings is possibly being staged and/or manipulated by city politicians, their staffs, and their principal political/financial supporters to discourage public input and derail adequate press coverage on controversial issues before the boards and commissions. 

The City Attorney should note that this breakdown is a serious matter that is encroaching on the effectiveness of open city government and fairness for the public that merits investigation by appropriate authorities and the press should the City staffs who prepare the board/commission agendas not clean up their act. So I ask the public and the press: Are you being served? If not, speak up now. 

 

 

David Olson 

Berkeley


Board stands up for music

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet staff
Tuesday February 26, 2002

Strong support on the Board of Education may save the music program from substantial cuts. 

Superintendent Michele Lawrence has recommended that the board, which must cut about $6 million to balance next year’s budget, layoff music program coordinator Suzanne McCulloch, assign her duties to one or more elementary school principals and reduce the number of full-time teaching positions from 11.5 to 9.1. 

But, board members say protecting teacher positions will be a top priority, and at least two have raised concerns about cutting the coordinator position, put in place this year. 

“I don’t think there’s any question that the program has benefited tremendously from the coordinator and there needs to be a person to do that work,” said Shirley Issel, president of the school board. “I hate to see a program that’s suffering from a lack of leadership.” 

“As competent as our principals are, they’re also overworked,” said board member John Selawsky. 

Selawsky argued that in the past administration of the program by principals has not worked. 

But board member Ted Schultz cautioned that budgetary realities will play a role in any final decision. 

“This is the first year we’ve had someone as a coordinator and it seems to be making an impact,” he said. “On the other hand, we’re in a budget pinch.” 

About half of the funding for the coordinator’s position comes from the Berkeley Schools Excellence Project, a special local tax, a quarter from state grants and a quarter from private grants. 

One of the private grants, a $10,000 award from the East Bay Community Foundation, will not be renewed next year. 

Chris Lim, associate superintendent of instruction, said McCulloch has done great work, but added that the financially-strapped district is concerned about picking up the $10,000 tab. But Issel said she is confident the district can find money to fill the hole. 

By all accounts, the music program had its share of problems before this year. There was no coherent district-wide curriculum, instruments were lost or went unrepaired, and there were constant scheduling problems, said teachers and parents. 

“The program has improved a lot with the coordinator,” said Rita Kimball, principal of Washington School. 

District music teachers say McCulloch, and her assistant Annette Lys, have done invaluable work by cataloguing instruments, organizing professional development and bringing instructors together. 

Karen Wells, a music teacher at the elementary and high school levels, praised McCulloch for helping to create a unified curriculum. 

“That would never of happened if Suzanne weren’t here,” Wells said. 

“This is the first year that many of us have been evaluated,” added Greg Gomez, who teaches woodwinds and brass at the fourth- and fifth-grade levels. 

“I’m a beginning teacher,” said Madeline Prager, another music instructor. “Suzanne has given me valuable tips.” 

Henry Viets, another music teacher, said McCulloch has been an effective advocate with school principals.  

“Approaching the principal as one music teacher, there an hour and a half a week, is not really effective,” he said. “(McCulloch) has made our lives so much better.” 

But music supporters say preservation of the coordinator position is not enough. Michael Kelley, co-chair of the Music Curriculum Committee, said the program cannot afford to lose 2.4 full-time teaching positions, as proposed by the superintendent.  

“We’re already operating at a bare bones minimum,” he said. 

“If we lose some teachers, we will be overwhelmed,” added Viets. “It will be horrendous.” 

Viets said the prospect of a smaller staff, and a growing workload, already had some teachers looking elsewhere. “Some of us are already preparing our resumes,” he said. 

Teachers also bemoaned the effect of layoffs on students, arguing that music helps to nurture creativity and build self-esteem. 

“You just can’t believe the feelings those kids have when they’re coming off the stage,” said Prager. 

Susan Medak, chair of the Berkeley Arts in Education Steering Committee, which advises the board, pointed to studies showing higher graduation rates, less absenteeism and greater parental involvement when students take part in music and the arts. 

Board members reached by the Planet said they value the music program and will try to preserve as many teachers as they can. Lawrence herself, at a school board meeting last week, signaled her support for music teachers.  

Jesse Anthony, a music teacher for 33 years, said he is confident of Lawrence’s support in the end. “She supports music,” he said. “She understands it.” 

Lawrence could not be reached for this story by deadline. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Once again war wins over education, reader says Berkeley

Jane Stillwater Berkeley
Tuesday February 26, 2002

Well, the other shoe just dropped.  

Berkeley Unified School District just slashed its budget by almost one-third.  

So much for educating our children. 

Meanwhile, the United States of America, land of the free, easily came up with the mega-bucks necessary to kill thousands of women and children in Afghanistan (probably by raiding our social security reserves). 

As we slide into giving this country's wealth over to total military armament, please remember Hitler, Mussolini and Tojo (the original evil axis):  

While they were out trying to conquer the world, the German, Italian and Japanese people slowly slid into deprivation, devastation and want. 

Now that Bush, Ashcroft and Rumsfeld are trying to convince us to live on munitions stockpiling and media hype also, it's time to ask ourselves -- what will OUR post-war world be like? 

When planning our future, always remember this simple home truth: WAR CREATES NOTHING. WAR IS A HUNGRY BEAST WHO DESTROYS ITS KEEPERS AS WELL AS ITS PREY. 

 

Jane Stillwater 

Berkeley


Latinos gasp for breath

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet staff
Tuesday February 26, 2002

Language barriers, poor air quality and a lack of access to quality health care have contributed to an asthma crisis among California Latinos, according to a report released Monday by San Francisco-based Latino Issues Forum. 

“The cases are rising to an epidemic level in California,” said Raquel Donoso, senior program manager at the Issues Forum. 

Berkeley Latinos, however, may be faring better than the statewide community, according to the latest figures compiled by the city. 

According to statewide data from the California Department of Health Services, Latinos were hospitalized for asthma at a rate of 106 per 100,000 between 1995 and 1997, compared to 100 for non-Hispanic whites and 355 for African-Americans, who had the highest rates.  

In Alameda County the overall numbers were similar. But for children 14 and under, hospitalization rates were considerably higher than the statewide average. Among Latinos for instance, 265 per 100,000 were hospitalized for asthma, compared to 183 statewide. 

According to 1999 data compiled by the city, 89 children ages one to 19 were hospitalized for asthma. Forty-nine were African-American, 22 were white, eight were Asian, six were “other,” and only three were Latino. 

Dr. Jose Ducos, medical epidemiologist for the city, said there is no cut and dry explanation for the disparity in Berkeley and county-wide figures. But he noted that the Latino population is comparatively small in Berkeley, composing about 10 percent of the total. 

Ducos added that, according to several medical indicators, Berkeley’s Latino population is relatively healthy. He suggested that low asthma hospitalization rates may reflect that overall health. 

But Ducos and other health care professionals in the area warned that hospitalization figures are an inexact measure. Good preventative care in a given area might prevent hospitalization, a lack of health insurance may keep certain populations away from long-term care and, most important, hospitalization figures reflect only the worst cases, they said. 

Ducos is working on a city-wide mail survey, scheduled to be completed this summer, that will give officials a better idea for the prevalence of asthma and other chronic diseases. 

Medical research on the causes of asthma is inconclusive, but doctors say that dust, cigarette smoke and other pollutants act as triggers for asthma attacks.  

Dr. Sue Haverkamp, associate medical director for pediatrics at La Clinica de La Raza in Oakland, said many of her Latino patients suffer from asthma. 

She attributes the high incidence to socio-economic conditions, noting that low-income patients tend to live in overcrowded and unsanitary dwellings that produce dust, cockroach dander and other asthma triggers.  

According to Donoso, of the Issues Forum, two in three overcrowded households statewide are Latino.  

The Issues Forum report makes several recommendations for reaching out to this population. The Forum calls on the state to develop more Spanish-language asthma information, launch a statewide education campaign and provide money to hire more school nurses, among other things. 

The report also calls on local schools to provide more asthma information and train teachers on the basics. Next year, the Ethnic Health Institute at Alta Bates-Summit Medical Center in Berkeley will conduct public education on asthma in the Berkeley and Oakland schools. The Institute will also work in Berkeley and Oakland public housing. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


News of the Weird

Staff
Tuesday February 26, 2002

Barefoot worms have it rough 

 

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Things aren’t looking good for a barefoot bookworm. 

Robert Neinast has sued the Columbus Metropolitan Library, saying that the ban on going barefoot there blocks a healthy lifestyle and his First Amendment rights. 

During a hearing Friday in U.S. District Court, Judge Algenon Marbley told Neinast, a software writer from nearby Pickerington, that he wasn’t inclined to let the case go to trial. 

The library’s attorney, Philomena Dane, told the judge that the library has the policy to protect patrons’ safety and avoid injury lawsuits. 

Dane said Saturday that Neinast failed to make the case that going barefoot is a form of expression. 

“One doesn’t know what the message is,” she said. 

Neinast wore a dark suit and black shoes in court. 

“As I said in my affidavit, I wear shoes on formal occasions, and it doesn’t get much more formal than this,” he said after the hearing. 

 

The legal eagle has landed 

NEWARK, N.J. — A legal eagle is coming back to the federal courthouse in Newark. 

The 2-ton, hand-carved limestone eagle, which sat at the base of the flagpole at the old courthouse for decades, will be unveiled March 5 during ceremonies at the federal courthouse. 

The eagle vanished in the late 1930s, around the time when the old courthouse was demolished. However, few were aware of its disappearance until members of the U.S. District Court Historical Society in New Jersey commissioned a comprehensive study of the state’s federal courts. 

During their work, researchers unearthed a 1938 newspaper article about the statue. Investigators soon tracked it to a Montclair home once owned by B. Palmer Davidson, a former writer for The Star-Eagle, a predecessor of The Star-Ledger of Newark. The statue was cemented onto the side of a brick structure attached to a garage wall in his back yard, where it remained for many years. 

The eagle was removed from the home in November and has been refurbished. 

How many students does it take to change a light bulb? 

CHICAGO — The University of Chicago finally has its own answer to a vexing question: How many students does it take to change a light bulb? 

Mary Ruth Yoe, the editor of the school’s alumni magazine, decided students there had gone long enough without a good University of Chicago answer so she asked for contributions. Scores of responses followed. 

“Change it to what?” answered Michael P. Richard. “We were taught to define terms.” 

Another entry argued that the answer depended on whether the students are undergrads or graduate students. 

The answer for undergrads? “Four. One to change it and three to complain about how hard it was.” 

For graduate students, though, the answer was, “Just one. But it takes seven years.” 


Berkeley directors offer ‘Promises’ to the Academy

By Peter Crimmins Special to the Daily Planet
Tuesday February 26, 2002

Yesterday afternoon the Academy Award –nominated film, “Promises,” up for Best Documentary Feature, screened at the Pacific Film Archive as part of the Human Rights Watch International Film Festival. It was the first time the film by Berkeley-based filmmakers Carlos Bolado and Justine Shapiro, and San Francisco-based B.Z. Goldberg, had been screened in the Bay Area. 

The film’s distributor, Cowboy Pictures, will give the film a limited theatrical release in March and April. 

Following seven children, both Israeli and Palestinian in the West Bank, the film sought to give voice to the young people and actively attempt to bring them together as a way toward creating peace. The hope, it would seem, lies in trying to bring children together before their political biases become insurmountable. 

The difficulty is that even young children are not clean slates – they are not innocent of war, or the contagious hatred of war. Listening to their elders, throwing stones in the street, and watching their friends and family become "martyrs" (i.e. killed), the 10 year-old kids come loaded with political baggage against their neighbors.  

The next generation, the film suggests, is not more innocent than its predecessor. But it may be more hopeful. They certainly have a better sense of humor than their respective Ministers and Presidents. A playground scene of a Jewish vs. Palestinian belching contest could do more to the peace process than the hot air traded across official negotiation tables. 

Carlos Bolado, editor and co-director of "Promises," spoke to the audience after the screening of the film yesterday afternoon. He said the editing was a year-long process hampered by many difficulties. For one, he had hundreds of hours of videotape of kids speaking Hebrew and Arabic, two languages Bolado doesn’t speak. Also the political nature of the film incited long, heated discussions between the three filmmakers, as Goldberg and Shapiro (Bolado’s wife) are Jewish, leaning toward the Israeli side, and Bolado calls himself a political leftist who tends to side with the Palestinians. 

The film goes beyond documenting the children’s lives, becoming an active participant. After selecting a handful of subjects from as wide a swath of backgrounds as their were able – male and female, Israeli and Palestinian, Jewish and secular – the directors and co-producers Goldberg and Shapiro arranged for all their conflicting subjects to come together to meet and talk and play. 

Some of the children agreed to the cross-political playdate, and some expressed their indifference and hostility to meeting children from the other side. 

The filmmakers did the bulk of their shooting in the West Bank in 1997 and 1998. Because of the escalating tension and violence there in the past couple years, Bolado said this film could not be made today. Access is largely shut down for citizens and press alike, and parents would not allow their children to take part in a project of this nature in the current climate. 

Criticism came from the audience during a question-and-answer period following yesterday’s screening: The film didn’t explain how more Palestinians have been killed during the land war, and some in the audience felt the oppression on the Palestinians in guarded camps was overlooked. Bolado apologetically admitted that much of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict was not portrayed in the film in favor of a more balanced, humanist position. 

Bolado said the long, heated discussions in the editing room were about these issues and the filmmaker’s own political interests, but he and the filmmakers decided to narrow the focus of the film on the lives of the children rather than make a political call to arms. He said they wanted the film to be more centrist in order to be seen by as many people as possible and create dialogue. Making the film pro- or anti- Israeli or Palestinian, Bolado said, would be like talking to the same 12 people who think exactly the same way. 

The situation in the West Bank is a complicated one and if leftist sympathies are in favor of the Palestinian plight and against the U.S. government’s military aide to Israeli, Bolado said the conflict’s roots go back many years and not so long ago it was the Israeli’s that were the ones painted the victims. The war has been bred into the citizens on both sides of the conflict for generations. 

The final images of the film are in a hospital maternity ward where families can view the newest additions to their families. After listening to 12 year-old children describe the difficulties they have in overcoming their differences with other kids on the other side of military checkpoints, this coda offers a question to ponder: How young must peace activists go to get children innocent of war? 

When asked by an audience member if he thought the way to make peace in Israel-Palestine is through the children, he evaded a direct answer. He said it’s important to keep people talking to each other, "we have to keep making films… We have to keep doing things."  

 

 


Cal hearings to address intellectual property rights, antitrust laws

Daily Planet Wire Report
Tuesday February 26, 2002

BERKELEY — The Federal Trade Commission and the Antitrust Division of the Department of Justice are holding four joint hearings at the University of California at Berkeley, which began on Monday, to field testimony on issues of patents and competition. 

The university's Haas School of Business is hosting the hearings, which run until Thursday.  

They are part of a national series of hearings being held under the theme “Competition and Intellectual Property Law and Policy in the Knowledge-Based Economy.” 

The hearings will allow members of academia and business to present their experiences to the commission, as it tries to develop a better understanding of how to balance issues of antitrust law with intellectual property policies. 

Thirteen UC Berkeley professors are among those who are expected to testify in the hearings, including Chairman of the Competition Policy Center Joseph Farrell and Director of the Institute of Business and Economics Research Carl Shapiro. 

In the past, both Shapiro and Farrell have served the Department of Justice's Antitrust Division as deputy assistant attorneys general for economic analysis. 

The hearings, which are open to the public, are divided into several categories and topics, including economic perspectives on intellectual property, competition and innovation. 

Other sections of the hearing will allow representatives from several fields of business and commerce -- biotechnology businesses, pharmaceutical companies, software firms, Internet merchants, and those who make hardware and semiconductors -- provide business perspectives on patents.


High-tech exec sentenced in teen sex scandal

The Associated Press
Tuesday February 26, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — A former high tech executive was sentenced on Monday to two years and 10 months in prison for trying to have sex with someone he met on the Internet who pretended to be a 14-year-old girl. 

Ranjit Singh Sahota, 37, of Fairfax, pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court for attempting to persuade and coerce a minor to engage in unlawful sexual activity. He was also sentenced to a 3-year period of supervised release. A hearing was scheduled for May 24 to determine the amount of restitution Sahota owes to a girl he allegedly raped in August 2000. 

Sahota was arrested last June at a meeting he set up with an FBI agent posing as a 14-year-old girl. He admitted having online conversations with the agent, telling her he was a college student and he wanted her to be his girlfriend. He also admitted he sent her sexually explicit messages. 

Sahota is the founder and former chief executive officer of MetaTV, a Mill Valley firm that develops portals and formats for interactive Internet television services. He was replaced as CEO of MetaTV in June 2001, just days after his arrest. 

 

 


Vegas’ MGM under fire from black community

By Lisa Snedeker The Associated Press
Tuesday February 26, 2002

LAS VEGAS — Under fire by some black leaders, MGM Mirage Inc. reported Monday that it is putting more minorities in management and employing more minority vendors and contractors as part of its diversity efforts. 

The largest operator of Las Vegas Strip hotel-casinos acknowledged criticism of its minority business practices when MGM Grand announced its $6.4 billion merger with Mirage Resorts in May 2000. Company officials told state gambling regulators at the time that it would improve after the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People criticized the company’s management. 

On Monday, company officials issued a progress report that detailed the company’s successes and its unmet goals. 

“While more than half of the work force is minority, less than a third of managers and above are minorities,” said Terry Lanni, MGM Mirage chairman, who gave the company’s inaugural diversity report. 

“Hispanics clearly have the largest challenge in upward mobility, although each minority group is underrepresented (in management),” he said. 

MGM Mirage established the gambling industry’s first “diversity initiative,” Lanni said. 

“We recognized the importance of diversity to the success of our business,” he told about 270 minority group and business representatives at a luncheon at MGM Grand hotel-casino. 

As examples, Lanni pointed to the company’s recent hiring of a black woman as a senior vice president and the formation of a diversity committee headed by another black woman — MGM Mirage board member Alexis Herman, former Labor Secretary in the Clinton administration. 

“But that doesn’t mean we’re going to fire every white male,” he added. 

The company’s Clark County resorts spent $445 million on goods and services in 2001. Of that, $24.3 million, or 5.5 percent, was spent with minority and female-owned businesses, Lanni said. “With 28.5 percent of Clark County comprised of minorities, we should be doing one heck of a lot more than 5.5 percent of our total business with women- and minority-owned firms,” he said. “We have got a lot of work to do.” 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Palm, 3Com ordered to post $50m bond in patent-infringement case

The Associated Press
Tuesday February 26, 2002

ROCHESTER, N.Y. — A federal judge has ordered handheld computer maker Palm Inc. and its former parent, 3Com Corp., to post a $50 million bond ina dispute with Xerox Corp. over a handwriting-recognition patent. 

The struggling computer maker and 3Com, both based in Santa Clara, Calif., are appealing a Dec. 20 ruling that they infringed on Xerox’s patent of the technology, which allows users to enter letters and numbers into personal-data units with simple, one-stroke motions. 

U.S. District Judge Michael Telesca ordered the bond Feb. 22. 

If the Stamford, Conn.-based company prevails on the appeal, the bond “will ensure that Xerox is able to collect at least some, if not all, of the damages it will suffer as a result of 3Com’s infringement during the appeal period,” he wrote. 

The bond covers only the potential damages that accrue during the appeal period, not the entire infringement period. 

Xerox sued U.S. Robotics, later acquired by 3Com, in April 1997, claiming that the technology marketed as Graffiti and used in Palm, Handsprings and other handheld devices infringed a Xerox patent received on Jan. 21, 1997. 

Telesca ruled in December that Xerox’s patent for Unistrokes technology invented at its research center in Palo Alto, Calif., was valid and was infringed upon by Palm and 3Com in devices that use “Graffiti” language. 

Last week, the judge denied Xerox’s motion for an injunction that would have prevented Palm from selling its electronic organizers during the appeal period. 

A rejection of Palm and 3Com’s appeal by the Court of Appeals would clear the way for Xerox to seek damages. 

“We continue to serve notice that Xerox will always take the appropriate actions to protect its valuable patents from unauthorized use and infringement,” Xerox general counsel Christina Clayton said. 


Recession solution is new products

Staff
Tuesday February 26, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — To recover from its worst-ever recession, the high-tech industry needs to create better new products said Intel Corp. chief executive Craig Barrett Monday, while speaking at the Intel Developer Forum in San Francisco. 

He said Intel’s decision to continue spending on research, development and manufacturing during the downturn is paying off as the company is now producing faster and cheaper processors than ever before. 

“The only way to get out of a recession is with new products,” Barrett told about 4,000 attendees of the Intel Developer Forum. “Old technology does not sell. ... You need to continue to invest.” 

 

 

 

 


Lawsuit filed against Chevron alleges toxic and carcinogenic dumping

Staff
Tuesday February 26, 2002

FORT WORTH, Texas — Thirteen Parker County families have filed a lawsuit against Chevron Pipe Line Co., alleging it dumped toxic and carcinogenic chemicals at its pipeline booster/pump station east of Brock. 

The families allege chemicals have migrated into the soil and groundwater sources of nearby farms and ranches, Fort Worth law firm Puls, Taylor & Woodson LLP said Monday. 

The lawsuit was filed Feb. 22 in state court in Weatherford. 

Leaks from boosters, sumps, pumps, swab traps and oil water separators on or under the station are cited as sources of the pollution 

A spokesman for ChevronTexaco in Houston, Mickey Driver, said the company hadn’t yet seen the lawsuit and could not comment. 

Chevron Pipe Line Co. is a subsidiary of San Francisco-based ChevronTexaco Corp. 

Brock is about 30 miles west of Fort Worth. 


Slain reporter remembered by classmates, colleagues

The Associated Press
Tuesday February 26, 2002

STANFORD — Stanford University faculty and students mourned the death and honored the life of fallen Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl Monday. 

Pearl, a Stanford alumnus, was remembered as a bright, funny person, who was both a driven and gentle soul. He graduated from Stanford in 1985 with a degree in communications. Nearly 600 people crowded into Memorial Church to remember Pearl. 

“I’m going to miss knowing that he is out there in the world,” said Karen Edwards, who was a classmate of Pearl. 

Stanford President John Hennessy said an endowment would be established in Pearl’s name to benefit communications students. 

Born on Oct. 10, 1963, in Princeton, N.J., Pearl worked for newspapers in Massachusetts after growing up near Los Angeles and graduating from Stanford University. 

Pearl joined The Wall Street Journal in 1990. He spent three years in Atlanta; moved to Washington, D.C., in 1993, where he covered transportation; then moved to London in 1996 and to Paris in February 1998. 

“It was obvious he was destined for a brilliant career,” said Henry Breitrose, a Stanford professor. Based in Bombay, India, for the past year as the Journal’s bureau chief for South Asia, Pearl was on assignment in Pakistan pursuing as part of the newspaper’s coverage of the war on terrorism in neighboring Afghanistan. Nearly a month after his abduction by Islamic extremists, the U.S. State Department confirmed Thursday that Pearl had died. The Journal said it believed Pearl was killed by his captors. 

“I truly like to believe that during the countless hours he was being held by kidnappers, that this also numbed him into thinking clearly, brilliantly and he achieved a state of grace true to his spirit,” said Marion Lewenstein, a Stanford professor. Pearl’s wife Mariane is a French free-lance journalist, who lived and worked with Pearl in Pakistan. She is seven months pregnant with the couple’s first child. 


A radical ‘way of dying’

By Devona Walker, Daily Planet Staff
Monday February 25, 2002

Berkeley remembers famed attorney Robert Treuhaft  

 

Few American biographies are so clearly a patchwork of political struggles, and even fewer of us live the majority of our breathing moments struggling for the rights of others, Berkeley said goodbye to one such man this weekend. 

Memorial services were held on Saturday for famed civil rights Robert Treuhaft at H’s Lordship in the Berkeley Marina.  

Treuhaft died in New York on November 11 at the age of 89. Best known for his years of working on the forefront of several battles in American politics, he was also a known communist during the McCarthy era. After relocating to Oakland, he defended the Black Panthers in the 60’s and more recently collaborated with his late wife, Jessica “Decca” Mitford, on her best-selling book “The American Way of Death,” which exposed wide-scale corruption in the funeral industry and resulted in regulatory interventions.  

He also took up defending labor unions, the Free Speech Movement and defending poor victims of police brutality, antiwar protesters, workers' rights, etc. — you name a cause worth fighting for in America and he was right there. 

In the Bay Area Civil Rights movement, he is credited not only for much of the growth of the progressive movement in the 1940’s but also inspired the political awakening of many who are now synonymous with Bay Area politics. 

In 1953, he was dragged out before the House of Un-American Activities Committee in California and branded as one of the most dangerous and subversive lawyers in the country.  

His wife Jessica, in the book the original “Muckraker” credits him as being her inspiration for the “The American Way of Dying.” It was his work defending the widow’s of longshoreman that spawned the original germ for this expose into the funeral industry.  

“The subject perfectly united his fervor on behalf of the economically exploited with her macabre sense of humor: Until his death, morticians' 

luxury catalogues were still arriving at the Oakland house and making him harrumph and chuckle,” wrote Stephanie Zacherak about the famous couple. 

This book helped shape consumer legislation, and it was reported to influence Robert Kennedy’s decision to purchase a modest coffin for his murdered brother.  

From 1962 to 1978 Treuhaft worked on behalf of the East Bay Civil Rights Congress and became the lead counsel for various demonstrators in Oakland as well as Berkeley.  

He remained active, well into his 80’s, and continued the struggle. 

He inspired his younger colleagues to not give up. One such story was retold on Saturday that had originally been told on he and his wife’s 50th wedding anniversary. 

One young black lawyer recalled that Treuhaft had pushed her to finish law school. She was sitting in a bedroom of the Oakland house and said she suddenly felt inspired. It was then that Treuhaft came in and told her that the room had the same effect on Maya Angelou. “It’s where she begun I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings,” he said. 

 

The UK Independent, CCB Berkeley Oral History 

and the San Francisco Chronicle contributed to this report 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Give students a fighting chance for a voice

Monday February 25, 2002

Editor:  

 

I would like to address the suspicious and tremendously political process that is going on in regards to the redistricting plans for Berkeley, and further highlight the need for a student member on the city council. 

Over the past few months, a battle has been going on between Progressives, Moderates, and Berkeley students.  

Plans have been approved, rejected and repealed — in a manner that typifies politicking as opposed to good governance that we have come to expect out of the Berkeley government. 

It is imperative that the city council approves a city-redistricting plan that not only represents accurate demographic data but that produces a district that gives the 30,000 UC Berkeley student residents a legitimate chance to have one of their own on the city council. 

While the original ASUC plan of a District 7 student population (ages 18-24) of 71%, may have seemed a bit much to some, it nevertheless stood no chance because of an antiquated city charter law that essentially promotes the status quo by requiring that the lines remain in tact as much as possible. This is a tremendously limiting barrier for the city as it prohibits Berkeley from adapting to the natural demographic changes that occur during the ten years between censuses. Berkeley needs to be organized in a way befitting of its actual make-up.  

The Associated Students of the University of California (the student government at Cal) has a plan that does this. By forming districts based on actual numbers, District 7 will have a student population of 60%. In addition, previous plans proposed drastically undercounted by the 1000’s many of the student residential halls populations. And in response to this, certain council plans called for merely spreading the undercount evenly across districts as opposed to including every citizen in Berkeley. This method is completely unacceptable.  

In addition, it appears as if the Progressive Party is set upon moving some students out of District 7 and into District 8 so that they might have a chance to defeat District 8 representative Polly Armstrong (a moderate). This gerrymandering is not only an abuse of power, but also futile as District 8 will remain predominantly moderate in any redistricting plan.  

The importance of redistricting is unquestionable. It extends back to the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and if done properly, can provide a way for underrepresented minority groups to gain political power and leverage. The Berkeley City Council needs to remember this. Having a student-majority district is a natural and needed reality in a city where they represent almost 1/3 of the 96,000 residents. I hope we all remember this in the upcoming meetings regarding this issue, starting with the public debate this Tuesday, February 19th. Redistricting is needed in Berkeley. But it is needed in a way that reflects the demographic structure of the city and not the political wishes of those who vote on it.  


Out & About Calendar

Compiled by Guy Poole
Monday February 25, 2002


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. 

 


Seniors lead Bears past USC

By Dean Caparaz, Daily Planet Correspondent
Monday February 25, 2002

Dennis Gates scored a career-high 17 points as Cal completed a home sweep of the Los Angeles schools by routing USC, 83-64, Saturday afternoon at Haas Pavilion. 

The win improved Cal’s record to 20-6, 11-5 in the Pac-10, and gave head coach Ben Braun his third 20-win season at Cal. USC fell to 19-7, 11-5 in conference, and into a second-place tie with Cal and Arizona. 

Gates was one of four Golden Bears in double figures, including fellow senior starters Ryan Forehan-Kelly (14 points) and Solomon Hughes (10). 

“I’m really happy for them,” Braun said of his seniors. “Their winners by their attitude, by their unselfishness. They’re team guys. I couldn’t ask for a better effort from Solomon, Dennis and Forehan-Kelly.” 

Point guard A.J. Diggs, who started in place of the injured Shantay Legans, chipped in 12 points, four assists and three steals. 

Diggs had his hands full with USC’s Brandon Granville, one of the few Trojans who arrived in Berkeley with his shooting touch intact. The Cal walk-on sophomore did a nice job against USC’s experienced senior point guard, who scored 12 points on 4-of-9 shooting and dished out eight assists. 

“A.J. certainly never backed down from a challenge,” Braun said. “He had a solid game. Not too many people play harder than A.J.” 

The Bears trademark stingy defense made life miserable for the Trojans and star Sam Clancy. The 6-foot-7 center, averaging 19.2 points per game coming into the day, scored 11 points on 4-of-16 shooting. The Bears held USC to just 33.8 percent shooting from the field for the game. 

Freshman Jamal Sampson spent most of the time guarding Clancy, and the freshman outplayed the Pac-10 Player of the Year candidate. 

“I thought this was a big game for him,” Braun said of Sampson. “He’s a guy who takes that challenge [of defending Clancy] on. Jamal was with him step for step.” 

Sampson and the Bears were all over the Trojans during an eight-minute stretch of the second quarter during which Cal outscored USC 12-0. At the 10:52 mark, a Granville free throw tied the game at 24-24, but his team didn’t score again until Clancy hit a bucket with 2:38 remaining in the half. Meanwhile, Sampson scored six points with Clancy guarding him and blocked a shot. Sampson finished with four blocks for the game. 

Joe Shipp had two dunks during the run. The first came off a beautiful behind-the-back, no-look pass from Amit Tamir. The latter had an off-day shooting the ball, making 1-of-7 from the field, but he led the Bears with seven assists. 

‘You can’t measure his worth in just points,’ Braun said. ‘What I was impressed with is he had seven assists and no turnovers.’ 

Cal took a 42-31 lead into halftime. 

USC started out the second half as the more aggressive team, closing to within seven points with a 10-6 run that made the score 48-41. But that was the closest the Trojans would get. Cal slapped them with a 15-7 run, which included six points from Gates and blocked shots by Hughes and Sampson, and the lead swelled to 63-48. 

Cal travels to face the Arizona schools next week with a shot at first place on the line. The Bears need one or both of the L.A. schools to beat first-place Oregon (20-7, 12-4) next week and hope for good results against Arizona State and Arizona. 

But they’ll enjoy this weekend first. 

“They’re big wins,” Braun said of sweeping the L.A. schools. “Playing UCLA and USC in back-to-back games, that’s tough. It’s nice to be getting these wins at the end of the year. I hope it’s indicative of where we’re going.”


Immigrants put out of work by the Feds, protesters say

Molly Bentley, Special to the Daily Planet
Monday February 25, 2002

Seventy to eighty people gathered in tents outside Oakland airport Tuesday to protest a provision in the Aviation and Transportation Security Act that requires airport security screeners to be U.S. citizens. Organizers predicted that 4,500 workers will lose their jobs in the Bay Area, 400 of them at Oakland airport, and the majority of them Filipino. 

“This is part of an anti-immigrant wave,” said Kawal Ulanday, a spokesperson for Filipinos for Affirmative Action, who sponsored the event.  

He said that American citizenship is unnecessary to perform a screener’s job. The government, he said, is fanning the patriotism that swept the country after September 11. “They are trying to create a climate in which all immigrants are suspicious.” 

In effect as of Tuesday, the act requires that federal security screeners replace private security checkers gradually over the year. It nationalizes airport security entirely by November 19th.  

Because federal employment requires U.S. citizenship, non-citizen screeners, even if legal immigrants, could soon start receiving pink slips, according to Ulanday. 

Ulanday coordinated the Oakland rally with similar protests at San Francisco International and San Jose airports in support of Filipino and other immigrant workers. He said that the new law renders immigrants ineligible for the 28,000 new federal security jobs created by the ATWA, and will affect 15 to 20% of screeners nationwide, and as many as 90% of the screeners at SFO.  

Many of the Oakland screeners have had their jobs for a long time, some as many as ten years, according to Ulanday, and have the experience and competency to retain them.  

Ideally, he would like the new law repealed, but as that is unlikely, he would like to see the current screeners receive the necessary training by the Department of Transportation to bring them up to the new security standards and qualify them for the higher pay.  

The new jobs will start at $20,000 to $30,000 a year, according to Jim Mitchell, a spokesperson at the Department of Transportation.  

They now pay, $7.00 to $11.75 an hour. 

Mitchell said that the law is not designed to keep immigrants from federal jobs, but to create a professional security force and a consistent security system. He hopes that the experienced screeners, once they have their citizenship, will apply for the new jobs created by the airport security act. 

“There are a lot of good screeners out there,” said Mitchell. “We want the best ones to stay with us because they have the experience and probably have a lot of good ideas we could use.”  

The citizenship requirement for federal employment is the law, he said, and it is the most practical way to run background checks on potential employees. It’s more difficult to screen applicants that are not U.S. citizens, he said. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Transportation is evolution not a vacuum

Roy Nakadegawa
Monday February 25, 2002

Editor: 

 

Berkeley with a Transit First policy should approach zoning in an evolutionary manner.  

As a minimum, for the area along Hearst Street that is clearly within two major transit corridors, University and San Pablo, via a short accessible walk should maintain status quo zoning, not downzone. Actually, Berkeley should increase density to maintain, support and improve transit.  

Last June on a transit study tour, I visited Curitiba, Brazil, a city that United Nation considers the most Livable and Sustainable City. I viewed transit corridors with 6-10 story buildings lining transitways but a block back they had 3-4 story buildings and further beyond were single storied homes. People use transit for 

65% of all their trips, still surprising, they provide 1.3 million trips/day via only a bus system that is not publicly subsidized. 

Here, AC Transit is upgrading the bus service along San Pablo that will be similar to Los Angeles’ Wilshire Metro Rapid Bus. LA, using signal priority with low-floor buses and special boarding stops has attracted over 40,000 additional riders per day with buses operating at 2 minutes intervals during peak periods and still they are crowded.  

The major reason for its high ridership is the high corridor density. With additional riders, transit service need not be subsidized as much.  

Downzoning leads to less access to transit and negates the effort of AC Transit’s attempt to improve transit through Berkeley. If our intent is to be a Transit First City we should support development of higher density transit corridors and educate the public that this is what we are working towards. In the long run, it will provide for the livability, health, environment and viability of the city similar to Curitiba. 

 

Roy Nakadegawa P.E. 

BART Director, District 3 

Berkeley


St. Mary’s boys win second straight BSAL championship

By Tim Haran, Daily Planet Correspondent
Monday February 25, 2002

The St. Mary’s High boys basketball team executed its game plan perfectly Saturday night and defeated Salesian 69-56 in front of a packed house at Albany High. The win gave the Panthers their second straight Bay Shore Athletic League title and their fifth win the last two seasons over their league rival. 

St. Mary’s guard John Sharper led all scorers with 20 points, including a 3-point rainmaker from NBA range with under two minutes remaining in the game. The hoop, which was the Panthers’ first in more than four minutes, stopped a Salesian comeback run dead in its tracks.  

“We had to make them play our game,” Sharper said after the Panthers’ 19th consecutive victory. “We needed to run and we had to pressure them.” 

Salesian (20-9) knew going into the game that it didn’t want to get sucked into playing St. Mary’s (25-2) up-tempo brand of offense. But the Panthers didn’t give the overmatched Chieftains the option to play any other way. 

“They just wear you down,” said Salesian head coach Bill Mellis. “They get you to play their game.” 

The Chieftains scored the game’s first points on a 3-pointer by 6-foot-3 junior Kevin Richardson, but poor foul shooting (6-of-21) by Salesian and deadly outside shooting by St. Mary’s proved too much for the Chieftains to overcome. The Panthers led by three at the end of the first quarter and stretched it to double-digits at halftime, 33-23.  

Out of the locker room St. Mary’s caught fire, scoring the first seven points and stretching its lead to 55-36 at the end of the third. Salesian staged a rally late in the fourth quarter and pulled to within 10 points, but the sharp-shooting Panthers held on. 

All season St. Mary’s has relied on a trio of senior stars – Sharper, DaShawn Freeman and Chase Moore – to lead the fast-paced offense and pressure defense. Freeman scored 11 Saturday night and Moore, who sat out much of the first half with two fouls, added eight.  

“As long as we kept pushing the ball up court, we knew we’d be fine,” Moore said. “If we gave them an ounce of confidence they were going to take advantage.” 

Fellow St. Mary’s seniors Terrence Boyd and Tim Fanning came up with some key buckets, especially in the second half. Boyd scored nine points, all after the break, including a 3-pointer to open the third quarter. Fanning, meanwhile, came off the bench at the start of the second period and drained two 3’s. In the middle, 6-foot-8 junior Simon Knight tossed in six points, while freshman Larry Gurganious added seven. 

“These kids are tough,” said St. Mary’s head coach Jose Caraballo. “(Many are) seniors, they have a lot of pride. They play like champions.” 

St. Mary’s beat Salesian earlier this season 70-57 and won all three meetings against the Chieftains last year, including a victory in the North Coast Section championship game. 

“It’s always tough to play them because it’s such a rivalry and there’s so much emotion involved,” Caraballo said. 

The Panthers went on to win the Division IV State Championship last season, but won’t repeat this year because they will compete in Division I. 

Caraballo said at the start of the season that he’s set his goals higher for this year and he still thinks that St. Mary’s is one of the best teams at any level. That will be put to the test starting on Tuesday, as the Panthers start the North Coast Section playoffs with a matchup against Antioch High. Caraballo’s squad earned the No. 2 seed and will get a home game in the first round, with tipoff scheduled for 8 p.m. De La Salle High got the top seed. 

After the game Saturday, he wondered what a matchup between two of Northern California’s top teams might yield when the championship game is played at Berkeley’s 12,000-seat Haas Pavilion. 

“Can you imagine us and De La Salle at Haas? How many people we’d have there?” Caraballo said with a grin. “We’ve just got to get there.”


PUC wants to terminate federal power contracts

Daily Planet Wire Report
Monday February 25, 2002

California Public Utilities Commission officials announced they plan to file a complaint with federal authorities today asking them to abrogate or rewrite 44 long-term power contracts that it says are unfair by $21 billion. CPUC officials say commission lawyers will file the complaint with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission tomorrow. 

“It is our hope that the FERC moves expeditiously on this matter to give much-needed justice to ratepayers,'' California commission president Loretta Lynch said. 

“When these contracts were negotiated, the sellers had California over a barrel. Now it's time for the FERC to recognize last year's out of control market prices and lower California's power costs,” she said. 

The complaint, copies of which were made available to reporters on Sunday, says that in January, 2001 “at the height of the California market dysfunction,” the California Department of Water Resources was “thrust into the position of embarking on an unprecedented program of power procurement.”  

That happened, the complaint says, at a time when the market was “dominated by the exercise of market power” by power companies that initial mitigation efforts by the federal officials only made worse. 

“In this environment, despite its best efforts, CDWR was forced to pay unjust and unreasonable prices, and to agree to onerous, unjust and unreasonable non-price terms and conditions, in order to secure the power necessary to ensure that the lights stayed on in California,” the complaint says. 

The complaint says that in many cases, the state was “forced to accept high-priced power for 10 or even 20 years in order to obtain any power at all for the two to three year period in which it sought to focus its efforts.” 

The complaint says the challenged contracts violate applicable law because their prices, terms, and conditions are "tainted with the exercise of market power” and therefore "unjust and unreasonable” under the Federal Power Act. Among the allegedly unfair terms cited are provisions providing for payment priority over bond repayment, a requirement that the water resources department remain creditworthy without a corresponding requirement on the part of the sellers along with other "asymmetrical” terms. 

A spokeswoman for San Jose-based Calpine Corp., one of the companies targeted in the complaint, said Sunday that the action had been expected and “will have no impact on the company's ability to continue to deliver electric power to Californians on the terms of its current contracts with the state.” She said Calpine is “confident that the FERC will find Calpine's long-term contracts with the California Department of Water Resources are just and reasonable.” 

 

 


Thanks to council for watching over, apologies for being misunderstood

John H. DeClercq
Monday February 25, 2002

Editor: 

 

(RE: Daily Planet Newspaper Article, Friday, February 8, 2002) 

 

To the seven of you who voted to support the City Manager’s measured approach, thank you. Your sensitivity to the possibility being misunderstood by many in this country, which could negatively impact the City, is appreciated. 

 

John H. DeClercq 

Senior Vice President 

TransAction Financial Corporation 


Lady Panthers can’t hold early lead, fall to Kennedy

By Tim Haran, Daily Planet Correspondent
Monday February 25, 2002

The St. Mary’s girls basketball team led by as many as 13 points against Kennedy Saturday night, but foul trouble in the backcourt cost the Panthers as the Eagles rallied in the second half to beat St. Mary’s 59-54 at Albany High in the BSAL championship game. 

“We had to help on defense and that got us into foul trouble,” said senior guard Heide Spurgeon, who fouled out early in the fourth quarter. “I wouldn’t say we didn’t match up against (Kennedy center Deidra Chatman), but you definitely have to adjust when you play someone like that.” 

The win gave Kennedy (14-0 BSAL) back-to-back undefeated league seasons and its second straight Bay Shore Athletic League title. 

The two teams could meet again this week in the North Coast Section Division IV playoffs. The Eagles are the No. 3 seed and have a bye in the first round. St. Mary’s earned the sixth seed and face McKinleyville at 6:30 p.m. on Tuesday at home, with the winner heading to Kennedy on Wednesday. 

Kennedy’s Chatman led all scorers with 20 points on Saturday, including 8-of-13 from the free-throw line, while forward Rashonda Abercrombia added 16. 

Heading into the game as the heavy favorite, Kennedy looked unfocused and lackadaisical early on. Their attention shifted from the game when, midway through the first half, there was some confusion as to how many fouls Kennedy’s Crystal Thomsen had. The scorers listed three, but the Eagles counted only two.  

“We couldn’t get caught up in the officials calls,” said Kennedy head coach Allen Moore. “I told them to work the ball inside and capitalize on (St. Mary’s) foul trouble.” 

St. Mary’s (12-2), who squeezed out a two-point win against Holy Names to reach the finals, got into foul trouble early in Saturday’s game. Spurgeon and freshman Nateanah Fripp each picked up three fouls in the first half and were forced to the bench.  

Fripp and St. Mary’s other freshman, Shantrell Sneed, led all Panthers scorers with 18 apiece Saturday night. Fripp scored 12 in the first half alone and junior guard Meghan Leary added 7 for the Panthers. 

“Our two freshmen really stepped up,” Spurgeon said. 

The Panthers led the entire first half, but got drawn into the Eagles’ fast-paced style of basketball in the second and was unable to set up a half court offense. 

“We like to play a half court game, but we started running because we didn’t think they could rotate well,” Spurgeon said. “We got into serious foul trouble and I think we got a little disoriented.” 

St. Mary’s went up by 13 with 6:08 remaining in the second quarter after Fripp was fouled on a 3-pointer. She nailed all three free throws to give the Panthers a 25-12 edge. Kennedy staged an 11-point run right before the break and narrowed the lead to a single point, 30-29, heading into the locker room. 

Less than a minute into the third quarter Kennedy grabbed its first lead of the game on a bucket by Chatman. The Eagles never trailed again and led by as many as 13 with six minutes left in the game. Kennedy fought off a late St. Mary’s run in which Sneed scored 11 points in five minutes and pulled her team to within four. 

“At halftime our coach started out by telling us what they were doing,” Chatman said. “I asked what we needed to do.” 

The answer: get back on defense, work on positioning and get the ball inside to capitalize on St. Mary’s foul trouble. 

Kennedy accomplished those goals in the second half en route to winning its second consecutive BSAL title.  

“I think our coach might have taken the game a bit lightly, but our team didn’t,” Chatman said. “I was a little nervous when we were down in the first half, but I told my team that I wasn’t going to let us lose.”


Marina nomads may soon be forced to migrate

By Devona Walker, Daily Planet Staff
Monday February 25, 2002

Complaints about public sex at Aquatic Park may spark clearing overall changes at marina 

 

Early Sunday morning Egrets and Blue Herons had gathered onto separate pirches, in the distances the last 500 or so feet of the 3,000 foot long Berkeley pier had faded off into the morning dew and 44-year-old Mondo dropped bread crumbs sparingly to the ground.  

“You never know right,” he said laughingly, not wanting to waste too much of the limited food supplies he received yesterday from a Richmond mission. 

“I’ve been on the streets for five years, after all that time I’d be a fool to be surprised anymore.” 

He was in good spirits that morning because he was anticipating that he would be able to eat breakfast and dinner, and in addition he was asked back to work that day.  

Earlier that morning Mondo was so excited that he was unable to sleep and ended up making the acquaintance with a young woman who had pulled p beside his van in an older model stationwagon. She had three children, he remembered, and had left an abusive situation in Castro Valley.  

“She didn’t know where anything was,” Mondo said. “So I drew her a map — where she could get a meal and some groceries and even programs and stuff. Some places you have to listen to a lot of the gospel but some places you don’t, you can just go in and get yourself together. It’s really hard out here for women.” 

Just on the other side of the freeway in Aquatic Park, a political row brewing over alleged public sex, may change things for Mondo as well as the other handful or so homeless people who have been parking there. 

The issue of public sex occurring at the park has been witnessed by very few. It was brought to the Waterfront Commission’s attention by Claudia Kawczynska, a member, said Brad Smith, vice chair of the commission.  

And since then, members have been navigating politically volatile waters — on one hand not wanting to appear homophobic but on the other hand wanting very much to not allow Aquatic Park to degenerate into seediness. 

“There’s been a request for more police at aquatic park,” Kamen said. “But we’re trying to be very careful about this issue because we don’t want to come off as being homophobic or anything. But public sex there especially with Greenland where there are going to be families using the park, it is just not appropriate.”  

“The demographic of people having public sex there don’t tend to be low-lifes by any stretch of the imagination. They tend to be very much closeted,” he added. Consequently one idea that has surfaced is a possible web cam, videotaping activity at the Park. 

“So you put up the web cam and take away the anonymity,” he explained. “Another idea would be to take the KRE building and turn it into a gay social club. I think it would be a wonderful way to get those guys out of the bushes and give them a place to socialize.”  

Commissioners say they do not want to criminalize the men who go there, but with so many plans facing the entire waterfront area, something must happen to change behavior.  

Meanwhile on the marina side proposed changes also threaten the homeless who use the strip of parking between Skates on the Bay and H’s Lordships to sleep in their cars. H’s Lordships will be renovating and adding on more dining space. Negotiations are also underway for the Doc of the Bay site. In addition, there a walkway is planned to go from Skates to the Berkeley Yacht club. All of this activity will undoubtedly affect just how lenient the city looks on the homeless. 

Smith said he believes sexual allegations about Aquatic Park as well as proposals for the Marina to be the basis for increased attention in the area. 

“I think there’s always been a desire to improve Aquatic Park. It has historically had a reputation for being a little seedy,” Smith said. “The topic of the homeless have come up. I haven’t noticed any difference but I think there is a sense of there being an increase in crime.” 

Kamen said the homeless have been in the area for nearly as long as the park itself and he predicts that the number of people actually camping overnight on the marina to be relatively low. 

“In a way it’s really the best place for it. You’d expect them to camp out there and would prefer it to happen there as opposed to a residential neighborhood,” Kamen said.“It’s generally looked up with some leniency to a certain extent. But it can promote other activities if it is not done discreetly.”  

 

 

 


School bureaucrats needs to downsizing

Yolanada Huang
Monday February 25, 2002

Editor: 

 

I want to thank Superintendent Lawrence for beginning the much needed step of reducing BUSD’s top heavy bureaucracy.  

For over two decades the community has been asking the school board and administration to reduce our cumbersome and unproductive administration. BUSD’s management is notorious for bureaucratic sloth. It is this bureaucratic slothfulness that has led us into our current fiscal problem, because the management was not able to produce coherent, consistent and accurate financial information. The reduction of BUSD’s top heavy administration is a much needed step, even if BUSD did not face a fiscal problem. So, thank-you Superintendent Lawrence for beginning this reduction process in the Education Services Division. 

It is this legacy of bureaucratic sloth which gives me grave concern and raises many questions. I have attended both public budget meetings and all Board meetings since last September. The public has been told that one of the main reasons for FCMAT’s intervention is that the numbers in the June, 2001 budget are not reliable nor accurate. We have been told that this inaccuracy is due to BUSD’s antiquated computer and business system. Yet our current financial crisis is entirely predicated upon this antiquated and unreliable computer system because FCMAT’s December, 2001deficit is produced from recalculations of numbers from this antiquated and unreliable computer system. I and members of the public have requested and not yet received an explanation for the $25 million increase in expenditures listed in the December budget figures. 

The Superintendent’s proposed reorganization now before the Board makes sweeping, dramatic and fundamental shifts and cuts. These cuts will change the philosophy upon which our community’s education is based. This is a matter of concern for all of us. 

At the last public hearing on the budget, the Superintendent was specifically asked if there were any comparative analysis of the cost of an elementary school program versus the costs of the high school program. The answer, was no, the computer system could not calculate that. .Given that programs many of us have worked hard to keep face the chopping block, including sports, music, 7 periods at the high school, library, magnet schools and more, I ask that cuts not be made based upon hunches, or estimates. Cuts should only be made based upon correct, accurate facts. 

Before the Board makes any changes and any cuts, it is imperative that the underlying data upon which the FCMAT numbers is based, be made public and a full explanation made as to how the December figures were derived. 

 

Yolanada Huang 

Berkeley


’Jackets claim ACCAL title

By Jared Green, Daily Planet Staff
Monday February 25, 2002

Saturday’s ACCAL championship game between Berkeley High and Encinal High wasn’t exactly high drama: the Lady ’Jackets stomped the Jets by 21 points two weeks ago in the regular season meeting, and there was no reason to think the rematch would be any different. Berkeley cruised out to a 21-9 lead after one quarter and never looked back, winning the league title with a 59-35 victory. 

The ’Jackets (19-8) earned the top seed in this week’s North Coast Section Division I playoffs. They will face Mission San Jose at home on Tuesday, with tipoff scheduled for 7:30 p.m. 

Berkeley head coach Gene Nakamura is in an unusual situation, with just 10 active players on varsity. The ’Jackets are usually the deepest team in California, with 15 players used as interchangable parts, but injuries and academic issues have left the bench thin. Nakamura said he plans to promote five junior varsity players for the postseason, but there will be a larger load for the starters to carry. 

Nakamura’s two senior stars, guard Angelita Hutton and forward Sabrina Keys, proved themselves capable of putting the team on their shoulders on Saturday. scoring Berkeley’s first 19 points to grab a 19-8 lead after six minutes. Hutton nailed three of her game-high four 3-pointers during the early going, with Keys doing the dirty work inside. 

Hutton led Berkeley with 18 points and also had 2 blocked shots. Keys scored 16 points before fouling out in the fourth quarter, and she also had 9 rebounds and 2 blocks. 

The Jets, on the other hand, looked like they had never seen a basketball before for much of the game, committing turnover after turnover and chucking up shots from all over the court. They were just 7-for-41 from the field through the first three quarters and shot just 24 percent for the game, giving them no chance of overtaking the ’Jackets. 

Nicole Hornage was the only Encinal player who approached efficiency on the offensive end, scoring a game-high 22 points. But Encinal’s other weapons, Jackie Randolph, Shafon Rollins and Amber English, were a combined 4-for-37 from the field, with Rollins the high scorer with 4 points. Randolph and Rollins were held scoreless in the first half. 

“We know they’re not a great shooting team,” Nakamura said of the Jets. “We wanted to make them play on the outside and not give up offensive rebounds.”


Today in History

Staff
Monday February 25, 2002

On Feb. 25, 1793, the department heads of the U.S. government met with President Washington at his home for the first Cabinet meeting on record. 

On this date: 

In 1570, Pope Pius V excommunicated England’s Queen Elizabeth I. 

In 1836, inventor Samuel Colt patented his revolver. 

In 1901, United States Steel Corp. was incorporated by J.P. Morgan. 

In 1919, Oregon became the first state to tax gasoline. 

In 1948, Communists seized power in Czechoslovakia. 

In 1950, “Your Show of Shows,” starring Sid Caesar, Imogene Coca, Carl Reiner and Howard Morris, debuted on NBC TV. 

In 1986, President Ferdinand E. Marcos fled the Philippines after 20 years of rule in the wake of a tainted election; Corazon Aquino assumed the presidency. 

In 1990, Nicaraguans went to the polls in an election that resulted in an upset victory for the alliance opposed to the ruling Sandinistas. 

In 1991, during the Persian Gulf War, 28 Americans were killed when an Iraqi Scud missile hit a U.S. barracks in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia. 

In 1994, American-born Jewish settler Baruch Goldstein opened fire inside the Tomb of the Patriarchs in the West Bank, killing 29 Muslims before he was beaten to death by worshippers. 


Cal rugby completes Canadian sweep

By Jared Green, Daily Planet Staff
Monday February 25, 2002

The Cal men’s rugby team got their fourth win in seven days with a 47-13 drubbing of University of British Columbia on Saturday at Witter Field. The Bears took a home sweep of Canada’s top two collegiate teams with the victory. 

“It’s been a good week,” Cal head coach Jack Clark said. “The guys were keen for both games, to keep our tradition going.” 

The Bears also avenged their only loss of last season, a 27-25 setback in Berkeley. After a close win over University of Victoria on Wednesday, Saturday’s game was less competitive much more spirited, with several fights and a barrage of penalties slowing the game to a crawl at times. 

“The referee’s contributions weren’t up to snuff, and the game got a little niggly,” Clark said. “We don’t need that. It just distracts us from what we’re trying to do.” 

It took Cal just seven minutes to take the lead, as a lineout deep in BC territory resulted in flyhalf Matt Sherman punching through the defense for a try and a 7-0 lead. The teams traded penalty kicks twice before Cal center Alex Houser scored on a short run for a 20-6 halftime lead. 

All-America loose forward Kort Schubert scored two tries in the second half for the Bears, the first when he went wide into the backline to outnumber the Thunderbird defenders in the 53rd minute. Schubert scored his second try when Sherman broke loose for a long run, then dumped the ball off just 10 yards from the goal line. 

The Thunderbirds did manage to score their only try in the second half on a freakish play. A poor pass from flyhalf Saro Turner slipped through fullback Stan Manu’s grasp, but the ball hit Manu’s foot and flew through the Cal defense. Manu recovered the ball on a full sprint, then threw a blind pass to wing Rob Petretta for the score. But by that time the Bears were comfortably ahead, and the rest of the game was marked only by a full-field dustup between the teams and a pushover try from the Bears.


UC students, lobbyists share $30m capital building

By Mark Sherman, The Associated Press
Monday February 25, 2002

WASHINGTON — Larry Berman shows off his new building with all the enthusiasm of a real estate agent who thinks he’s about to seal a deal. 

“Come over here,” he said as he stood near the window in the 11th-floor conference room. “Look at that view of the National Cathedral.” 

Berman, a 50-year-old political scientist, is director of the University of California’s Washington program. And his building is the university’s new 11-story Washington Center a few blocks north of the White House. 

The $30 million center, which opened in October, is a combination dormitory and lecture hall for up to 270 students, as well as offices for the university’s eight full-time lobbyists. 

It is the largest operation of its kind in Washington and projects the image of a university that brags about the more than $6 billion a year it gets from the federal government — more than all recipients of federal aid except for a few defense contractors. 

The genesis of the building was “to present a unified image of the University of California in Washington,” said Ellie Ross, UC’s special projects manager. 

The majority of the building is given over to student rooms — rent and parking fees are helping pay for its construction. 

The lobbying operation occupies just one floor but is a critical link between the federal government and the university system, with its nine campuses and three national laboratories. 

“People think of us as being state-funded,” said A. Scott Sudduth, UC’s chief Washington lobbyist. “But we receive as much if not more of our resources from the federal government.” 

The labs at Lawrence Berkeley, Lawrence Livermore and Los Alamos in New Mexico account for nearly half of UC’s federal aid, more than $3 billion. Only half jokingly, Sudduth said UC is the largest employer in New Mexico since the lab’s employees receive UC paychecks. 

Issues of weapons research and security have taken on new importance since Sept. 11, he said. 

The terrorist attacks also are playing an important role in shaping U.S. policy toward foreign students because at least one hijacker entered the country on a student visa. 

“There’s a whole new question post-9/11 of who has access to the American education system in terms of international students,” Sudduth said. 

But the university’s reach extends well beyond the labs and more traditional education policy issues. 

Because three of the university’s five hospitals are so-called safety-net hospitals that serve indigent patients, UC has fought Bush administration efforts to reduce federal payments to the safety-net hospitals. 

The lobbyists also are trying to preserve funding from Medicare, the federal health insurance program for older Americans, to teaching hospitals that train doctors. Proposed cuts could cost the UC hospitals $50 million over five years, Sudduth said. 

He said he’s been asked why UC has such a robust lobbying operation. 

“We receive more R-and-D funding than the Ivy League and Big Ten combined,” he said. 

As federal support of education has increased through student loans and grants as well as research money, lobbying by colleges and universities has increased as well. 

The State University of New York, as part of a push to boost its national profile and double its federal research dollars, last year hired a Capitol Hill lobbyist at a cost of $600,000. 

But SUNY’s goal, to reach $1 billion in research money by 2004, is small by UC’s standards. 

“Because of the national weapons labs, UC has more interaction with the federal government than almost any other university,” said Terry Hartle, senior vice president of the American Council on Education, which represents many of the nation’s universities in Washington. 

Sudduth, 42, who used to run the University of Texas lobbying office and previously worked as a congressional aide, said UC has recruited more experienced lobbyists in recent years, reflecting UC’s desire to influence policy. 

One example is the administration’s science budget. Sudduth said the university is concerned that the National Science Foundation and the Department of Energy are being shortchanged, while the National Institutes of Health has had its budget doubled in the past five years. 

“Now we’re the largest benefactor of the increase at NIH,” Sudduth said. “But NIH is strong in the life sciences, and research doesn’t work that way today.” 

Work on the human genome might include contributions from computer scientists and engineers, as well as specialists in life sciences, he said. 

“We want to maximize the overall budget for basic research. Then let us go out and compete for grant money,” Sudduth said. “We feel confident we’ll get our share.” 

UC officials see their new building as a symbol of their strength — a sparkling glass-paneled, technologically advanced edifice. 

The idea for the new Washington center was to consolidate various university operations under one roof, akin to Washington programs run by Stanford, Boston and Cornell universities. 

Students come from the university’s nine campuses for 10 weeks or a semester at a time. By day, they work as interns throughout the federal government. They take classes in the evening. 

Cam-Tu “Cammie” Nguyen, 21, a senior at UC San Diego, works in the Justice Department’s press office, preparation for what she hopes is a career in public relations. 

She loves the location, a few blocks from the lively Dupont Circle and Adams Morgan neighborhoods. But Nguyen said her parents were hesitant about sending her to Washington after Sept. 11. 

“They were a little bit worried,” she said. “But I assured them that no one who was here in the fall quarter went home.” 

The building opened a few weeks after the terrorist attacks.  

UC students have been coming to Washington for internships for years, working in Congress, the White House and federal agencies while living in the suburbs and taking classes in a downtown office building. 

The structure is the envy of Washington campuses. Those that have their own facilities are in older, smaller buildings. 

“I hear Larry Berman has a great view and parking,” said Linda Jarschauer Johnson, who runs Cornell’s program.


Prop 10 generates $20m for children’s health

By Grant Smith, Special to the Daily Planet
Monday February 25, 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 one 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. 


Presidio tug of war still in the balance

By Paul Glader, The Associated Press
Monday February 25, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Two months after the top official at the Presidio stepped down amid allegations of nepotism and spending abuses, redevelopment plans for the verdant national park are moving forward — slowly. 

The board that controls the Presidio must meet a federal profitability mandate that local citizens fear will sacrifice the park’s environmental and historic sanctity. The Presidio Trust hopes to complete that master plan by June, and local opponents of developing the former Army base want to inject their priorities into that document. 

On Saturday, they gathered to renew the development-versus-preservation tug-of-war that began in 1996, when Congress founded the Presidio Trust — and said it had to be economically self sufficient by 2013. 

While Presidio officials explained the outpost’s 220-year history to hundreds of locals at an open house, Bill Henslin stood with a few dozen protesters to denounce what he described as a corporate takeover of the park. 

“The Presidio is not an enclave to the elite,” said Henslin, co-founder of the Friends of the Presidio National Park. “It should be a place for the public and it should emphasize natural and historic values over corporate values.” 

Protesters said the latter was the priority of James Meadows, the Presidio’s executive director who resigned in December after four years and a history of conflict with citizens groups. Several published reports accused Meadows of misspending on Presidio projects and running a patronage system that gave jobs to relatives and allowed subordinates to pay below-market rents for homes on site. 

Meadows also drew fire from preservationists when the trust inked a deal in August with movie producer George Lucas’ Lucasfilm Ltd. to build a 23-acre office and film production facility. That deal creates a 900,000-square-foot campus for 2,500 workers in place of an old hospital. 

“They had disagreements with his style,” Ron Sonenshine, spokesman for the trust, said Saturday. “He’s not here. What’s past is past.” 

The trust, which oversees 729 buildings and nearly 700 acres of open space, hired an executive consulting firm last week to find a replacement for Meadows. His annual salary was about $200,000, Sonenshine said. 

The citizen groups believe relations could get better with Presidio officials, though they say their vision is opposite the trust’s board of directors that will chose the next executive director. They also are asking for detailed federal audits of the trust’s finances. Sonenshine said the General Accounting Office audited the trust in 2001, part of what he described as “intense scrutiny from Congress and the federal government.” 


Woman arrested in stabbing death of 13-year-old son

The Associated Press
Monday February 25, 2002

BURLINGAME — Police arrested a Minnesota woman on suspicion of stabbing her 13-year-old son to death at his father’s house Sunday. 

Donna Anderson, 49, of Shoreview, Minn., was being restrained by her bleeding ex-husband, Frank Burns, at 8:30 a.m. Sunday when police arrived at the home. 

Police said the teen-ager had been stabbed multiple times in the chest and upper torso. 

Police also suspect Anderson of stabbing Burns in the leg with a seven-inch kitchen knife as he tried to restrain her. Burns was treated and released from the hospital for his injury. 

Police said Burns heard a scream and went to see what was happening when he reportedly found Anderson stabbing the boy. 

The woman had brought her son from Minnesota to California so he could visit his father and grandparents, who live in the same house in the small city about 15 miles south of San Francisco. 

Burlingame Police Chief Gary Missel said they do not have a motive yet. 


Nuke dump foes try to gather support from California cities

The Associated Press
Monday February 25, 2002

SAN JOSE — Opponents of a proposed nuclear waste dump are trying to gather support from communities in California and 44 other states in the path of trucks and trains hauling radioactive materials to the site. 

Under one scenario, up to 300 loads of waste from California’s Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant would be hauled by train through San Jose to the proposed Yucca Mountain waste site. Other possibilities would mean hundreds of trucks traveling on Interstate 5 from Southern California. The shipments, encased in hardened steel, lead-lined casks, could begin as early as 2010. Nevada officials and casino owners are spending more than $5 million on a national lobbying campaign warning of the risks of radiation poisoning and cancer. In California, there are four nuclear reactor sites where waste would be removed: Diablo Canyon near San Luis Obispo, San Onofre near San Clemente, and two shut-down locations — Humboldt Bay near Eureka and Rancho Seco near Sacramento. “I would be very concerned if the waste passed through urban areas like ours,” said Rep. Mike Honda, D-San Jose, who said he hasn’t decided how to vote on the dump. “When something is moving like that, it’s vulnerable to terrorists.” 


Computer dumping documented in China

Staff
Monday February 25, 2002

SAN JOSE — What happened to that old computer after you sold it to a second-hand parts dealer? 

Environmental groups say there’s a good chance it ended up in a Third World dump, where thousands of laborers burn, smash and pick apart electronic waste to scavenge for the precious metals inside — unwittingly exposing themselves and their surroundings to innumerable toxic hazards. 

Now a report being released Monday documents one such “cyber-age nightmare” — a cluster of villages in southeastern China where computers still bearing the labels of their one-time owners in America are ripped apart and strewn along rivers and fields. 


High-tech hits the road

The Associated Press
Monday February 25, 2002

‘Telematics,’ or automotive electronics rev up marketplace 

 

 

SAN JOSE — For months now, Nicole Gunther hasn’t heard her 4-year-old daughter whine from the back seat, “Are we there yet?” 

The relief came when Gunther and her husband purchased a Honda minivan with a DVD player and satellite navigation system. Now Disney films keep her child quieter on car trips, and the days of getting lost are over. The Gunthers are the kind of consumers that automakers and high-tech companies prize as they rev up on “telematics” — automobile versions of the communication and entertainment staples of the home and office. 

Telematics gear is fast expanding past navigation devices and rear-seat DVDs, as new technology such as satellite radios gain traction. Within two years, motorists can expect to get traffic reports specific to their location or commute. Advanced vehicle diagnostics would let cars automatically transmit performance data to dealerships. 

Some companies are working on wireless technologies that one day — perhaps in five to 10 years — would allow users to get new movies and songs wirelessly from home, gas stations and convenience stores. Other technologies could control thermostats and lights at home while driving. 

For start-ups and tech giants alike, cars represent untapped frontier. Automakers, meanwhile, are looking to cater to the lifestyle of the digital road warrior. 

“People are used to using wireless communications and having continual contact with office and home, and people are used to using these technologies on the road,” said Dan Garretson, automotive industry analyst for Cambridge, Mass.-based Forrester Research. 

That is why some observers believe the market for automotive electronics is on the verge of a boom. 

Forrester predicts the industry will grow in annual revenues to $20 billion in 2006 from $1.6 billion in 2001. 

Just two years ago, telematics products consisted mainly of navigation systems offered only in a few high-end cars and the fledgling OnStar service from General Motors. 

Today, navigation options are also found in mid-range cars, and factory-installed satellite radios, offered first by Cadillac in two of its 2002 models, are making its way into dozens more 2003 models, including cars by GM, Ford and DaimlerChrysler. 

Still, high price tags will keep many features from becoming as standard as AM-FM radios, carmakers say. An in-dash DVD player with rear-seat display or a navigation system typically costs $1,500 to $2,000. OnStar fees range from $200 to $400 a year. 

 

 

 

 


Adobe to release new Photoshop

The Associated Press
Monday February 25, 2002

SAN JOSE — Adobe Systems Inc., the second-largest PC software company, will announce Sunday a major upgrade to its photo editing program, Photoshop. 

Photoshop 7.0, slated to be available in April, is compatible with the newest operating systems from Apple Computer Inc. and Microsoft Corp. — Mac OS X and Windows XP. 

The software, however, is expected to be a boost for Apple, which introduced Mac OS X a year ago. 

Both Apple and Adobe cater strongly to creative professionals, and analysts think many of them delayed buying new Apple machines or upgrading to OS X to wait for more software, notably Photoshop, to run on the platform. 

“It’ll be extremely good for Apple,” said Ron Glaz, analyst with market research firm International Data Corp. “OS X didn’t take off in the graphic artist world because there was no Photoshop for it.” 

But the explosion in digital photography has made Photoshop attractive to consumers as well. Adobe estimates more than half of its Photoshop sales are to hobbyists and nonprofessionals. 

“Your average Joe is even longing for Photoshop products now,” said Ed Lee, analyst with Lyra Research. 

The new version further simplifies the photo editing process and adds many tools to alter images. 


14th Dist. Stretch

By Devona Walker, Daily Planet Staff
Saturday February 23, 2002

In final weeks until the March 5th  

Primary, assembly hopefuls reveal what  

sets them apart 

 

Though housing and energy are the pressure points in California politics education appears to be the key. And in the bid for the 14th district assembly seat all three candidates are promoting themselves as “the education candidate.”  

With only a few weeks left until the March 5th primary, the two major candidates appear to be running neck and neck — with West Contra Costa school district board member Charles Ramsey’s headquarters optimistic about Richmond and former Berkeley Mayor Loni Hancock placing her hopes on old stomping grounds.  

The third candidate in this race is Dave Brown, a political analyst, who as a former public school teacher, has his own personal ties to education. 

Educating Ramsey  

“What I bring to the race that no other candidate brings is experience with education. I have done it no one else can say that,” Ramsey said referencing his tenure with the once fiscal insolvent West Contra Cost County School District. “I have experience turning a school district around, recruiting and keeping good teachers and getting results from students,” Ramsey said. 

Last October the Academic Performance Index showed that 33 out of 50 schools in the West Contra Costa Unified School District improved their overall schoolwide numbers in 2001. 

Overall, 26 of 39 elementary schools met their schoolwide growth targets, along with three of five middle schools.  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


1906 earthquake spawned West Berkeley plants

Susan Cerny, Special to the Daily Planet
Saturday February 23, 2002

South-west Berkeley was mostly open farm land until the 1906 Earthquake and Fire not only destroyed many manufacturing plants in San Francisco, but drove the companies out of the city permanently. Among the manufacturer's who left and settled in Berkeley were Jackson-Byron Iron Works, McCaulay Foundry, and Pfister Knitting Company. These companies built new manufacturing plants in the vicinity of Seventh and Eighth streets between Dwight and Parker.  

One of the businesses that came to Berkeley as the result of the 1906 Earthquake was the Kawneer Company. This company produced a revolutionary styled metal-framed window which was greatly sought after for the rebuilding of San Francisco. Since the manufacturing plant was in Kansas City, the company built a second plant in Berkeley in 1912 on Eighth Street between Dwight and Parker.  

The designer of these popular metal-framed windows, and founder of the company, was Francis John Plym. When Plym visited the 1893 Chicago World’s Fair he was twenty-four years old and had only a sixth grade education. But the fair inspired Plym to become an architect and he entered the University of Illinois School of Architecture where he successfully obtained a degree.  

By 1906 he was the city architect of Kansas City, and had also patented a design for a metal frame window. Plym called his new product “Kawneer” after the Kansas River, commonly known as the “Kaw.” His window design was widely used in commercial and industrial buildings throughout the world, and became the foundation of today’s modern glass-wall architecture.  

The window factory Plym designed for his Berkeley plant incorporated a series of twenty windows projecting from the roof and letting natural light into the work area. These projecting windows created the distinctive saw-tooth silhouette, which became a common feature in industrial buildings. The Kawneer Company continued to manufacture windows in this building until 1958 when it was sold to the Sealy Mattress Company.  

By 1972 the building had been converted into artists’ studios, and small theater groups performed in some of the spaces. During the 1970s many old manufacturing buildings were being vacated and, like the Kawneer Building, were reused for artists' studios. The spaces were large, open and the rent was affordable. Now, thirty years later, a building like Kawneer is sought after by much more affluent tenants and the artists are being displaced throughout west Berkeley.  

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


Wanted: Berkeley library old-timers

Sayre Van Young
Saturday February 23, 2002

Editor: 

 

The Central Library at Shattuck & Kittredge will soon re-open amidst a great deal of Berkeley-style hoopla and enthusiasm. 

Library staff are especially eager to share the renovated and restored “New Central” with the entire community.  

As part of the re-opening gala planned for April 6, we'd like to honor any residents who may have attended the original opening of the Library on January 31, 1931. We're seeking your readers' help in locating those special library patrons. Could anyone who was there on that day, and who'd like to share the fun on April 6, please give me a call at the Berkeley Public Library at 510-649-3947?  

 

 

Sayre Van Young 

Berkeley History Room 

Berkeley Public Library 

 

 

 

 


A BIG, BAD, MOVIE

By Christy Lemie The Associated Press
Saturday February 23, 2002

Self-indulgence, pretentiousness peppers the underdog 

 

“Big Bad Love” is a small, bad movie about an alcoholic Southern writer who writes about being an alcoholic Southern writer, then drinks more when editors reject his drunken submissions. 

Based on the short stories of Mississippi writer Larry Brown, the film is both incoherent and pretentious. Arliss Howard, who stars as Leon Barlow and directed and co-wrote the script, relies on heavy-handed metaphors and naggingly repetitive imagery. 

Leon tacks up words and bits of phrases on the wall behind his typewriter — we see the words, then we hear him say the words, then we see the words played out in front of us. 

Leon boozes himself into oblivion and passes out, then wakes up hungover and stumbles around chain-smoking all day before repeating the cycle. Sometimes he tries to get back in the good graces of his ex-wife, Marilyn (Debra Winger, Howard’s real-life wife, in her first film role in six years). 

Sometimes his mother (Angie Dickinson) comes by to make him feel guilty about neglecting his pre-adolescent son and young daughter, who’s ill. 

Mostly he sits around drinking Maker’s Mark and cheap beer with Monroe (Paul Le Mat), his buddy from Vietnam, who is wealthy but lives like a slob in true Southern Gothic fashion. 

Leon’s inebriated reality is punctuated by stream-of-consciousness fantasy sequences. He receives an encouraging rejection letter from a New York editor, and pictures her being led through a field on horseback, wearing a sexy black cocktail dress, tossing his pages in the air one by one. 

Marilyn and their children appear to him standing in a doorway in the middle of a field — sometimes they’re in danger, sometimes they just stare at him disapprovingly. 

At least when David Lynch thrusts this kind of imagery at us, it’s interesting and it looks good. 

Howard, with his wiry frame, is reminiscent of Ed Harris as the tormented artist Jackson Pollock in 2000’s “Pollock,” with a cigarette perpetually dangling from his mouth as he hovers over his latest creation. 

And the same things that were wrong with “Pollock” also plague “Big Bad Love.” 

The movie catalogues Leon’s self-destructive behavior without hinting at its origin. We’re simply expected to accept that that’s the way he is, which makes it difficult to sympathize or connect with him on any level. 

And because it’s based on a series of short stories, “Big Bad Love” feels fragmented. There’s no driving story arc — just episodes, then the closing credits. 

Maybe Howard should have made a movie based on a different Larry Brown, the Philadelphia 76ers coach whose run-ins on the court with Allen Iverson would make more interesting movie fodder than Leon’s run-ins with himself. 

 

“Big Bad Love,” is rated R.


Art & Entertainment Calendar

Staff
Saturday February 23, 2002

MUSIC 

 

924 Gilman Feb. 23: From Ashes Arise, Artimus Pyle, Brainoil, Down in Flames, Dystrophy, Scholastic Deth; Mar. 1: Street to Nowhere, Thick as Thieves, Calimigo, Scociopath, Samsara, Dead in the End; Mar. 2: Funeral Dinner, Betray the Species, The Shivering, Confidante, The Cause, Get Get Go; Mar. 8: Dead and Gone, Drunk Horse, The Cost, Scurvy Dogs; Mar. 9: Not Flipper, The Sick, Lo-FI Niessans, Stalker Potential, Deficient; All shows start a 8 p.m. unless noted; Most are $5; 924 Gilman St. 525-9926. 

 

The Albatross 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. 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. 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 Mar. 10: 3 p.m., The Petersen Quartet perform the works of Beethoven, Shostakovich and Ravel. $34; Zellerbach Hall, UC Berkeley, 642-9988 

 

Cato’s Ale HouseFeb. 24: Blue and Tan; Feb. 27: Vince Wallace Trio 

 

Club Jjang-ga 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. 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. 

 

The Starry Plough 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 

 

“Free Men! Free Women!” 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 

 

“Soukous Xplosion Tour 2002” Mar. 1: 9 p.m. Madilu Systems, Nyboma, Diblo Dibala & Matchatcha and special guest Daly Kimoko will make the sounds of Africa come alive. $25, $30 at door. California Ballroom, 1736 Franklin St., Oakland, 415-421-8497 

 

“Cosi Fan Tutte” 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 

 

“In Praise of Music: Berkeley Choral Festival” Mar. 4: 8 p.m., Several local choral groups will join the Berkeley Symphony Orchestra in a benefit for the Musicians’ Pension Fund. $25 - $49, $12 students. Zellerbach Hall, UC Berkeley Campus, 841-2800 

 

“Splendors of Versailles and Madrid” Mar. 9: 8 p.m., Mar. 10: 7:30 p.m., Jordi Savall conducts the Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra as they perform works from the Royal Court composers of Spain and France. $34 - $50. First Congregational Church, Dana & Durant, 415-392-4400 

 

 

“Here..Now” 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 

 

“Kusum Africa” Mar. 1 & 2: 8 p.m., Sixty artists and four dance companies representing the traditions of the Congo, Republic of Guinea, and Ghana adapt sub-Saharan dance-drumming to tell the story of the occupation of Accra, Ghana to protest British colonialism. $18 - $30. Zellerbach Hall, UC Berkeley Campus, 642-9988 

 

“Risk of Falling” Mar. 9: 8 p.m., Mar. 10: 4:30 p.m., Julie Drucker has assembled troupe of dancers ages 24 to 83 to perform an intergenerational dance project that weds improvisational movement and personal storytelling to explore issues of trust, fear, aging and community. $12 - $15, $10 seniors. Hillside Community Church, 1422 Navellier St., El Cerrito, 286-7922 

 

 

 

 

“Compania Espanola De Antonio Marquez” Mar. 13 & 14: 8 p.m., Artistic Director Antonio Marquez showcases his dazzling and dynamic program of flamenco. $24 - $36. Zellerbach Hall, UC Berkeley Campus, 642-9988


Out & About Calendar

Compiled by Guy Poole
Saturday February 23, 2002


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).  

 

– Compiled by Guy Poole


Berkeley High seniors shine in last home game

By Jared Green, Daily Planet Staff
Saturday February 23, 2002

Team elders score 61 of ’Jackets’ season-high 98 points vs. De Anza 

 

It was Senior Night at Berkeley High’s Donahue Gym on Friday night, as the ’Jackets played their last home game of the season. But while four of the six seniors honored before the game aren’t used to starting or even playing very much, they put together an inspired performance against the overmatched De Anza Dons, scoring 43 of the team’s 53 points in the first half and nearly breaking the 100-point barrier with a 98-45 win. 

Senior Jesse Alter led the ’Jackets with 16 points, his season-high, with classmate Garland Albert scoring 14, also his top effort of the season. All six seniors scored at least 5 points. 

“This is the first time we’ve gotten to play together,” senior Lee Franklin said. “The key was for us to come out and have fun, and that’s what we did tonight.” 

Berkeley got off to a quick start, running out to a 24-10 lead after just six minutes of play. Franklin hit a breakaway layup to finish the run, the last senior to break into the scoring column. Center Damien Burns, Berkeley’s leading scorer, may have finished with just 8 points, but he got the crowd going early with two huge dunks, and senior guards Madiou Diouf and Daryl Perkins pitched in with 3-pointers before the underclassmen got a shot with 40 seconds left in the quarter. 

“This was their night,” Berkeley head coach Mike Gragnani said of his graduating class. “They worked as a unit all week in practice, and they came out here with something to prove.” 

The seniors were on the bench for just over a minute of game time, as Gragnani didn’t like what he saw from his second unit and put the starters back in early in the second quarter. 

“(The reserves) came in and dropped the ball compared to what the seniors were doing,” Gragnani said. “That’s not acceptable.” 

The seniors pushed the lead to 39-17 before K.K. Alexander scored on a short jumper, the first underclassman to score for Berkeley. The game was pretty well decided by that time, with the Dons simply unable to get quality shots against the bigger, faster ’Jackets. 

They might not have been quality shots, but De Anza’s Tristan Newsome still managed to heave up a truckload of bombs. He was just 9-of-26 from the floor, but Newsome just kept jacking up shots from all over the court, finishing with a game-high 23 points. 

Berkeley almost managed to score in triple figures with a late surge. The seniors returned for one last run with a 86-37 lead with less than two minutes left in the game and came up just one basket short. Albert, who was fouled on two dunk attempts during the last final minute, hit a 3-pointer with just 20 seconds left, but Gragnani ordered his team to back off and allow the Dons to run out the clock. 

“Coach wanted to show some class, so he told us to lay back,” Franklin said. “It would have been nice to get 100 points, though.” 

Berkeley clinched a tie for the league championship with Pinole Valley, but the Spartans get the league’s automatic bid to the North Coast Section playoffs due to a tie-breaker determined before the season began. Gragnani will head to the seeding meeting on Sunday morning to apply for an at-large bid, which the ’Jackets are expected to receive. 

“We’re projected at a five- or six-seed,” Gragnani said. “I’d love the fifth seed, but it doesn’t really matter who we play. It’s how we play that matters.” 

Alter said that while he was “ecstatic” with Friday night’s home finale, he’s anxious to get into the post-season. 

“I’m so ready for playoff time,” he said. “We’re going to play as a team, we’re going to play together, and that’s what it takes to win.”


Bayer, Aventis to Merge

Wire and Staff Report
Saturday February 23, 2002

Berkeley-based Bayer has announced plans to merge its unit that makes blood-plasma products with a rival owned by Aventis of France. 

Bayer said it had signed a letter of intent to take a “substantial majority interest” and management control of the venture, which will have annual sales of more than $2 billion. Bayer also would have an option to buy the stake held by Aventis at a later date. 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Magnet School is vital, should not close

Steve Geller
Saturday February 23, 2002

Editor: 

 

There have been many good reports about the "City of Franklin" school. 

It seems to be involved in real practical education. It's an example of a small learning community, which is supposed to be such a good idea. 

Now, with a budget crunch, this good school is said to have too few students and should be closed. 

This is nonsense. Why doesn't this "magnet" school attract an abundance of students? It's centrally located, with access to bus lines coming from all over Berkeley. 

Something is badly wrong with policy here. 

 

Steve Geller 

Berkeley 

 


Alice Cooper is PTA’s patriot

Staff
Saturday February 23, 2002

PHOENIX — Shock-rocker Alice Cooper and his wife, Sheryl, are putting on a patriotic show at a Phoenix elementary school this week. The Coopers have been writing and directing the annual Hopi Elementary Variety Show every year since having to sit through what seemed like an endless recital 14 years ago. 

“It was dry as it could be,” Sheryl Cooper said. This year’s show, Hopi Doodle Dandy, mixes the mystery of a missing Declaration of Independence with songs, dances and skits. The show was expected to sell out Thursday and Friday, packing more than 3,000 people into an auditorium for two shows at Arcadia High School. “Alice Cooper will make his annual appearance in the show, as will Sheryl.


Hutchinson throws complete game to beat Boston College

Daily Planet Wire Services
Saturday February 23, 2002

Behind a complete game pitching performance by Trevor Hutchinson, a 17-hit attack and seven stolen bases, Cal defeated visiting Boston College, 10-4, Friday at Evans Diamond.  

The Bears improved their record to 6-6, while the Eagles go to 3-1.  

Hutchinson improved his record to 3-1 by pitching 9 innings, giving up 10 hits, four runs, two walks and getting five strikeouts. It was a less-than dominating performance by Cal’s top starter, but it got the job done. 

Cal had several hitting stars on the day. Sophomore first baseman Conor Jackson continued his hot streak, going 4-for-5 with an RBI against the Eagles. Junior left fielder Ben Conley was 4-for-5 with a double and an RBI, sophomore right fielder Brian Horwitz was 3-for-5 with two RBI and senior second baseman Carson White was 3-for-4 with an RBI. Junior catcher John Baker added a two-run homer in the fourth inning and sophomore shortstop Jeff Dragicevich had a double and two RBI.  

The losing pitcher for Boston College was starter Matt O’Donnell (0-1, 3.7 innings, 11 hits, eight runs, one walk, one strikeout). Matt Lederhos and Jason Delaney had two hits apiece for the Eagles, while Brian Macchi had a two-run homer in the fifth inning.  

Cal hosts Boston College in the second game of the three-game series Saturday at 1 p.m. at Evans Diamond. The series finale is on Sunday at 1 p.m.


Cal professor helps to defy aging process

Guy Poole, Daily Planet staff
Saturday February 23, 2002

A combination of two over-the-counter dietary supplements have reduced the effects of aging in rats, and might do the same for an aging population, according to a recent study.  

A team of researchers led by noted scientist Bruce N. Ames, professor of molecular and cell biology at UC Berkeley, fed older rats two compounds, acetyl-L-carnitine and alpha-lipoic acid, normally found in the body and available as dietary supplements, and noted the rats had improved memory, more energy and improved energy-producing organelles.  

The study was conducted at UC Berkeley and Children’s Hospital Oakland Research Institute and concluded that the two chemicals “tune up” the energy-producing organelles that power all cells, the mitochondria.  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Check-stealing is not only mailbox threat

Susan. Libby
Saturday February 23, 2002

Editor: 

 

Your article concerning check stealing made me think that you might also like to publicize the fact that mail theft from mailboxes is a problem now. 

I never thought about the fact that my mail sat in my mail box all day while I was at work until recently someone stole my mail. Items such as bank statements, credit card bills, checks and even credit card application forms are sought.  

The post office says that once the mail has been delivered it is no longer a post office affair; it becomes a matter for the police. The police were courteous and filed a report but they really weren't interested. 

However, the fraud department for my credit card pursued the matter. In any case, people should be aware and assess how vulnerable their mailbox is to mail theft. They should take steps to assure that their mail is not stolen. 

Identity theft is a big problem and it is surprising how much information comes through the mail. 

 

Susan. Libby 

Berkeley 

 

 


Judge’s order music to Napster’s ears 924 Gilman Feb. 23: From Ashes Arise, Artimus Pyle, Brainoil, Down in Flames, Dystrophy, Scholastic Deth; Mar. 1: Street to Nowhere, Thick as Thieves, Calimigo, Scociopath, Samsara, Dead in the End; Mar. 2: Funera

By Ron Harris, The Associated Press
Saturday February 23, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Napster, still stinging from the forced shutdown of its song-swap service last July, enjoyed a small legal victory as a federal judge ordered record labels to produce documents and prove copyright ownership of songs from Elvis Presley, the Beatles and other top artists. 

U.S. District Judge Marilyn Hall Patel appointed an expert to review documents the record labels must turn over to show they own the rights to more than 200 “works for hire” — music commissioned by labels and performed by artists under contract. 

Napster had argued that the court must first determine if the music industry actually owns the rights to the works allegedly infringed if the Redwood City-based company is to be held liable for damages for allowing the songs to be traded through its online network. 

“We are pleased that the court granted Napster’s request to examine two critical issues: the record companies’ ownership of artists’ copyrights and anticompetitive behavior that amounts to misuse of their copyrights,” Napster general counsel Jonathan Schwartz said in a statement. 

Major record labels sued Napster in 1999 for copyright infringement. 

Napster admits the record labels that sued the Redwood City-based company in 1999 control 85 percent of all music sales. Patel agreed the labels have likely secured ownership of the songs at issue. 

“However, the court is equally reticent to allow plaintiffs, merely because of the quantity of music they control, to railroad Napster into potentially billions of dollars in statutory damages without adequately proving ownership,” Patel said in her order made public Friday. 

The judge also opened the door to legal discovery on Napster’s claims that the labels misused their copyrights to dominate the growing online music distribution industry. 


Golden Bears fall to UCLA

Daily Planet Wire Services
Saturday February 23, 2002

LOS ANGELES - In a preview of a first round Pac-10 Tournament game, California fell to UCLA, 58-48, in a defensive battle Friday night at Pauley Pavilion. 

“We had very good ball movement for the first 12 minutes of the first half,” said Cal head coach Caren Horstmeyer. “This was an odd game. We could play so hard and with such passion against Washington and then come out against UCLA, a team we fell we’re better than, and just be out-competed, out-hustled and outplayed. Going into the Pac-10 Tournament, you would like to come out and see a little bit of fire.” 

Cal dropped to 7-18 (2-15 Pac-10) with the loss and UCLA improved to 8-18 (4-13). The Bruins have clinched the No. 8 seed in next week’s inaugural Pac-10 Tournament with the win. Even if Cal wins Sunday against USC and UCLA loses to Stanford, the Bruins will have the tie breaker with the Bears based on their sweep of Cal during the regular season.  

LaTasha O’Keith led Cal with nine points, followed by Leigh Gregory with seven. Gennifer Arranaga came off the bench to pace UCLA with 14 points. Shalada Allen turned in a double-double with 12 points and a career-high 14 rebounds. Whitney Jones also had 12 points for the Bruins, 10 coming in the first half.  

O’Keith hit a three-pointer to give Cal its biggest lead of the game at 15-11 with 11:23 to play until halftime. The Bruins then tightened up their defense and sliced through the Bears’ defense for numerous lay-ups to grab their biggest lead of the half at 30-21 following a basket from Shalada Allen at the 2:14 mark.  

The Bears didn’t let the Bruins extend their lead to double figures and trailed 32-25 at the half.  

Both teams’ offenses were cold in the second half for long stretches, but UCLA was still able to extend its lead to 13 at 49-36 with about four minutes left in the game.  

UCLA played zone against Cal for almost the entire game, which led to the Bears 22.6 percent shooting for the game. At times, it seemed like there was a lid on the basket as the Bears got good looks but didn’t score enough.  

The Bears substituted for offense and defense situations down the stretch and cut the Bruins lead to nine. But that was as close as they would get.  

“We did not shoot well,” said Horstmeyer. “We had good looks, but we just missed shots.”  

The Bruins also shot a paltry 33.8 percent for the game.  

On a positive note, Cal snared a season-high 49 rebounds, including 19 on the offensive glass, to out-rebound UCLA by one. Senior center Ami Forney had a team-high eight boards for the Bears. Cal also committed only 17 turnovers for the game after having 11 at halftime.


Hemlocks kick off new legalization effort

By David Scharfenberg, Daily Planet staff
Saturday February 23, 2002

The Bay Area Hemlock Society, led by Berkeley-based Rev. Dennis Kuby, will kick off a new effort to legalize physician-assisted suicide Sunday afternoon with a meeting at Northbrae Community Church. 

“Our people are going to confront the politicians,” said Kuby. “We’re planning to become rather militant about this.” 

Kuby said he is organizing supporters locally and statewide to lobby their representatives on the controversial issue. 

California voters rejected a 1992 ballot initiative, by a 54 to 46 percent margin, to legalize assisted suicide.  

In 1999, 14th District Assemblywoman Dion Aroner introduced legislation to legalize the practice, but it died in committee. 

A discussion group, composed of legislators on both sides of the issue, is currently meeting and will report to the Select Committee on Palliative Care, which is focused on issues of chronic pain, this summer. 

“I’m not naive,” said Hans Hemann, Aroner’s legislative director. “I don’t predict that they will come to a consensus on physician-assisted suicide.” 

Kuby said he supports legislation similar to the Oregon physician-assisted suicide law passed by voters in 1997. That law requires a patient to be 18 or older, capable of communicating health care decisions and diagnosed by two doctors with an illness that will lead to death within six months. 

Dr. Joel Fort of El Cerrito, who advises the Bay Area Hemlock Society, said patients in severe pain should have the opportunity to end their suffering through physician-assisted suicide.  

But, he added that the safeguards built into the Oregon law are essential. “I think it should be screened carefully,” he said. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Sports shorts

Staff
Saturday February 23, 2002

Legans out for USC game 

Cal junior point guard Shantay Legans will sit out Saturday’ s game against No. 20 USC Saturday due to a concussion he suffered in Thursday’ s contest vs. UCLA.  

Legans, who averages 7.2 points and 3.9 assists for the Bears, sustained the injury in the closing minutes of Cal’ s 69-51 win over the Bruins. With 2:44 left in the game, UCLA’ s Matt Barnes knocked Legans to the floor with his forearm, and Legans sustained the concussion when his head hit the ground. Barnes received a one-game suspension for the incident.  

Legans’ status for next week’ s games at Arizona State and Arizona will be determined early in the week.  

Cal head coach Ben Braun said that sophomore A.J. Diggs would start in Legans’ place. Diggs started five consecutive games earlier this season.  

 

Cal officials looking into complaints about coach 

Cal officials are reported to be investigating complaints against former women’s gymnastics coach Trina Tinti, who resigned earlier this week. 

The complaints have to do with an unusually high injury rate for Tinti’ s team. Four Golden Bears were injured in as many weeks earlier this season. 

Cal officials said Tinti’ s resignation was her own decision. Assistant coaches Jennifer Bialosky and Steve Wilken have taken over Tinti’ s duties for the time being.


School bureaucrats needs to downsizing

Yolanada Huang
Saturday February 23, 2002

Editor: 

 

I want to thank Superintendent Lawrence for beginning the much needed step of reducing BUSD’s top heavy bureaucracy.  

For over two decades the community has been asking the school board and administration to reduce our cumbersome and unproductive administration. BUSD’s management is notorious for bureaucratic sloth. It is this bureaucratic slothfulness that has led us into our current fiscal problem, because the management was not able to produce coherent, consistent and accurate financial information. The reduction of BUSD’s top heavy administration is a much needed step, even if BUSD did not face a fiscal problem. So, thank-you Superintendent Lawrence for beginning this reduction process in the Education Services Division. 

It is this legacy of bureaucratic sloth which gives me grave concern and raises many questions. I have attended both public budget meetings and all Board meetings since last September. The public has been told that one of the main reasons for FCMAT’s intervention is that the numbers in the June, 2001 budget are not reliable nor accurate. We have been told that this inaccuracy is due to BUSD’s antiquated computer and business system. Yet our current financial crisis is entirely predicated upon this antiquated and unreliable computer system because FCMAT’s December, 2001deficit is produced from recalculations of numbers from this antiquated and unreliable computer system. I and members of the public have requested and not yet received an explanation for the $25 million increase in expenditures listed in the December budget figures. 

The Superintendent’s proposed reorganization now before the Board makes sweeping, dramatic and fundamental shifts and cuts. These cuts will change the philosophy upon which our community’s education is based. This is a matter of concern for all of us. 

At the last public hearing on the budget, the Superintendent was specifically asked if there were any comparative analysis of the cost of an elementary school program versus the costs of the high school program. The answer, was no, the computer system could not calculate that. .Given that programs many of us have worked hard to keep face the chopping block, including sports, music, 7 periods at the high school, library, magnet schools and more, I ask that cuts not be made based upon hunches, or estimates. Cuts should only be made based upon correct, accurate facts. 

Before the Board makes any changes and any cuts, it is imperative that the underlying data upon which the FCMAT numbers is based, be made public and a full explanation made as to how the December figures were derived. 

 

Yolanada Huang 

Berkeley


News of the Weird

Staff
Saturday February 23, 2002

Wedding goes on despite cold paws 

JACKSON, Mich. – Lucky and Stormy were married, despite the bride coming down with a case of cold paws. 

The therapy dogs at the Summit Park Assisted Living Center were joined in matrimony Wednesday in front of about 40 family and friends. 

They didn’t say ’I do,’ but when Gail Yates, the center’s activities director, read the vows, no one objected and the two didn’t run away. 

Lucky, a part-Brittany spaniel, and Stormy, a large Shetland sheep dog, are now canine man and wife. 

The two have visited the center together for two years. 

“I’m very relieved that the pressure is off,” Shelley Hansen, Stormy’s owner and the self-proclaimed mother of the bride, told The Jackson Citizen Patriot. “Arranging a wedding is a lot of work, and it makes you a nervous wreck.” 

Lucky sported a red bow tie and red top hat. Stormy dressed in a traditional white veil with white seed pearls. 

“I feel that I’ve gained a daughter-in-law,” said June Poleski, the groom’s owner. 

Velna White, a resident, enjoyed cake and lemonade after the wedding. 

“I’m 100 years old, and I’ve been married a lot of years,” said White, a widow. 

 

Supreme Court Justice wins powerlifting event 

OLYMPIA, Wash. – Justice may be blind. But in Washington state, it’s also buff. 

State Supreme Court Justice Faith Ireland proved she’s more than just a legal powerhouse earlier this month when she won the National Powerlifting Championship in Chicago. 

Granted, she was the only one in her age class (59) and weight class (132). Still, you don’t want to mess with a judge who can bench press 110 pounds, squat lift 192 pounds, and dead lift 236 pounds. 

“I felt absolutely elated,” Ireland said Wednesday of her win. Next, she’ll compete in the world championship in Argentina in October — provided it doesn’t conflict with oral arguments. 

Ireland was elected to the state’s high court in 1998. She started working out with weights to rehabilitate her back after a car accident 15 years ago. 

She competed in the national championship last year but failed to make a clean squat lift. 

“I felt like I had something to prove,” said Ireland. “I felt vindicated.” 

 

How many firefighters does it take... 

OLYMPIA, Wash. – Firefighters have learned that it’s a lot easier to pluck a kitten from a tree than to lift a 200-pound ostrich out of the mud. 

East Olympia Fire District Chief Ettore Castellente said he and four firefighters got the job done Tuesday after a lone Thurston County sheriff’s deputy was unable to free the big bird from a ditch. 

“The family had been digging a trench the day before and didn’t notice that the ostrich fell into the trench,” Castellente said. “They discovered her this morning, and I believe she was in shock.” 

The ostrich, known as Empress, was stuck in the bottom of the trench with her legs tucked underneath. 

Firefighters fashioned a sling from fire hose supports, used it to lasso Empress and then lifted the ostrich to safety with help from the bird’s owners. Empress was not in immediate danger and responded well after being freed, Castellente said. 

“It’s one of those things we’re generally not in the business of doing,” he said. 

 

Maryland wants to adopt walking as state sport 

ANNAPOLIS, Md. – Maryland already has a state sport. A state exercise may be next. 

Four students from a Montgomery County elementary school proposed to a House committee Wednesday that walking be designated as Maryland’s official state exercise. 

“If more people get out of their cars, we’ll have a friendlier, healthier, happier home,” 8-year-old Will Smith told members of the House Commerce and Government Matters Committee. 

Will and his classmates made the trip to Annapolis to back the bill introduced by state House Delegate William Bronrott. 

“Walking is an activity anybody can do at any time. You don’t need any equipment,” said Emily Haislip, 8. 

The students got support from some high-powered health officials, including Barbara Moore, president of Shape Up America. 

Moore told committee members the bill is more than just a symbolic gesture, touting walking as an effective way to reduce obesity and improve the general health of Americans.


Murdered journalist mourned at Stanford

Staff
Saturday February 23, 2002

The Stanford University community is mourning the slaying of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl, who graduated from the university in 1985. 

The U.S. State Department said Thursday that the missing journalist had been killed. He was reportedly kidnapped in late January while on an assignment in Pakistan.University President John Hennessy praised the Stanford alumnus. 

“Daniel's pursuit of truth -- even at his own peril -- represents the very highest values of a free press in a democratic society,” Hennessy said. 

Pearl, 38, graduated from Stanford with honors with a bachelor's degree in communication. He later worked at several newspapers in Massachusetts before joining the Wall Street Journal in November 1990. Kristine Samuelson, chair of the Department of Communication said, “We are devastated by the news of Danny Pearl's death. We are in the business of training young journalists to tell the world's stories and we've just lost one.” 

Communication professor Henry Breitrose, who served as department chair at the time Pearl declared his major, said he remembered a young man who was smart, motivated and a strong writer. 

“He had the ability to avoid the conventional wisdom in doing a story and to try and find an angle, something that would illuminate the story rather than follow the template or master narrative,” he said. He said he was not surprised that Pearl excelled in his journalism career. 

“What a good journalist does is find out what he or she is not supposed to know but what the public at large is supposed to know,” Breitrose said. "That's what Danny was doing.'' 

A memorial service for Pearl has been scheduled for Monday at 4 p.m. in Memorial Church on the Stanford campus.


Group accused in baby’s starvation death back in court

By Justin Pritchard, The Associated Press
Saturday February 23, 2002

20-year-old woman only defendant released on bail 

 

SAN RAFAEL – One of the four women in a house full of malnourished children never sought medical help as a “frighteningly small” 19-month-old boy gasped for breath and turned blue before dying, prosecutors told a judge in an effort to keep her behind bars. 

But the arguments weren’t strong enough to keep Kali Polk-Matthews, 20, jailed. She was released overnight Thursday on $100,000 bail, becoming the first member of the cultish Marin County family to get out of jail. She is accused of manslaughter and child neglect while her four adult housemates face second-degree murder charges in the death of young Ndigo Campisi-Nyah-Wright and the alleged mistreatment of his 12 siblings. 

The children lived in a home where they were lashed and forced-fed chili peppers if they misbehaved, according to papers filed with the court where the children’s parents appeared Thursday. 

The surviving children, in protective custody since Ndigo died in mid November, also described harsh punishments for sneaking food during routine three-day fasts. 

One of the girls said she was tied to a playpen at night for two weeks as punishment for eating during a fast, according to the documents. Other children told authorities that discipline included their mouths being sealed with tape and beatings with belts. 

Authorities said they seized a “Book of Rules” from the house where Winnfred Wright allegedly terrorized the children along with four women, according to documents reviewed by a reporter Wednesday but absent from the court’s file Thursday. 

Wright, 45, and the three mothers — Carol Bremner, 44, Deirdre Wilson, 37, and Mary Campbell, 37 — remain in Marin County jail without bail. 

All of the adults were indicted earlier this month and arrested on charges ranging from second-degree murder to manslaughter and child neglect; Polk-Matthews, who only joined the household months ago and did not bear any children, doesn’t face the murder charge. 

Judge Terrence Boren also imposed a temporary gag order preventing lawyers and officials from speaking publicly about the case. He will review that decision March 12 when the defendants are expected to enter pleas. 

“My niece Kali Matthews is a kind and decent person,” Jim Matthews said outside the courtroom. “I hope that she’s able to extricate herself from this matter. It’s a sad affair all around.” 

Ndigo suffered from multiple fractures because he had almost no calcium in his bones, according to forensic child pathologist Gregory Reiber, who did the autopsy on the child. 

“In spite of being faced with the agony of a child gasping for breath and turning blue, she never called for medical assistance,” prosecutors wrote in papers filed Thursday. Those papers also said some of children were “obviously deformed” and Ndigo was “frighteningly small,” but Polk-Matthews did not contact police. 

Medical authorities have said most of the other children were also malnourished, deprived of sunlight and suffering from rickets, a bone-softening disease caused by a lack of vitamin D. 

Just before Boren issued the gag order on lawyers, law enforcement officials and social workers, Wright’s lawyer took a few shots against media coverage of the case. 

“Because the case involves racial and sexual issues and an alternative lifestyle, it creates an atmosphere vulnerable to voyeurism and sensationalism,” attorney Mary Stearns argued in asking wanted Boren to seal any documents related to the case— a motion opposed by a lawyer for the San Francisco Chronicle. 

Boren didn’t order any further sealings in open court, but did in private Thursday afternoon after prosecutors requested affidavits they filed Wednesday be withheld from the public, according to a court administrator. 

Wright has refused requests for interviews. 

Reached at his Sacramento home Thursday night, his father, Leonard Wright, refused to answer questions. 

“I have nothing to say,” Wright said. “Nothing to say.”


Homeless man who allegedly killed elderly woman pleads innocent

The Associated Press
Saturday February 23, 2002

SAN DIEGO – A homeless man who allegedly struck and killed an elderly woman who refused to give him money has pleaded innocent to murder and elder abuse charges. 

Eric Martin, 33, entered his plea Thursday and is being held on $1 million bail. 

Eva Lopez, 84, was killed Sunday after Martin allegedly attacked her as she left a Mexican restaurant. 

Police arrested Martin on Monday at a gas station in San Diego. Martin allegedly made incriminating statements to police about the attack, authorities said.


PG&E backing term-limits effort

By Stefanie Frith, The Associated Press
Saturday February 23, 2002

SACRAMENTO – PG&E Corp., the parent company of bankrupt utility giant Pacific Gas and Electric Company, has donated $15,000 to the campaign to extend California’s term limits, state campaign finance records show. 

Proposition 45 has received more than $9 million in contributions by a myriad of special interests, including more than $3 million from the California Democratic Party, according to reports filed with the secretary of state’s office. 

The PG&E contribution puts the company on the same side as California Democrats while many Democratic politicians have shunned utility company contributions. 

PG&E’s contribution is another sign of the influence of special interests trying to dismantle the state’s term-limits law, said Lew Uhler, president of the National Tax Limitation Committee and a Proposition 45 foe. 

Karin Caves, the spokeswoman for the Yes on 45 campaign, said she couldn’t comment on the PG&E donation but said it was made public. The No on 45 campaign, she said, is hiding their contributors. 

The No on 45 campaign has reported more than $100,000 in contributions, mostly from the Americans for Limited Terms, according to reports filed with the secretary of state’s office. 

Renee Parnell, a spokeswoman for the PG&E Corp., said that any contributions the corporation makes comes out of the shareholders fund and not out of rates paid by customers. 

“We believe voters have the right to vote for the person they feel best represents them,” Parnell said. ”(The proposition) gives them the right to petition for a one-time extension and in turn extends the opportunity for choice.” 

Recent polls show the proposition failing to gain the support of a majority of California voters, who passed a term-limits initiative in 1990 to create the current law. 

Proposition 45 wouldn’t repeal term limits but let voters in individual legislative districts sign petitions to extend by one term the limits on their member of the state Assembly or Senate.


State unemployment rate creeps up in January

By Simon Avery, The Associated Press
Saturday February 23, 2002

Addition of 30,200 new jobs can’t stop rise in joblessness; total tops 1 million 

 

LOS ANGELES – Even as California’s economy produced 30,200 additional jobs, the state unemployment rate crept to 6.2 percent in January, up from a revised 6.1 percent in December, state officials said Friday. 

“The job generation was impressive, given we’re still feeling the effects of September 11th,” said Michael Bernick, director of the Economic Development Department. 

But the growth, driven by the trade and services sectors, wasn’t enough to offset the number of people looking for work in January. 

With the number of unemployed Californians hitting 1,083,000 in January – 276,000 more than a year earlier – many job seekers said they are finding it hard to remain upbeat. 

“Sometimes I’m hopeful. Sometimes I feel cynical. I try not to get discouraged,” said Charles Gallin, who is trying to find work in San Francisco in an accounts payable department. 

The 34-year-old has been sending out resumes since he was laid off by CMP Media, a publishing and advertising firm, in November and has registered on four Internet job sites. So far, he has only had three responses telling him his application is being considered. 

Gallin is relying on unemployment insurance and some temporary jobs to pay his bills. But he hasn’t had a call in three weeks from any of the six temp agencies with which he’s registered. 

“This is the slowest it’s been for me,” he said. 

The San Francisco Bay area job market remained particularly weak in January, suffering from the technology bust and ongoing weakness in the hospitality industry. In San Francisco County the unemployment rate hit 7 percent, compared with 3.8 percent in Orange County. 

Some San Francisco Bay area residents are considering a move south to find work. 

Jacqueline Breedlove, who lost her job at an AIDS recovery center on Jan. 11, said she sees about twice as many job listings in Los Angeles and is considering leaving Oakland. 

She’s sent out several hundred resumes, but despite a master’s degree and 20 years experience as a social worker, the mother of two has only managed to schedule one interview. 

Breedlove said her savings are gone, and she has had to borrow from her mother and friends. 

“It looks pretty bleak to me at this point. I’m getting very emotional and sometimes want to cry but must contain myself,” she said. 

Economists warn that the employment picture is normally slow to improve coming out of a recession because companies wait for business to improve before adding new jobs. 

Some organizations that help people find work said their caseloads have been rising steadily, even as the economy sends out signals of recovery. 

“Things have gotten worse,” said Katherine Field, a coordinator at the EastBay Works Oakland Career Center. “Our career counselors are hearing that people can’t even get temp jobs at $8 to $10 an hour.” 

Employers have positions to fill, but they are holding off as long as they can, Field said. She is hopeful that some will choose to hire in late March when the center hosts a job fair in downtown Oakland. 

In San Diego, where the county unemployment rate is 3.9 percent, Steve Opp said he’s become more optimistic about the job market in the last few weeks after searching six months for work. 

The 47-year-old marketing executive said firms are rigorous in their selection criteria and slow to make decisions. But he’s starting to see more listings. 

“I think there are plenty of jobs out there right now, it’s just a question of how far people are willing to deviate,” he said.


PG&E to forge ahead with reorganization

The Associated Press
Saturday February 23, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO – Bankrupt Pacific Gas and Electric Co. intends to forge ahead with its reorganization plan and also appeal a federal judge’s ruling that bankruptcy law does not expressly permit businesses to pre-empt state law while getting back on their feet. 

Separately on Thursday, the official PG&E creditor committee said it could not support an alternate reorganization plan created by state regulators. The utility filed a request asking U.S. Bankruptcy Judge U.S. Montali to give PG&E until the end of June to promote its plan without any competitors. 

In a U.S. Bankruptcy Court filing, California’s largest utility said it would move forward on several tracks, including amending the plan to take Montali’s concerns into account and arguing that the state has waived its right not to be overruled by the federal government. 

The utility also said it would seek an appeal of Montali’s ruling. 

“The Court’s ruling allowed us to both move forward with the plan of reorganization and file an appeal. We are taking advantage of both options,” said Ron Low, a PG&E spokesman. 

PG&E wants to transfer power plants and transmission lines worth $8 billion into new federally regulated subsidiaries.  

It would borrow against those assets to raise the $13.2 billion it claims it owes creditors. In the process, it would have to pre-empt dozens of state laws and regulations. 

The state Public Utilities Commission is trying to block the plan to avoid control over how much PG&E can charge for the electricity it generates at its power plants.


Community protests budget cuts

By David Scharfenberg, Daily Planet staff
Friday February 22, 2002

Parents, students and high school musicians turned out at a Board of Education meeting Wednesday to criticize the district for financial mismanagement and call for the protection of various programs identified by Superintendent Michele Lawrence in a $3 million package of budget cuts. 

“I am absolutely disgusted with what is going on with the school board and the programs they want to cut from Berkeley High,” said Nancy Bissell, a Berkeley resident. 

Board members, who are scheduled to vote on the $3 million package Feb. 27, and must cut $6 million total to balance next year’s budget, expressed general support for the superintendent’s proposal.  

But members raised questions about a few items and worried aloud that, because they are working on a tight timeline, they will be making cuts next week without complete information about the ramifications. 

Lawrence stood by her plan, but suggested that she might alter a controversial proposal to fold administration of the Berkeley Schools Excellence Project, a special local tax, into the district’s business office. An independent body currently administers the BSEP tax, which yielded about $10 million this year for class size reduction and other initiatives. 

Several BSEP advocates spoke during the meeting, arguing that the current structure works and that BSEP administration is a time-intensive task that could overwhelm Associate Superintendent of Business Jerry Kurr. 

“I do worry that this is a lot of responsibility for Jerry,” said Lawrence, suggesting that she might reconsider her proposal. 

 

The community speaks 

Marissa Saunders, parent of a fifth-grader at City of Franklin Microsociety Magnet School, attacked Lawrence and members of the board for the proposed closure of the school, which would save the district an estimated $326,000.  

“You’re turning your backs on us,” she said. “My daughter is not for sale. She’s not a budget cut.” 

Three Franklin students also took the podium over the course of the night, and asked the board to keep their school open. 

“I do not want the City of Franklin school to close,” said first-grader MacKinzie Castillo. 

Board members said it would be difficult to close the school, but ultimately signaled their approval of the move. 

Lawrence said if the closure goes through, the district might move an overcrowded Jefferson School into the larger City of Franklin building next year, and convert Jefferson into a new district headquarters.  

The district’s central office is currently located at 2134 Martin Luther King, Jr. Way in property rented from the city. The lease will expire in several years, and city officials have indicated that they would like to reoccupy the building.  

But the Franklin closure was not the only proposal that stirred controversy. Pam Drew, a math teacher in the district’s Independent Study program, spoke against a plan to eliminate the program’s department head. 

Michael Kelly, co-chair of the Music Curriculum Committee, which advises the board, asked the district to protect the music program. 

Kelly got help from a group of high school musicians who played in the hall outside the board’s hearing room until the meeting began. 

“We just wanted to remind people what (the music program) has done for us, and we’d really prefer that it not get cut at all,” said Gene Fielden, a Berkeley High School senior and viola player. 

Lawrence has called for the elimination of the district’s music and visual arts coordinator position and asked the board to notify all the district’s music teachers that they may be laid off next year.  

By law, the district must notify certain types of teachers and administrators by March 15 if they might be let go next year. Lawrence and school board members said they hope to take back some of those notices, if they can find savings elsewhere, by the end of the year. The superintendent suggested that the district will try to spare music teachers.  

But Selawsky said he was skeptical about Lawrence’s plan to eliminate the coordinator position and relinquish administration of the music program to elementary school principals. 

“We’ve worked that model in the past and it’s been, to my mind, less than ideal,” Selawsky said. 

“This is an area that needs more exploration,” replied Chris Lim, associate superintendent of instruction. 

Barry Fike, president of the Berkeley Federation of Teachers, criticized the administration for failing to seek teachers’ input in making suggestions for programmatic cuts. 

“When educational decisions are made without hearing from those at the forefront of instructional delivery and support, they can't help but be decisions made without critical information,” he said. “A number of the decisions you make will therefore inevitably be misguided.”  

Lawrence has argued that, because the district did not know the extent of its financial woes until January, and faces the statuatory deadline of March 15 for layoffs, it has been forced to act quickly, without as much community input as it would like. 

Board members acknowledged that a hastily-prepared budget, with minimal community input, has left them in the difficult position of making decisions without time for full analysis. But, they suggested that the situation may be unavoidable. 

“I’m very uncomfortable with this whole process, but I realize it comes with the territory,” said board member Terry Doran.  

 

 


McCain-Feingold finance reform bill needs to be examined

Doris “Granny D” Haddock
Friday February 22, 2002

Editor, 

 

The McCain-Feingold Bipartisan Campaign Finance Reform Bill, now awaiting second and final passage in the U.S. Senate after passing the U.S. House with minor changes last week, is being misrepresented in serious ways by the opponents of campaign reform. 

The most important misrepresentation is this: that the McCain reform would limit the free speech rights of issue organizations like the NRA or the Sierra Club. Not true. 

Let’s imagine that the National Rifle Association wants to oppose the reelection of, say, John McCain. Under existing law dating back to Teddy Roosevelt’s reforms of 1907, they cannot use their own corporate treasury money to run ads against McCain – only individuals can make campaign donations. The NRA can easily circumvent the law by running ads that do not use the magic words “vote for” or “vote against,” instead using thinly-veiled alternatives, such as “ask John McCain why he wants to take away your right to...” It’s called an issue advocacy ad. When an ad slamming a candidate is run right before an election, is it an election ad? You bet it is. 

If it is an election ad, should we voters know who's behind it? Indeed we should, for free speech does not mean anonymous speech. If McCain-Feingold is signed into law, here is what the NRA could still do. They could use their own money to send a letter to all their members. It could say, “we have some candidates we want to support or oppose in the upcoming election. Please make a contribution to our political action committee.” With those donations, the NRA political action committee could run ads for or against any candidates of its choosing. No corporate money would be involved in the ads – only the personal funds of the people contributing to the political action committee. Those names would be a matter of public record as campaign contributors. Everything would be in the open. 

Where is the loss of free speech rights? The only thing lost is the ability of special interest organizations to operate from behind a cloak of secrecy. 

It’s time for thoughtful people to stop listening to the gross representations made by the anti-reformers, left and right, and get on with the business of cleaning up our elections. It’s time for serious journalists to stop casually passing along lies and really reading and explaining the McCain bill, which has passed muster with all the nation’s noted constitutional scholars. Far from damaging our free speech rights, the bill helps to return free speech rights to regular citizens. We the people have had our voices drowned out by special interest money, and the McCain-Feingold bill will help us again be heard. 

 

 

Doris “Granny D” Haddock 

Dublin, NH 


Caught Being Human

by Peter Crimmins, Special to the Daily Planet
Friday February 22, 2002

The announcement of the Academy Award nominees last week inaugurated the annual film buff’s ritual of arguing who will win which award on March 24. From professional critics to café blowhards, to coworkers around the water cooler, to people who don’t let the fact that they haven’t seen the movies stop them from expressing their opinion about them, they all will spend some part of the Lent season proselytizing about Russell or Sean or Denzel, Halle or Nicole or Renee, “Beautiful Mind” or “Gosford Park” or “Lord of the Rings.” 

Few, if any, will ponder which documentary is most deserving of the award. And for good reason. None of the five nominees for Best Documentary Feature has had any kind of theatrical release (and, for the record, they are: “Children Underground,” “Lalee’s Kin: The Legacy Of Cotton,” “Murder On A Sunday Morning,” “Promises,” and “War Photographer”). Few know what these films are about or what rewards they hold. 

This weekend the Human Rights Watch International Film Festival will partially remedy that. Of the nine features playing at the Pacific Film Archive Friday through Sunday as part of a traveling program, two are Academy Award nominees. 

“Children Underground” (screening Saturday, 8 p.m.) follows a group of orphaned and runaway Romanian children living in a Bucharest train station, Piata Victorei. Ranging in age from 8 to 16 years old, the kids sleep on cardboard, beg for change, bathe by water tap, beat each other up out of fear and desperation, and spend the day high on Aurolac, a kind of paint with addictive chemical fumes that the children huff out of plastic bags. 

Without narration or commentary, filmmaker Edet Belzberg followed five selected children with a video camera. It’s similar to what Berkeley filmmaker Steven Okazaki did in the San Francisco tenderloin in his documentary “Black Tar Heroin: The Dark End Of The Street,” or, the more well-known feature narrative “Kids” by Larry Clark where young people run loose and wild in an primal world of their own, oblivious to the rules and customs of the adult world surrounding them. 

Romania has had an explosion of homeless youth since former President Nicolae Ceaucescu tried to bolster the work force for his communist regime by banning contraceptives and abortion. And estimated 20,000 unwanted children now live on the streets, with paltry social services to help them. 

 

As we see the shoes of adult commuters walking past sleeping ten-year olds ravaged by filth, Aurolac, and insanity, the film shows us that the streets have an addictive lure that eventually gets under the skin of the kids. The few organizations that offer aide to homeless youth want to help, and the children want to be helped, but the mindset the kids develop to be able to survive on the streets cannot accommodate the rules by which the organizations operate. One director of a residential facility says he cannot accept kids who have been on the streets for more a few months. 

 

The other Academy Award nominated film in the Human Rights Watch festival, "Promises" (Sunday, 3PM) by local filmmakers Justine Shapiro, B.Z. Goldberg and Carlos Bolado, is also centered on children. Seven Isreali and Palestinian children show viewers the Middle East conflict and the careful art of growing up inside it. The film has been picked up for theatrical distribution – opening widely in cinemas yet to be determined – and the filmmakers will be at the PFA in person to speak with the audience after the Sunday afternoon screening. 

 

The Human Rights Watch is an international non-profit agency dedicated to protecting basic human rights from abuse by governments and regimes around the world. They conduct investigations into suspected abuses with the aim to "embarrass abusive governments in the eyes of their citizens and the world" and advocate intervention. As such, the films in their festival tend to be important – and also bleak, humorless and roughly crafted. 

 

A third film focusing on children as the end recipients of war and systematic abuse is "Behind Closed Eyes" (Feb 23, 6PM), a multi-part film following four young people from different hot spots around the world: an 18 year-old former Lyberian child soldier must be re-trained before re-entering his village, a refugee from Kosovo lives among a sea of white tents, a one-legged orphan in Cambodia goes away to school, and in Rwanda we see the teenaged mother of a rape baby struggle to raise her child with dignity.  

 

These children are not as raw as the lawless kids in the Bucharest train station. They are in various stages of rehabilitation and awkwardly try to learn the ways of the adult world. Whether or not this film deserves to be more hopeful, the kids describe their desires for the future and are working toward a stable home. In the case of the Rwandan teenage mother, her vignette in the film has a soundtrack of a radio program featuring women telling of stories and their sorrows, as a kind of social healing. 

 

Also featured in the festival is the new film by San Francisco filmmaker Lourdes Portillo, a highly regarded documentarian of Latino life whose film "Senorita Extravida: Missing Young Women" just won a jury prize at Sundance.  

 

"Missing Young Women" (Feb 22, 7PM) goes to Ciudad Juarez in Mexico, a NAFTA boomtown where young women migrate from all over the region to get factory jobs at the American companies that have set up shop there. Since 1994, over 200 young women have been kidnapped or killed, turning up in the sands of the desert outside the city as skeletons wrapped in tatters of clothing.  

 

Portillo’s film is a gracefully crafted investigation into the mysterious string of murders, and to the inconsistent police response to the crimes. The initial police statements are dismissive, implying it is not unusual by the nature of Ciudad Juarez’s nightlife, then it is suggested the deaths might be a serial killer, or ritual killing. But as the film accumulates police scape-goating, botched evidence, and the victim’s clothing mismatched with their skeletons (identifiable by dental records) the film throws a very suspicious light on the police involvement, possibly even complicity, in the string of grisly killings. 


Arts & Entertainment Calendar

Staff
Friday February 22, 2002

Music 

924 Gilman Feb. 22: Oppressed Logic, Deface, Edddie Haskells, Throat Oyster; Feb. 23: From Ashes Arise, Artimus Pyle, Brainoil, Down in Flames, Dystrophy, Scholastic Deth; Mar. 1: Street to Nowhere, Thick as Thieves, Calimigo, Scociopath, Samsara, Dead in the End; Mar. 2: Funeral Dinner, Betray the Species, The Shivering, Confidante, The Cause, Get Get Go; Mar. 8: Dead and Gone, Drunk Horse, The Cost, Scurvy Dogs; Mar. 9: Not Flipper, The Sick, Lo-FI Niessans, Stalker Potential, Deficient; All shows start a 8 p.m. unless noted; Most are $5; 924 Gilman St. 525-9926. 

 

The Albatross 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. 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. 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. 

 

Cato’s Ale House Feb. 24: Blue and Tan; Feb. 27: Vince Wallace Trio 

 

 

Club Jjang-ga 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. 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. 

 

 

The Starry Plough 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 

 

Annie Nalezny, Piano Recital Feb. 3: 3 p.m., Beethoven's Sonatas "A Therese" & "Les Adieux," Bruce Nalezny's "Poeme & Finale" and Chopin's 12 Etudes op. 10. $12-$15 donation. Berkeley Piano Club, 2724 Haste St. 

 

“Chamber Music Series” Feb. 3: 4 p.m., The Pacific Piano Quartet perform Brahms Piano Quartet in c minor and the Faure Piano Quartet No. 1, also in c minor. $10. Crowden School, 1475 Rose St., 559-6910 x110, jamie@thecrowdenschool.org. 

 

“Baroque Etcetera” Feb. 3: 7 p.m., Local baroque musicians perform instrumental and vocal works of Bach, Strozzi, Vivaldi, Corelli and Picchi. Church of Saint Mary Magdelen, 2005 Berryman at Milvia, 525-0152. 

 

“Asylum Street Spankers” Feb. 7: 9:30 p.m., The Spankers; The Starry Plough, 3101 Shattuck Ave., 841-2082, www.asylumstreetspankers.com. 

 

Antonio Literes’ “Jupiter Y Semele” Feb. 9: 8 p.m., Feb. 10: 7:30 p.m., Presented by the Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra with guest conductor Eduardo López Banzo. $34-$49. 415-392-4400, www.philharmonia.org.  

 

“Larry Schneider Quartet” Feb. 10: 4:30 p.m., Matt Clark, Jeff Chambers and Eddie Marshall. $6-$12. Hardymon Hall/Jazzschool, 2087 Addison St., 845-4373, www.jazzschool.com. 

 

“Young Talent in a Young Century” Feb. 10: 4 p.m., 15 year old Shoshana Kay will be featured soloist with the Community Women’s Orchestra. Also: Katya Lopez, Rosanne Luu, Tomoko Momlyana and Catarina Sdun. Malcolm X School, 1731 Prince St., 653-1616. 

 

“The Sex Indie-stry Show” Feb. 14: 9 p.m., The Pre-Teens, Bitesize, Good for You, Shmoogie, and The Clarendon Hills all perform in a benefit for COYOTE, a rights advocacy group for sex workers. $6. The Stork Club, 2330 Telegraph Ave., Oakland, www.stjamesinfirmary.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 

 

“Soukous Xplosion Tour 2002” Mar. 1: 9 p.m. Madilu Systems, Nyboma, Diblo Dibala & Matchatcha and special guest Daly Kimoko will make the sounds of Africa come alive. $25, $30 at door. California Ballroom, 1736 Franklin St., Oakland, 415-421-8497 

 

“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 

 

“In Praise of Music: Berkeley Choral Festival” Mar. 4: 8 p.m., Several local choral groups will join the Berkeley Symphony Orchestra in a benefit for the Musicians’ Pension Fund. $25 - $49, $12 students. Zellerbach Hall, UC Berkeley Campus, 841-2800 

 

“Splendors of Versailles and Madrid” Mar. 9: 8 p.m., Mar. 10: 7:30 p.m., Jordi Savall conducts the Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra as they perform works from the Royal Court composers of Spain and France. $34 - $50. First Congregational Church, Dana & Durant, 415-392-4400 

 

 

Dance 

 

Kun Shin Dancers celebrate the artistic traditions of mainland China and Taiwan. Intricate fan and ribbon dances, athletic sword dance, drum duet, courtship piece, peacock dance, and a hoop dance. $8-$10. Calvin Simmons Theatre in the Henry J. Kaiser Convention Center, Ten 10th St., Oakland, 465-9312, www.danceforpower.org.  

 

“Merce Cunningham Dance Company” Feb. 1 and 2: 8 p.m., The engagment features a world premiere by Cunningham (as yet untitled), with music by Christian Wolff and costumes by Terry Winters. $24-$26. UC Berkeley, Zellerbach Hall, 642-0212, www.calperfs.berkeley.edu. 

 

“Dance Festival” Feb. 8: 8 p.m., Feb. 9: 8 p.m., East Bay Dance Festival featuring: AXIS Dance Company, Savage Jazz Dance Company, Moving Arts Dance Collective, Dandelion Dancetheater. $15, Students and Seniors $12. Julia Morgan Center for the Arts, 2640 College Ave. 326-4245, www.katherinedavis.com/ebaydancefestival.htm. 

 

“Frogz” Feb. 8: 8 p.m, Feb. 9: 2 p.m., 8 p.m., A bevy of balletic frogs, poor-spelling sloths and other curious mischief-making characters roll, leap, and slink around the stage. $18 -$30. Cal Performances, Zellerbach Hall, UC Berkeley Campus, 642-0212 

 

“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 

 

“Kusum Africa” Mar. 1 & 2: 8 p.m., Sixty artists and four dance companies representing the traditions of the Congo, Republic of Guinea, and Ghana adapt sub-Saharan dance-drumming to tell the story of the occupation of Accra, Ghana to protest British colonialism. $18 - $30. Zellerbach Hall, UC Berkeley Campus, 642-9988 

 

“Risk of Falling” Mar. 9: 8 p.m., Mar. 10: 4:30 p.m., Julie Drucker has assembled troupe of dancers ages 24 to 83 to perform an intergenerational dance project that weds improvisational movement and personal storytelling to explore issues of trust, fear, aging and community. $12 - $15, $10 seniors. Hillside Community Church, 1422 Navellier St., El Cerrito, 286-7922 

 

“Compania Espanola De Antonio Marquez” Mar. 13 & 14: 8 p.m., Artistic Director Antonio Marquez showcases his dazzling and dynamic program of flamenco. $24 - $36. Zellerbach Hall, UC Berkeley Campus, 642-9988 

 

 

Theater 

 

Word for Word double bill Feb. 1: 7 p.m., Feb. 2: 5 p.m., Feb. 3: 2 p.m.: Julius Lester’s short children’s play “John Henry”; Zora Neale Hurston’s “The Gilded Six Bits.” Both children and adults will view John Henry together, then the children leave the theatre to participate in art exercises that help them enter the spirit of the play. Meanwhile, the adults remain in the theatre to view The Gilded Six Bits. $16 adults, $11 children. Julia Morgan Center for the Arts, 2640 College Ave., 845-8542, www.juliamorgan.com. 

 

“Unmasked!” Feb. 1: 8 p.m., Feb. 2: 8 p.m., Feb. 3: 5 p.m.: An evening of two short student-directed plays, “The Lesson” by Eugene Ionesco and “Beyond Therapy” by Christopher Durang. $7 adults, $5 students and seniors. Albany High School Little Theather, 603 Key Route Blvd., Albany, 559-6550 x4125, theaterensemble@hotmail.com. 

 

 

“James Joyce, Marcel Duchamp, Erik Satie: An Alphabet” Feb. 5: 8 p.m., Originally conceived as a radio play, John Cage’s imagined conversations between 15 artistic and cultural figures, their dialogue, historical materials, and musings that Cage simply made up. Director Laura Kuhn, Composer Mikel Rouse. UC Berkeley, Zellerbach Hall, 642-0212, www.calperfs.berkeley.edu. 

 

Oakland Magic Circle hosts its 34th annual Installation Banquet and Stage show, Feb. 5: 7 p.m. Dinner, 8 p.m. Show, Dick Newton, Timothy James, Peter Winch, Dan X. Solo, $20 Adults, $15 Children; Bjornson Hall, 2258 MacArthur Blvd., Oakland, 420-0680. 

 

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

 

“The Trestle at Pope Lick Creek” Through Feb. 10: Wed. - Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 2 and 7 p.m., playwright Naomi Wallace’s story about Dalton, a 15-year-old who dreams of escaping to college, and Pace, the town’s 17-year-old tomboy. Stuck in a town with no real prospects, the pair begins a deadly contest of chicken with the daily express train. Directed by Søren Oliver. $30-$35. Aurora Theatre, 2081 Addison St., 843-4822, www.auroratheatre.org. 

 

"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 

 

“The Pirandello Project” through Feb. 23: Check venue for specific dates, times and prices. An original presentation of three short works by the Nobel Prize-winning playwright, Luigi Pirandello. Berkeley City Club, 2315 Durant Ave., 841-4082, www.pirandelloproject.org 

 

“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. 

 

“Divine Comedy: The Dante Project” Mar. 1 through Mar. 10: Fri. - Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m. A motorcycle and sidecar speeding over the Marsh of Styx, a flying bathtub touring the solar system, and a traveler passing through a wall of fire are some of the more spectacular moments in this comic twist on Dante’s poem. $6 - $12. Zellerbach Playhouse, UC Berkeley Campus, 642-9925, genturc@uclink.berkeley.edu 

 

“The Golden State” Feb. 23 through Mar. 24: Thur. - Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 7 p.m., An aging Brian Wilson meets the ruling family of the sea, and a blend of comic book escapade and tragedy follows in the wake. $20, Sunday is pay what you can. Transparent Theater, 1901 Ashby Ave., 883-0305 

 

“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. 

 

“A Fairy’s Tail” Mar. 16 through Apr. 20: Thur. - Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 5 p.m. The Shotgun Players present Adam Bock’s story of a girl and her odyssey of revenge and personal transformation after a giant smashes her house with her family inside. $10 - $25. The Allston Street Theatre, 2116 Allston Way, 704-8210, www.shotgunplayers.org 

 

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 

 

“Trace of a Human” Feb. 28 through Mar. 30: Jim Freeman and Krystyna Mleczko exhibit their latest works including mixed media sculpture installation and acrylic on canvas paintings. 11 a.m. - 5 p.m.; Ardency Gallery, 709 Broadway, Oakland, 836-0831, gallery709@aol.com 

 

“Ansel Adams in the University of California Collections” Through Mar. 10: A selection of photographs and memorabilia presenting a different perspective on Adam’s career as one of the leading figures in American photography; 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 

 

“Being There” Feb. 23 through May 12: An exhibit of paintings, sculpture, photography and mixed media works by 45 contemporary artists who live and/or work in Oakland. Wed. - Sat. 10 a.m. - 5 p.m., Sun. 12 - 5 p.m. $6, adults, $4 children. The Oakland Museum of California, Oak and 10th St., 238-2200, www.museumca.org 

 

“Scene in Oakland, 1852 to 2002” Mar. 9 through Aug. 25: An exhibit that includes 66 paintings, drawings, watercolors and photographs dating from 1852 to the present, featuring views of Oakland by 48 prominent California artists. Wed. - Sat. 10 a.m. - 5 p.m., Sun. 12 - 5 p.m. $6, adults, $4 children. The Oakland Museum of California, Oak and 10th St., 238-2200, www.museumca.org 

 

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 22, 2002


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).  

 

 

– Compiled by Guy Poole 


Lady Panthers survive a scare from Holy Names

By Jared Green, Daily Planet Staff
Friday February 22, 2002

In most BSAL matchups, the St. Mary’s girls’ basketball team just wears their opponents out. But on Thursday, Holy Names just refused to go away, taking the Panthers down to the buzzer and losing 37-35. 

The Panthers came close to blowing a six-point lead with just two minutes left to play. Holy Names had three different possessions that could have given them the lead, but the Monarchs just couldn’t quite make it all the way back. 

“It’s hard to play a team three times in one season,” St. Mary’s head coach Don Lawson said. “They figured out how to play us. Their coach is very good, and he did some things tonight that offset our strengths.” 

The main thing the Monarchs did was collapse on the St. Mary’s post players anytime the ball went inside. That strategy helped hold freshman Shantrell Sneed, who averages nearly 20 points per game, to just 12 points, and senior Kamaiya Warren to just 4 points. Sneed often settled for medium-range jumpers rather than going inside, probably a good idea while she recovers from a sprained knee. The freshman also took a hard fall into her own bench early in Thursday’s game, but appeared to be unharmed. 

St. Mary’s opened its largest lead at 18-8 early in the second quarter with a 10-0 run, but the Monarchs cut the lead to 22-18 at halftime. With their inside game handcuffed, the Panthers started heaving up shots from the outside, hitting with irregularity and keeping Holy Names close. Although St. Mary’s pulled out to a 32-25 lead early in the fourth quarter, they just couldn’t put together a finishing run.  

Guard Meghan Leary made a free throw to make the score 37-31 with two minutes left in the game, but that was the last time St. Mary’s would score. Holy Names would get buckets from Johana Padilla and Beth Costa to get within two points with 16 seconds left, and Leary committed a travel to give them the ball back with 11 second on the clock. But Leary made up for her gaffe by stealing the ball back. She was fouled with 0.8 seconds left and missed her free throw, but Junai Dawson couldn’t gather the ball in for a shot. 

St. Mary’s will face top-seeded Kennedy in the final on Saturday. The Eagles blew through the regular season undefeated in the BSAL, leaning on the strength of senior center Diedra Chatman. Lawson thinks his team matches up well with Kennedy. 

“I think we’ll actually have a much better chance to get the ball inside than we did tonight,” he said. “They’ll put Deidra on Kamaiya, but they don’t have anyone else to match up with Shantrell. They’ll try to pressure our guards, so we need good perimeter play.”


City Council chooses two redistricting plans

By Devona Walker, Daily Planet staff
Friday February 22, 2002

Next week the city of Berkeley will step a little closer to reconfiguring its eight electoral districts to better agree with new census information using a plan submitted by Elliot Cohen of Nuclear Free Berkeley. 

Other plans were were also presented by Tim Hansen, University of California Berkeley student Josh Fryday, Nick Rizzo, a 16-year-old Berkeley High School student and Councilmember Dona Spring. 

Council unanimously agreed to further study Cohen’s plan at midnight Wednesday morning after some two hours of heated debate. Rizzo’s plan was also approved for further study by a 5 to 4 vote. 

“My plan draws from the one vote/one person principle which is base don the idea that you want each district to have the same number of voters,” 

Cohen said. “This is not a plan that goes along with my political biases. I did it because I saw what happened last time. 

“So, if there was fighting this time around between council about who gets what, and no one was able to come up with a compromise, I hoped my plan could be used to bridge things and create peace on the Council.” 

This was Cohen’s second shot a creating a plan, and he says this success is based upon a lot of lessons he learned from previous failures. 

A call for redistricting plans was put out to residents in January after the council could not decide on an appropriate plan. 

The City Charter requires new district lines to be drawn every 10 years, following the U.S. Census Bureau’s population count. But because of the bureau’s undercount of about 4,500 residents in districts 7 and 8, a fair redistricting plan was difficult for the council to settle upon. 

Citizens for Fair Representation, who protested against an early plan, commented during the meeting Tuesday night about the fairness of Cohen’s plan in relationship to other plans. 

They were specifically moved by Cohen’s 1 percent deviation from the actual numbers. They also applauded Cohen for being able to put his own legal agenda aside. 

But essentially, the redistrciting is about numbers, communities and politics. 

“I too was looking at this process and trying to figure how this might work out best for me,” Councilmember Linda Maio said. “But I just don’t agree with this.” 

In the end Maio voted for Cohen’s plan because it seeemed to be the most honest of all the plans. Citizens for Fair Representation sokesperson agreed that the plans brought forth this tiem around wer9e much better than previous years. 

“All the plans do much more in an attempted to be nonpartisana,” a spokersperson for the Citizens for Fair Representation said. 

“Do not use the term of community of interest to further narrow political goals,” said John Curl. “The only two that I can see that really equitably distribute the undervount is Nick Rizzo’s and councilmember’s Springs.” 

 


Ramsey is the clear choice for Assembly, for Berkeley

John Cecil
Friday February 22, 2002

Dear Editor, 

 

It is in Berkeley’s best interest to elect Charles Ramsey on March 5, as our Representative in the State Assembly. While we have two excellent candidates in Charles Ramsey and Loni Hancock, who agree on Berkeley’s and California’s problems, it is much better for Berkeley to vote for Charles Ramsey. This conclusion is supported by reviewing the statements in Loni’s campaign mailers! Hancock stresses her insight in our long-standing problems derived from her local public service and her commitment to resolving them as well as the abundant Political connections she has in Washington as well as Sacramento.  

Your vote for Ramsey is best for Berkeley because we get additional energy and perspective to resolving our nagging problems and we get Loni too! Her commitment to Berkeley, political influence will not vanish the day after the election, she will still be able to make Berkeley’s voice heard in Sacramento and Washington, so Berkeley gets both Loni and Ramsey by voting for Ramsey! If the contest between the two to who will best resolve Berkeley’s problems continues, it will be a contest based on accomplishments rather than campaign promises!  

Local public education is an area where a different approach would be of more benefit to Berkeley, Ramsey will represent Berkeley’s educational interests in Sacramento.  

Given Loni is committed to helping Berkeley finally deliver the promise implicit in voluntarily integrating public schools almost 40 years ago, and that Berkeley has supported our schools with massive Bond issues, more than $10 million per year from the BSEP tax as well as other donations of money and time, it seems that the solution to our education problems must be found locally. Loni should be running for School Board, the Board and our children need the benefit of her experience and leadership. 

I realize that there is a third candidate for the assembly, however Dave Brown’s campaign promises merely will dump more single passenger cars and their pollution into 

Berkeley and thus appears not interested in representing Berkeley.  

 

John Cecil  

Berkeley


Singing Sugar Mama’s number

by Jai-Rui Chong, special to the Daily Planet
Friday February 22, 2002

The people in the speakeasy in Verona, PA. used to flip young Gwen Avery nickels to play records on the jukebox. 

“It would be B5 or S6 or whatever,” said Avery, now 59 and living in Berkeley. “So that’s how I learned the songs, not by the name of the artist, but by the number.” 

Avery is herself a kind of mix-and-match jukebox, capable of low-down trouble blues, harmonic doo-wop and nimble scats – while accompanying herself on the electric piano. “If you threw in Bessie Smith, Etta James, Satchmo, Ma Rainey, Nina Simone, Esther Phillips, and Mahalia Jackson in a big pot and mixed it up, you’d get me,” she said. 

And there’s no denying that Avery has a special gift when she breaks out into the spiritual “How Long” in middle of her living room with a voice as wide and deep as the Mississippi River. 

“I’ve got a good memory of my roots,” said Avery. “It comes out whenever I open my mouth.” 

For Avery, music is in the bones. She was born into a musical family and sang with her parents until she was 4 years old, when they split. After that, she was raised in her grandmother’s speakeasy , with a crowd that was always drinking, dancing and talking too loud.  

“Naturally I became an entertainer growing up with all those grown-ups,” she said. “They expected me to be something cute.” 

It is this rollicking juke-joint that Avery hopes to recreate when she plays at a benefit concert for Mayoral Candidate Wilson Riles at Humanist Hall in Oakland tonight and when she jams with her Blues Band Sistah’s at the Jon Sims Center for the Arts in San Francisco on Saturday. 

Not only does she want to bring back the dance-out-of-your-seat good times, Avery said, but also the camaraderie that was special in her segregated hometown. 

“It was the only place in town where everybody could mingle,” said Avery. “People of all races would get a beer, listen to music, and talk about their homelands. It was a little tiny melting pot.” 

A search for more of this combination of diversity and intimacy led her to the Bay Area. “The looseness was astonishing,” she said. “The way people would ride public transportation and huddle together!”  

Before she decided to stay in San Francisco, she stopped off in several cities, including Chicago, where she made up her mind to take up singing as a profession. At first Avery and the hippie friends were just taking it all in, astounded that $2 could get them into bars to see the likes of Carol King and Miriam Makeba. 

But then her friends heard her sing and told her she should seriously consider making singing her life.  

“I said, ‘Me?’” 

It didn’t take long before record labels like Decca and Arista started paying attention. “But I wasn’t ready for that regimentation,” said Avery. “I was too much of a free spirit.” 

Lack of a stable finances did mean she had to employ “other skills” to survive in the early days, she said with a chuckle. “I cut hair. I knew how to play pool very well, so I could always hustle. My grandma was a bootlegger so I learned a lot. I knew what I had to do to survive.” 

These days she still cuts albums on an independent record label, practices in her house and loads all of her own musical equipment in the back of her new truck. Avery and Emily Tincher, her manager and partner, may run a small-scale operation that relies on word-of-mouth publicity, but Avery's popularity doesn’t suffer. 

Her schedule is full of gigs at battered women’s shelters, prisons, or black history month celebrations at local colleges. Last year, Outmusic, the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered musicians’ organization, named Avery’s “Sugar Mama” New Album of the Year. 

“It’s a slow crank, but I like it that way,” said Avery. “I never craved the big excitement like--what's her name? ... Britney.” 

 


St. Mary’s boys, girls head to BSAL finals

By Jared Green, Daily Planet Staff
Friday February 22, 2002

Seniors lead boys to easy victory 

 

For the last two seasons, the St. Mary’s High boys’ basketball team has depended on a trio of current seniors. Thursday night against St. Joseph in the BSAL playoffs, DaShawn Freeman, John Sharper and Chase Moore keyed yet another victory to put the Panthers in the league championship game. 

Sharper and Moore each scored 20 points and Freeman dished out 12 assists in the 69-61 St. Mary’s win on Senior Night. Fellow senior Terrence Boyd also scored 12 points. The Panthers (24-2 overall) will face archrival Salesian on Saturday for the BSAL title and an automatic bid to the North Coast Section playoffs. 

Sharper scored 10 of his points in the second quarter as the Panthers started to pull away. A 16-9 first-quarter lead ballooned to 27-12 as the St. Mary’s defense caused turnover after turnover. Freeman ended the half with a penetration kick-out to Sharper, who calmly drained his second 3-pointer of the quarter for a 37-21 halftime lead. 

“The second quarter was big for us,” St. Mary’s head coach Jose Caraballo said. “Our pressure really got to them, and we got our transition game going.” 

The Pilots (21-7) wouldn’t go quietly, however. Senior Ari Warmerdam turned it on in the second half, scoring 22 of his game-high 27 points after the break. The 6-foot-5 forward poured in 14 points in the third quarter alone to drag his team back to within 53-43, but the Pilots would get no closer until a 3-pointer from Murphy Holmes at the final buzzer. 

Warmerdam appeared to be the only Pilot who came ready to play, at least on the offensive end. The second-leading scorer for St. Joseph was Jeff Fuller with 7 points, and while 13 different Pilots scored, no other player had more than 4 points. 

With the playoffs shaking out exactly to form, the Panthers will get another shot at Salesian on Saturday. It will be the second meeting this season, and there’s more on the line than a league title. The Panthers are shooting for two straight undefeated BSAL seasons, not to mention a top seed in the NCS Division I playoffs. Salesian, on the other hand, will be playing more for pride. They have lost to St. Mary’s four times in a row over the last two seasons, and this will be the Chieftans’ last shot at a win over the St. Mary’s seniors. 

“They’re our biggest rival, and they’re going to come out and try to get revenge on us,” Sharper said. “We can’t let that happen.” 

Freeman said his fellow seniors won’t take the Chieftans lightly. 

“Especially us seniors, we want to win this last one,” he said. “It’s a big rivalry, and I want to win it for the school as well as for the team.” 

Saturday’s championship game is scheduled to tip off at 8 p.m. at Albany High’s gym. 

Caraballo said the game plan won’t change much from the teams’ meeting two weeks ago, a 70-57 Panther win. 

“We’re going to play our game and make them adjust to us,” he said. “They’re the ones that lost.”


School and city officials meet, crunch some issues and numbers

By David Scharfenberg, Daily Planet staff
Friday February 22, 2002

School and city officials discussed the closure of City of Franklin Microsociety Magnet School, parking tickets at Willard Middle School and the value of city-school symposiums at their monthly “2 x 2” meeting Thursday. 

The Board of Education, which needs to trim about $6 million to balance next year’s budget, has indicated it will likely close Franklin next year, saving the district an estimated $326,000. 

City Councilmember Linda Maio said residents in her district with children enrolled at Franklin have called her with concerns about where they will enroll their kids next year, and asked that the issue be placed on the agenda for a formal, joint City Council-Board of Education meeting scheduled for March 20. 

The two bodies meet in official joint session twice a year, once in the spring and once in the fall. 

Franklin teachers have asked the board to provide displaced students with first choice in schools next year, and board members have indicated that they would like to give students preference, as long as space and racial balance issues at other schools are addressed. 

Superintendent Michele Lawrence, speaking at the board’s meeting, suggested that if the Franklin closure goes through, the district might move an overcrowded Jefferson School into the larger Franklin building, and move district headquarters into Jefferson. 

Currently, the district is renting the Old City Hall on Martin Luther King, Jr. Way from the city for its central office. The lease will run out in a few years, and city manager Weldon Rucker said the city would like to take over the building, seismically retrofit it, and possibly expand it. 

He said city officials and citizen commissions would likely make use of the office space in the historic building. 

Timiza Wagner, project manager at Willard Middle School, said Principal Michele Patterson and other teachers and administrators have had trouble getting parking permits from the city and have accumulated a number of parking tickets. 

“She would like very much to have something done about these tickets,” Wagner said, making reference to Patterson. “She is a servant of the Berkeley Unified School District and the community.” 

Rucker said he would look into the issue and take care of it. 

Joaquin Rivera, vice president of the school board, raised concerns about the value of “2 x 2” meetings and the two joint City Council-Board of Education meetings. 

“They just don’t seem to be useful,” Rivera said, calling for better organization of the “2 x 2” meetings, and more time for serious discussion at the joint sessions. 

Currently, he said, the two bodies meet for only an hour, with a half-hour reserved for public comment at each session. With nine city Councilmembers and five school board members, he said, there is little time for in-depth conversation. 

 


De-Cal courses are just a part of living in Berkeley

Daniel Velton
Friday February 22, 2002

Editor: 

 

As a member of the Berkeley rabble in good standing I can speak with authority, or against it. And in the university’s most recent scandal, the voice of authority I’ll speak against ran in a letter to the Daily Californian, our student newspaper. 

“The university was created to exercise the intellect of man, not the emotions of man. As long as my university conducts classes where immature emotions are exercised as ‘academic’ study, I will withhold my support,” wrote Berkeley alumnus Ronald Pavellas. 

By immature emotional classes, Ronald Pavellas means those tied to the sex scandal, where one of the student-taught De-Cal courses allegedly involved orgies and field trips to the Garden of Eden, a San Francisco shack of sin. 

“The alma mater of my father and I is losing its proper focus and is pandering to those for whom the intellect is foreign territory,” he continued. 

First of all, if he meant to sound like a Harvard grad instead of one from Berkeley, he should have written “my father and me.” Besides that, he sounds like a great number of people who simply find themselves outraged by news of the goings-on under the sheets here. 

The administration is looking over the entire 20-year-old program of student-run courses, considering tighter supervision and intervention in what used to be the pride and joy of liberal, democratic education.  

But let me tell you how the students look at it. We know what constitutes a De-Cal course. We knew before the scandal.  

I considered taking a two-unit De-Cal course this semester and asked a friend who teaches one, and who will go unnamed, about it. 

“You can come to class every day drunk and high, or both,” he told me. “You’ll still get an A.” 

And, if the student instructor doesn’t put on airs of being a professor, that’s the classroom policy in a lot of cases. Those that put on airs find their attendance dropping very fast. It would surprise me to discover someone who takes a De-Cal course with sincere intentions of intellectual pursuit. The courses equal units, free of charge. Intellectual pursuit is reserved for lecture halls and 200-pages-a-night reading assignments in professored classes. 

But someone will always bring out a silk handkerchief and rub their glasses and harrumph. They are only kidding themselves, though. 

Any night of the week, there are more of my fellow students than can fit inside a classroom, visiting the strip of clubs on Broadway. 

Any night of the week, there are more of my fellow students than I can imagine doing the unimaginable. 

And any night of the week, there are a great deal of students who stay home and read serious books and make the intellect their domestic territory. 

There’s one thing that both sides of this case need to admit to themselves. In all likelihood, they secretly do. It’s the simple fact that there is a time and place for everything.  

It’s called Berkeley. 

 

Daniel Velton 

UC Berkeley student


Internet game plays on the unpredictability of Bob Dylan

By David Bauder, The Associated Press
Friday February 22, 2002

NEW YORK — He may not know it, but when Bob Dylan signals his band to start a song onstage Friday night in Dallas, more than 1,000 people far from the arena are keenly interested in his choice. 

Fans of the veteran troubadour have launched an intricate Internet pool built on their predictions of what Dylan sings in concert. 

The pool reflects both the obsessive interest Dylan still draws 40 years into his career and the way this road warrior has structured his career. He generally plays more than 150 concerts a year. 

For the fans, it’s mostly fun. 

“If I ever got a chance to meet him, I’d say ‘thanks,”’ said one player, Becky Dalton, of Westminster, Calif. “I’m almost 49, and he makes me feel 16 when I go to see him. He’d probably look at us and say, ‘get a life.”’ 

Dylan is into the second decade of what is jokingly called his “Never-Ending Tour.” He’s typically on the road for a month or two at a time, rests for a few weeks, then starts anew. 

There are 1,054 people from 50 countries competing in the Internet pool for his current set of dates, which ends Sunday in Austin. He returns on April 5 in Stockholm for a five-week European swing. 

The pool was started a year ago by 24-year-old Canadian graduate student and computer expert Arthur Louie, and has quickly grown. 

Participants pick a set of songs, which are given point values: low for the songs Dylan plays most frequently, high for the songs he plays rarely. 

It’s a game that could be created around very few artists. For one thing, not many perform as much as Dylan. For another, most acts are so tightly choreographed their set lists change very little, if at all, from city to city. 

The Grateful Dead, while still active, could have probably done it. Phish, now on hiatus, had a similar game going, Louie said. 

Dylan usually plays around 20 songs a night. During a 35-date concert swing last fall, he played 92 different songs, Louie said. The pool has exhaustively catalogued his current tour: “Blowin’ in the Wind,” “Honest With Me” and “Summer Days” were played on each of the first 14 dates. 

Twelve different songs, including “Visions of Johanna” and “Simple Twist of Fate,” were performed only once. 

Dylanologists study his set lists posted every morning after concerts for tendencies. They’ve noticed he’s begun most concerts lately with an acoustic cover tune, and has been performing a lot of songs from his Grammy-nominated album, “Love and Theft.” 

That might be expected — artists usually try to promote their latest albums on tour — but it hasn’t always been the case with Dylan. 

His unpredictability is legendary. Larry Shapiro, 46, an environmental attorney from New York City, says he’s moved up to 149th place in the current competition mostly because he’s given up trying to stay a step ahead of the maestro. 

“It’s a frightening thought to think that anybody can think like Bob,” he said. 

Winners of the game can actually win prizes, though Dylan might not appreciate them. The grand prize for the current competition is a CD box set of bootlegged Dylan concerts. 

Does Dylan himself know about the game? That’s cause for speculation on the Dylan pool; his spokesman, Elliott Mintz, thinks not. Mintz wrote down the Web address when told about the game to check it out himself. 

“To my knowledge, he doesn’t spend any time online,” Mintz said. “He’s not a big computer guy.” 

——— 

On the Net: 

http://pool.dylantree.com 

http://www.bobdylan.com 


Bears pound UCLA to take over third place

By Dean Caparaz, Daily Planet Correspondent
Friday February 22, 2002

Amit Tamir shredded the UCLA defense for 14-second-half points as Cal routed the Bruins, 69-51, last night at Haas Pavilion in a game that got testy down the stretch.  

With the win, Cal improved its record to 19-6 and 10-5 in the Pac-10. UCLA fell to 17-9 and 9-6. Cal moved past UCLA into sole possession of third place in the conference.  

Cal was coming off a disheartening loss at Washington, 75-60. Prior to that game, Matt Lyon, Cal’s assistant vice chancellor for public affairs, who was accompanying the Bears on the Washington trip, passed away of a heart attack.  

“(Thursday) was a huge game for us,” Cal coach Ben Braun said. “This was the biggest game our team has had to face, after a tough loss, a tragic death of a close member of our basketball family. To play under these conditions is really something.”  

The game bore little resemblance to the tight 64-57 loss the Bears suffered to the Bruins down in Los Angeles on Jan. 26. Back then, the Bears struggled mightily against the Bruins’ 2-3 zone. This time, they aggressively attacked the zone in the first half and then made their perimeter shots over the zone in the second stanza. Cal shot 6-of-11 from three-point range in the second half after making just 1-of-9 threes in the first half. The Bears shot 46.3 percent from the field for the game.  

“They allowed us to move the ball a lot more,” Cal guard Brian Wethers said. “They didn’t pressure as much on the wing.”  

“They just got the ball inside and that opened up their outside,” UCLA coach Steve Lavin said. “They took 30-plus threes in the game at Pauley [Pavilion]. Today they came out and established the game in the paint.”  

Tamir led Cal in scoring with 18 points. Wethers (15 points), Solomon Hughes (12) and Joe Shipp (11) also scored in double figures. Shipp and Wethers led Cal with 6 rebounds apiece. Wethers completed his all-around play by leading Cal with 6 assists. Overall, Cal had 21 assists on its 25 field goals.  

UCLA’s Dan Gadzuric tied Tamir for game-high honors with 18 and grabbed a game-high 10 rebounds, but Cal’s stingy defense held UCLA’s leading scorer Jason Kapono, who averaged 17.6 points per game coming into the night, to just 10 points on 3-of-9 shooting.  

With the Golden Bears up 66-51 with 2:24 to go, UCLA forward Matt Barnes clotheslined Cal point guard Shantay Legans as the latter went up for a rebound. Barnes, a 6-foot-7, 235-pound forward, knocked the 5-foot-10, 175-pound Legans to the floor, which he hit headfirst. Legans was unconscious for about two minutes and Barnes was ejected from the game. After Legans walked off the court with a likely concussion, Dennis Gates replaced him to sink one of two free throws. Legans’ availability for Saturday afternoon’s clash with USC was unknown.  

“It depends on how severe it is,” Braun said. “If it’s a severe concussion, he may not [play]. That would be very unfortunate. The good thing is he’s okay right now.” 

Hughes and Wethers led the way for the Bears in the first half with 10 points each. In fact, Hughes made his first five shots as Cal bolted out to a 16-7 lead. Cal figured out how to score against UCLA’s zone and also how to shut down the Bruins. Gadzuric was the only Bruin who could get any offensive rhythm, as his team shot just 33.3 percent from the field in the half. UCLA shot 50 percent in the second half to finish with a respectable 42.6 mark for the game.  

In the second half, Cal rode a three-point barrage to open up the game at 55-32. During one stretch, from the 17:03 to the 10:44 mark, Cal slapped a 20-6 run on the Bruins with six threes among the seven made baskets. The other basket was a two-handed dunk from Wethers. Tamir, who shot 2-of-7 overall in the first half and was 0-of-3 from beyond the arc, hit three 3-pointers during the run. Shipp added two from long range and Ryan Forehan-Kelly hit another. Tamir had three of his four assists during the run.  

“Our passing was sharp, crisp,” Braun said. “We played unselfishly. We did everything we had to do to win. I’m proud of our team.”


Today in History

Staff
Friday February 22, 2002

Today is Friday, Feb. 22, the 53rd day of 2002. There are 312 days left in the year. 

 

Today’s Highlight in History: 

On Feb. 22, 1732, the first president of the United States, George Washington, was born at his parents’ plantation in the Virginia Colony. 

 

 

On this date: 

In 1819, Spain ceded Florida to the United States. 

In 1865, Tennessee adopted a new constitution abolishing slavery. 

In 1879, Frank Winfield Woolworth opened a five-cent store in Utica, N.Y. 

In 1889, President Cleveland signed a bill to admit the Dakotas, Montana and Washington state to the Union. 

In 1892, “Lady Windermere’s Fan,” by Oscar Wilde, was first performed, at London’s St. James’s Theater. 

In 1924, Calvin Coolidge delivered the first presidential radio broadcast from the White House. 

In 1935, it became illegal for airplanes to fly over the White House. 

In 1973, the United States and China agreed to establish liaison offices. 

In 1980, the U.S. Olympic hockey team upset the Soviets at Lake Placid, N.Y., 4-to-3. (The U.S. team went on to win the gold medal.) 

In 1987, pop artist Andy Warhol died at a New York City hospital at age 58. 

Ten years ago: President Bush renewed his attack on a Democratic tax plan, saying in a radio address that congressional Democrats were choosing “politics over duty.” At the Winter Olympics in Albertville, France, American speedskater Cathy Turner won the women’s 500-meter race. 

Five years ago: Cutbacks began under new welfare law limiting childless adults, under age 50 and able to work, to three months of food stamps in any three-year period. Albert Shanker, the leader of the American Federation of Teachers who championed public school reforms, died in New York at age 68. 

One year ago: President Bush held his first full-fledged presidential news conference, in which he defended his tax-cutting and budget-tightening plans and gave FBI director Louis Freeh a vote of confidence following the arrest of veteran agent Robert Hanssen on spying charges. A U.N. war crimes tribunal convicted three Bosnian Serbs standing trial on charges of rape and torture in the first case of wartime sexual enslavement to go before an international court. 

 

Today’s Birthdays: Actor Sir John Mills is 94. Announcer Don Pardo is 84. Actor Paul Dooley is 74. Hollywood “ghost singer” Marni Nixon is 72. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., is 70. Movie director Jonathan Demme is 58. Actor John Ashton is 54. Actress Ellen Greene is 52. Actress Miou-Miou is 52. Actress Julie Walters is 52. Basketball Hall-of-Famer Julius Erving is 52. Actor Kyle MacLachlan is 43. Actress Jeri Ryan is 34. Actress-singer Lea Salonga is 31. Actor Jose Solano (“Baywatch”) is 31. Tennis player Michael Chang is 30. Actress Drew Barrymore is 27.


Sports this weekend

Staff
Friday February 22, 2002

Friday 

Men’s Basketball – Berkeley vs. De Anza, 7 p.m. at Berkeley High School 

 

Saturday 

Men’s Rugby – Cal vs. University of British Columbia, 1 p.m. at Witter Field 

Men’s Basketball – Cal vs. USC, 3 p.m.  

at Haas Pavilion 

Girls Basketball – St. Mary’s vs. Kennedy (BSAL final), 5:30 p.m. at Albany High School 

Girls Basketball – Berkeley vs. Encinal (ACCAL final), 6 p.m. at Hercules High School 

Boys Basketball – St. Mary’s vs. Salesian (BSAL final), 8 p.m. at Albany High School 


Riordan doubles the amount collected by Davis in recent weeks

By Alexa Haussler, The Associated Press
Friday February 22, 2002

SACRAMENTO — Republican gubernatorial front-runner Richard Riordan collected twice as much as Democratic Gov. Gray Davis in a high-stakes fund-raising battle in recent weeks, reports released Thursday show. 

Riordan collected $2.1 million during a recent 28-day period, while Davis took in $1.1 million. Both spent heavily on dueling television commercials as the primary race entered its final stretch. 

Riordan will face Secretary of State Bill Jones and Los Angeles businessman Bill Simon in the primary in less than two weeks. The victor will challenge Davis in November. 

The newest reports detail fund-raising and spending between Jan. 20 and Feb. 16. They reflect a crush of spending on commercials and an outpouring of cash by Davis and the two leading Republicans who want to unseat him. 

Riordan took in $250,000 during the four-week period from his top donor Univision chief Jerry Perenchio, who has contributed a total $400,000 to the former Los Angeles mayor. Perenchio also has donated at least $350,000 to Davis since February 2000. 

Both Riordan and Simon collected money from companies or individuals heavily involved in offshore oil exploration. Davis recently has publicly rejected federal efforts to settle a lawsuit over the state’s right to review oil and gas leases off California’s coast. 

Riordan received $20,000 from Hushang Ansary of Houston, chairman and CEO of IRI International, an offshore oil drilling company. Ansary, a former Iranian ambassador to the United States and now a U.S. citizen, has been a major supporter of President Bush. 

Simon received $5,000 from Tesoro Petroleum, a Texas-based company active in offshore oil drilling. 

Davis, meanwhile, continued to lure a stream of donations from an array of donors from corporate heavy hitters to worker’s unions. 

Davis spent $5.7 million in four weeks — mostly on television commercials that aired statewide. Riordan, meanwhile, poured $3.6 million into his bid, mostly for television spots. 

Despite raising cash at a clip of $75,000 a day during the four-week stint, Riordan has faced criticism from his own party, come under attack from Davis and has seen his once-commanding lead in polls shrink. 

Simon — a wealthy investor who went from virtually unknown to gaining on Riordan in recent polls — lent his campaign $1.7 million during the period and raised $686,000 in contributions. Many of his contributions have poured in from donors in his native East Coast and from religious conservatives. 

He also received $25,000 from PMX Industries, a Korean-owned copper and brass recycling mill in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and $1,000 from Susan Lyne, the new president of ABC. 

Simon spent $3 million, mainly on positive ads to boost his profile. His popularity has climbed in recent weeks and he has gained the support of some of the Republican party’s key conservatives, and he launched his first negative ad Thursday critical of Riordan. 

Secretary of State Bill Jones, who has struggled to attract donations and has lagged in polls, raised $484,000 during the period and spent $288,000. 

Davis — who faces no opposition until the general election in November — has made the unusual step of plunging into the campaign before the primary. He has launched a string of ads, many of which directly attack Riordan. But he still has the largest campaign treasury by far: He had $28 million to spend as of Feb. 16. 

——— 

On the Net: 

The campaign finance reports can be found at http://www.ss.ca.gov 


Registration drive turns out few new voters

By Kelly Virella, Special to the Daily Planet
Friday February 22, 2002

Tuesday was the last day for Californians to register to vote for the March 5 election. But looking at the empty registration tables at City Hall that day, you wouldn’t have known it.  

The Department of Elections was hosting an all day voter registration drive. The nonprofit A. Philip Randolph Institute had even volunteered to shuttle unregistered eligible voters to city hall. But by 3 p.m. only 60 of San Francisco’s thousands of unregistered eligible voters had shown up.  

With a primary gubernatorial slot at stake, an ongoing energy crisis and election reform on the ballot, the city’s chief election officer said she hoped more would register before the drive ended, at midnight.  

“It’s very important every San Franciscan comes out to vote,” Tammy Haygood said. “We’re going to stay open to give everyone the chance to register.” 

Tuesday’s rain was limiting the big gains in registration the department expected, Haygood said. Poll workers planned to set up registration tables outside city hall, in easy view of potential voters. But the weather forced them into the basement. 

But the department can’t blame the rain for low registration, said the co-author of an initiative that would allow people to register to vote the day of an election. “This is not a day that tells everybody, ‘Okay it’s Feb. 19, time to go out and register,’” said Chip Neilsen, an attorney for the Election Day Voter Registration campaign, which is trying to get its initiative on the November ballot. “People should be trying to encourage people to register everyday.” 

Six states allow voter registration on Election Day, and all say it has increased their voters’ participation, according to a report by the think-tank Alliance for a Better Campaign. Two years ago the state legislature changed the deadline for registration, giving Californians an additional two weeks to register.  

Though Democrats generally support last-minute voter registration, Gov. Gray Davis is skeptical of it, said Hilary McLean, a Davis spokesperson. “He does have concerns about the integrity of the voting process,” she said. “He would want assurance that there is adequate protection to the system.” 

Voter registration is intended to prevent ballot stuffing, the practice of rigging an election by having the same people vote more than once. Early voter registration deadlines give a registrar ample time to compile lists of registered voters that can be used to cross check individual voters’ identities.  

But early registration deadlines aren’t the only way to ensure the integrity of an election, said Bruce Cain, chair of UC Berkeley’s Institute of Governmental Studies. “It is technologically possible to register on the same day and prevent fraud,” he said. “I’m 100 percent in favor of it. We should have done it along time ago.” 

“It shouldn’t be that you have a waiting period,” said James Bryant, president of A. Philip Randolph Institute, the non-profit that shuttled people who wanted to register to city hall Tuesday. “It’s not like you’re getting a gun permit.” Or maybe it is, he said. 

“It’s a political weapon if you can get your community to vote,” he said. 

Despite occasional bouts with low voter turnout, San Francisco generally lives up to its reputation as one of the most politically active cities in the country, said David Binder, a political consultant based in San Francisco.  

Binder’s 1999 study showed 85 percent of San Francisco’s eligible voters were registered.  

“If you want sunshine and entertainment, you go to L.A.,” Binder said. “If you want that big city feel, you go to New York. If you want to be active in politics you go to San Francisco.” 

But registering isn’t the same as voting. Experts say turnout at the March 5 election is likely to be low again, as it was in the November 2001 election when only 30 percent of San Francisco’s registered voters turned out. Twenty-seven percent of California’s likely voters don’t even know there’s an election March 5, a recent Field poll showed.  

Recent allegations of corruption in San Francisco’s Department of Elections mean more voters are likely to stay away from the polls, said Karen Alexander, co-president of California Voter Foundation. Lost or misfiled ballots led the secretary to state to launch an investigation into the November 2000 election.  

“There’s a chronic perception of chronic election fraud in San Francisco,” Alexander said.


Group accused in baby’s starvation death back in court

By Justin Pritchard, The Associated Press
Friday February 22, 2002

Papers show 13 siblings were abused for misbehaving, force-fed and starved 

 

SAN RAFAEL — The 13 siblings who lived in a cultish family home where one child starved to death were lashed and forced-fed chili peppers if they misbehaved, according to papers filed with the court where the children’s parents appeared Thursday. 

The 12 surviving children, in protective custody since their 19-month-old brother died in mid November, also described a suburban home with harsh punishments for sneaking food during routine three-day fasts. 

One of the girls said she was tied to a playpen at night for two weeks as punishment for eating during a fast, according to the documents. Other children told authorities that discipline included their mouths being sealed with tape and being bent over a weight lifting bench and beaten with a belt. 

Authorities said they seized a so-called “Book of Rules” from the house where Winnfred Wright allegedly terrorized his children along with four women, three of them the children’s mothers, according to documents reviewed by a reporter Wednesday but absent from the court’s file Thursday. 

Wright, 45, and the three mothers — Carol Bremner, 44, Deirdre Wilson, 37, and Mary Campbell, 37 — remain in Marin County jail without bail. During Thursday’s hearing a judge gave the fourth woman, the children’s self-described home school teacher, a chance to make $100,000 bail. 

When the judge announced the bail reduction, Campbell, who is visibly pregnant, turned to Kali Polk-Matthews and smiled, touching her on the arm. But Polk-Matthews, 20, did not post the money by Thursday night and remained behind bars. 

Judge Terrence Boren also imposed a temporary gag order preventing lawyers and officials from speaking publicly about the case. He will review that decision March 12 when the defendants are expected to enter pleas. 

All five adults were indicted earlier this month and arrested on charges of second-degree murder, manslaughter and child neglect; Polk-Matthews, who only joined the household months ago and did not bear any children, doesn’t face the murder charge. 

The grand jury indicted Polk-Matthews without a request by prosectuors. 

“My niece Kali Matthews is a kind and decent person,” Jim Matthews said outside the courtroom. “I hope that she’s able to extricate herself from this matter. It’s a sad affair all around.” 

Prosecutors argued that Polk-Matthews’ bail should be set at $500,000 because she did little to try and save a 19-month-old the night he died. 

The boy suffered from multiple fractures because he had almost no calcium in his bones, according to forensic child pathologist Gregory Reiber, who did the autopsy on Ndigo Campisi-Nyah-Wright. 

“In spite of being faced with the agony of a child gasping for breath and turning blue, she never called for medical assistance,” prosecutors wrote in papers filed Thursday. Those papers also said some of children were “obviously deformed” and Ndigo was “frighteningly small,” but Polk-Matthews did not contact police. 

Medical authorities have said most of the other children were also malnourished, deprived of sunlight and suffering from rickets, a bone-softening disease caused by a lack of vitamin D. 

Just before Boren issued the gag order on lawyers, law enforcement officials and social workers, Wright’s lawyer took a few shots against media coverage of the case. 

“Because the case involves racial and sexual issues and an alternative lifestyle, it creates an atmosphere vulnerable to voyeurism and sensationalism,” attorney Mary Stearns argued in asking wanted Boren to seal any documents related to the case— a motion opposed by a lawyer for the San Francisco Chronicle. 

Boren didn’t order any further sealings, though several affidavits prosecutors filed Wednesday were missing from the court’s file. 

The Marin Independent Journal reviewed those affidavits and reported that they provided a chilling account of Ndigo’s last days alive. 

One girl in the house said Ndigo got progressively thinner as he was fed a diet of tea with supplements. Wright told investigators the night the baby died he had a hard time breathing and he was placed in front of a television to stimulate his brain, the paper reported. 

Wright has refused requests for interviews. 

Reached at his Sacramento home Thursday night, his father, Leonard Wright, refused to answer questions. 

“I have nothing to say,” Wright said, “Nothing to say.” 


Questions on the house

James and Morris Carey
Friday February 22, 2002

Q. Fran asks: I have well water in my home and of course the water smells. Someone told me if you take out the “rod” in the water heater, the water won’t smell anymore. But what rod is it and how do I get it out? 

A. The problem occurs when the metal rod in glass-lined water heaters (used to improve the life expectancy of the glass lining) combines with waterborne sulfate-reducing bacteria, resulting in the production of hydrogen sulfide. The water is not dangerous to consume, but is difficult to swallow. It smells like rotten eggs. 

Solution 1: Replace the magnesium metal rod (cathodic protection anode) with one made of aluminum (it might not be available for your brand of water heater). The aluminum rod produces 30 percent less current, and therefore generates less hydrogen gas while causing enough current to adequately protect the glass liner. 

Solution 2: Find the point of origin of the sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB), and eliminate it. SRB is most common in new-water supply pipes contaminated by soil during construction. The soil carrying the SRB eventually ends up as solids at the bottom of the water heater. A thorough flushing to remove the dirt, then a second flushing with a dash of chlorine, and finally a third flush — to clean — should do the trick. Hydrogen gas without the presence of SRB will go unnoticed. SRB is not so easy to remove if your water company pumps the bacteria into your home along with the water. This will often be the case as increasingly water districts are reducing or ceasing their use of chlorine. Sulfate-reducing bacteria are devastated by chlorination, but will thrive otherwise. 

It is possible to inadvertently contaminate your own water supply by allowing sulfate-reducing bacteria — not to mention other more dangerous bugs — to enter your water system at your own property. This can happen through your sprinklers if you’re not using anti-siphon sprinkler valves, which prevent backwash. Backwash could also result when a water main in your neighborhood is turned off while your garden hose is running in a muddy puddle. 

——— 

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


Sick-house symptoms and solutions

James and Morris Carey
Friday February 22, 2002

Many people are unaware that indoor air pollution can be just as bad as, or even worse than, outdoor air pollution to an individual’s health. 

EPA studies of human exposure to air pollutants indicate that indoor air levels of many pollutants may be two to five times, and occasionally, more than 100 times, higher than outdoor levels. It’s estimated that most people spend as much as 90 percent of their time indoors — making home, school and the workplace potentially hazardous to one’s health. Health risks probably are higher for infants, the elderly and people with chronic diseases. 

Further, laws designed to improve energy efficiency by cutting down on drafts don’t improve indoor air quality. Tightly sealed homes constructed in the last couple of decades might have diminished the use of fossil fuels, but have wreaked havoc with Americans’ respiratory systems. Homes that can’t “breathe” can’t dilute pollutants contained in building and decorating products. 

Indoor pollution sources that release gases or particles into the air are the primary cause of indoor air-quality problems. Inadequate ventilation can increase indoor pollutant levels by not bringing in enough outdoor air to dilute emissions from indoor sources, and by not carrying indoor air pollutants out of the home. This allows concentrations to build up. High temperature and humidity levels also can increase concentrations of some pollutants. 

All these pollutants have one thing in common; they contain chemicals that are part of a larger class of chemicals known as Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs). VOCs are organic (carbon-based) chemicals that evaporate readily at room temperature. VOCs typically are found in high indoor concentrations in dry-cleaned clothing; chloroform from chlorinated water; benzene from tobacco smoke (one of the leading indoor air pollutants); formaldehyde from fabrics, pressed wood products and insulation; styrene found in adhesives, foam, lubricants, plastics carpets and insulation; methylene chloride from paint strippers; and carbon tetrachloride from paint removers. 

Other potential sources of indoor air pollution are central heating, cooling and dehumidification systems, household cleaning and maintenance products, outdoor sources such as pesticides and biological contaminants such as animal dander, mold and cockroaches. 

While indoor air pollution affects people differently, in general, short-term exposure might cause immediate effects such as headaches, dizziness and allergies. Long-term exposures can result in respiratory disease, heart disease and cancer, all of which can be severely debilitating, even fatal. 

Building-related illness is an identifiable disease or illness that can be traced to a specific pollutant or source within a building. In contrast, the term “sick building (sick home) syndrome” is used to describe situations in which building occupants experience acute health and comfort effects that appear to be linked to time spent in a building, but where no specific illness or cause can be identified. Both syndromes are associated with acute or immediate health problems. 

While this is not particularly good news, awareness is the first step in creating a more healthful indoor environment and improving your health. Your best defense against indoor air pollution is a strong offense. First, identify and control sources of pollution to reduce and prevent indoor air contamination. This can range from changing housecleaning products to airing out freshly dry-cleaned clothing to tossing out formaldehyde-containing furniture. Equally important is improving ventilation. Proper ventilation — the mixing of indoor air with outdoor air — can revitalize the air in your home and protect your health. 

Since cigarette smoke is one of the single greatest contributors to indoor air pollution, smoking indoors is a no-no. Similarly, fireplaces and other fuel-burning appliances (water heaters, furnaces, stoves, etc.) should be properly adjusted and vented to the exterior. Doing so will both prevent carbon monoxide poisoning and improve the efficiency of the appliance. 

Adequately sized exhaust fans should be used wherever moisture and combustion are present in the bathroom, laundry and kitchen. A bath fan, for example, will help to dissipate chloroform gas, which is a byproduct of chlorinated water. It also will remove excessive moisture that can lead to mold which can produce yet more health hazards. 

There are other indoor air pollutants that deserve your attention, such as asbestos, lead and radon. The first two were used pervasively in building products before being outlawed by the EPA in the late 1970s. The rule of thumb with asbestos and lead is that it is best left alone if it in good shape and not peeling or crumbling. Asbestos or lead should not be scraped or sanded and should be removed only by a professional abatement contractor with the proper equipment. Moreover, testing should be performed after the abatement process to ensure the air quality is safe. 

Radon, on the other hand, is a naturally occurring gas that is derived from uranium in the ground. Radon can make its way into a home through cracks in foundation or basement walls. Small amounts of radon can be controlled by sealing cracks with a caulking or patching compound. Higher levels might require the installation of an exhaust system to disperse concentrated amounts into outdoor air. 

Do-it-yourself test kits are available for many indoor air pollutants such as lead or radon. Other indoor pollutants such as asbestos require professional testing. In either case, if you haven’t or someone in your family hasn’t been feeling up to snuff, or if you suspect that your home contains more than its share of pollutants, we suggest that you have your home tested by a pro. 

For more information on indoor air pollution and what to do about it visit the EPA Web site at www.epa.gov or the American Lung Association Web site at www.lungusa.org. 

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


PG&E admits it may have kept complex deals off its books

By Michael Liedtke, The Associated Press
Friday February 22, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — PG&E Corp. said Thursday that it might have improperly kept several complex deals off its books, making the power company the latest industry giant to own up to an accounting slip-up following the Enron Corp. scandal. 

The potential problems prompted San Francisco-based PG&E to postpone its scheduled fourth-quarter earnings announcement and raised the specter of the accounting debacle that destroyed Enron, once the nation’s largest energy trader. 

PG&E warned it might revise its financial statements dating back to 1999, but stressed the changes won’t have a major impact on its earnings or its shareholders’ equity. 

The company also sought to distance its off-the-book deals from the murky partnerships that ruined Enron. PG&E said details about all the deals had been outlined in its corporate annual report last year and a Securities Exchange and Commission filing made six months ago by one of its unregulated businesses, the National Energy Group. 

PG&E’s assurances appeared to satisfy the stock market. The company’s shares fell 59 cents to close at $20 Thursday on the New York Stock Exchange. 

The stock market is demanding more straightforward accounting from companies to minimize the chances of rude shocks like the one Enron delivered late last year when it acknowledged that it had overstated its past profits by $586 million. 

The pressure has prompted companies to pore through their financial statements for potential trouble. “Every company wants to make sure they have all their ducks in a row before announcing earnings now,” said analyst Carol Coale of Prudential Securities. 

With Enron’s collapse looming in the background, power companies are under the greatest scrutiny. Two other industry giants, Williams Cos. and Reliant Energy Inc., also have delayed their fourth-quarter earnings so they can re-evaluate the way they accounted for certain deals. 

PG&E faces even more daunting issues than questions about its accounting practices. The company’s main source of revenue, Northern California utility Pacific Gas and Electric, remains stuck in a bankruptcy case initiated 10 months ago and state regulators are trying to block its plan for reorganization. 

PG&E’s accounting headache revolves around the company’s approach to building power plants in Connecticut, California and Arizona, as well as the way it obtained some of its power-generating equipment. 

As part of these deals, PG&E formed trusts with other unidentified partners and created “synthetic” leases that allowed the deals to remain off the company’s books. 

For the deals to remain off PG&E’s balance sheet, the other partners have to maintain a 3 percent stake in the trusts, a condition that might have been breached because of “technical” issues, the company said. 

PG&E accountants and the company’s outside auditor, Deloitte & Touche, raised red flags about the deals Wednesday night during a final review of the fourth-quarter financial statements, said PG&E spokesman Brian Hertzog. 

If a more detailed review concludes the leases need to be reclassified, PG&E said it will change financial statements during the previous three years and record the deals on its balance sheet. The revisions might add an additional $1 billion in assets and liabilities to PG&E’s books. 

The possible changes won’t erode PG&E’s profits because the deals are regarded as capital leases, an accounting item that doesn’t affect income. 

——— 

On The Net: 

http://www.pgecorp.com 


Boeing to lay off 1,000 in Los Angeles

The Associated Press
Friday February 22, 2002

LOS ANGELES — Boeing Co. said Thursday it will lay off about 1,000 people from its satellite manufacturing arm in Southern California as it restructures to deal with tough competition in the uncertain economy. 

The announcement came four months after Boeing cut 400 other jobs at the satellite division because of the slowing economy. 

The Chicago-based company has slashed more than 15,000 jobs nationwide and plans to cut as many as 30,000 jobs by mid-year, most of them from its Seattle-based Commercial Airplanes division. The layoffs announced here Thursday are not part of the 30,000 previously announced. 

The new round of cuts include reductions in manufacturing and support staff along with some engineering positions at Boeing facilities in El Segundo and Torrance, said company spokesman George Torres. 

“We are restructuring in general to be more competitive in a very tough market,” he said. 

Boeing acquired the satellite business, which employs about 9,200 people, last year. The unit is the world’s largest producer of satellites for military and commercial markets. 

The weak economy has slowed orders from commercial customers, Torres said. 

The struggling telecommunications industry saw a number of companies such as Lucent Technologies Inc. and Global Crossing Ltd. falter financially. 

Many of those companies were looking to use satellites to help build global wireless communication systems and space-based broadband systems for the Internet. 

“They (Boeing) have been building a satellite a month for a long time, but they’re looking at the future. They’re not seeing the kind of orders they’ve had,” said Marco Caceres, a senior space analyst with the aerospace research firm the Teal Group, 

Boeing hopes the final cuts in Southern California will involve no more than 700 people through efforts to reassign workers to 350 current openings and encourage others to retire early, Torres said. 

But getting a transfer can be tough. 

“When you try to match skills with other parts of Boeing, most of the openings are on the engineering side,” he said. “There aren’t as many in manufacturing.” 

Torres said Boeing remains committed to expanding its satellite business. 

The company intends to proceed with plans for a 35,000-square-feet addition to its El Segundo satellite factory and continue pursuing new military business that could create about 1,300 new jobs by 2005. 

It is also on track to build 12 global positioning satellites for the U.S. Air Force in the fourth quarter of 2002. 


Global Crossing shareholders to file alternate bid

By Simon Avery, The Associated Press
Friday February 22, 2002

LOS ANGELES — A group of Global Crossing Ltd. shareholders intends to file an alternative rescue plan Friday for the telecom network firm that would save investors’ holdings and kick out many of the top executives. 

The company detailed a bankruptcy plan Jan. 28 under which it confirmed shareholders will likely receive nothing. 

The shareholder group, which is led by Coburn Meredith, a small investment firm in Hartford, Conn., and includes a grass-roots collection of individual investors, intends to file its bid with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan. 

The proposal involves raising about $1 billion by issuing warrants that would guarantee holders the right to buy Global Crossing shares at a set price in the future, sources familiar with the bid said. Coburn Meredith faces a quiet period until the filing. 

Lawyers for the group will try to convince Judge Robert Gerber that there would be sufficient demand for the warrants. 

Several independent experts called the effort extremely unusual. They expressed doubt the plan would succeed, saying bankruptcy law favors a company and its creditors and that few investors are likely to bet more money on Global Crossing. 

“This company is very far gone. I don’t see any ability to raise equity capital,” said Harry DeAngelo, professor of finance at the University of Southern California’s Marshall School of Business. 

Although the shareholders are not trying to buy out Global Crossing, they do want to gain control of the majority of seats on the board. 

John Schmidt, a spokesman for Global Crossing, said the company was not aware of the shareholders’ efforts but is obligated to consider other offers. 

As part of Global Crossing’s own bankruptcy plan, two Asian firms would receive 79 percent of the company in return for investing $750 million. Creditors would jointly own 21 percent and receive $300 million in return for forgiving about $12.4 billion of debt. A court hearing on the sale procedures is scheduled for March 7. 

It isn’t clear how much shareholder who support the plan will receive, but many shareholders interviewed said they still believe Global Crossing’s fiber optic network linking 27 countries is a winning investment. 

They said the assets had been mismanaged by a team of executives who misled investors. 

“They would not have that network without the shareholders,” said Diana Conley, an investor in Houston, Texas, who spent about $9,000 buying shares during the last year. 

“This is a public company. They have no right to treat us like a personal piggy bank. The shareholders own the company, although (chairman) Gary Winnick may act like he owns it,” said Jay Province of Charlottesville, S.C. 

The 44 year-old Web developer said he invested $25,000 in Global Crossing last September as part of a plan to save for his two children’s university education. 

A common complaint among shareholders is that even though they knew the risks of investing in telecommunications, they never knew ahead of time that Global Crossing was bolstering revenues by swapping network capacity with its own customers. 

An internal letter by Global Crossing’s vice president of finance in August said the practice needed to be investigated because it appeared to intentionally mislead investors. 

Global Crossing never made the concerns of Roy Olofson public and didn’t inform its auditors until late January. Schmidt said the company adheres to all generally accepted accounting principles and determined an investigation was not merited. 

But shareholders said they would not have invested if they had the information. 

“If I’d known, absolutely I would have gotten out,” said Gene Ray, a retired pastor in Miami who invested about $200,000 in Global Crossing over a two-year period ending last October. 

Some said they invested after comments in the fall by John Legere, the company’s new chief executive, that the firm was fully funded through 2002 and that bankruptcy was not a possibility. 

“We can’t make intelligent investment decisions based on lies,” Conley said. 

Schmidt responded that the company tells shareholders what it knows to be true at the time. 

The shareholders also expressed doubt that regulators and any amount of new laws can prevent future flameouts like Global Crossing. Instead, they say shareholders have to exert more control over the executives who are managing their investments. 

Global Crossing will be a crucial test case, said Province. 

“I really want to fuel the fire and get people motivated. Otherwise we’re going to have falling capital markets and a lot of angry people,” he said. 

Some independent experts agree that the collapse of large, seemingly well-run firms like Global Crossing and Enron Corp. will undermine the stock market unless shareholder confidence is protected. 

“There’s a risk here that there could be a long-term impact if enough investors become unwilling to invest,” said Christine Rosen, professor of business history at the Haas School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley. 


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 


Opinion

Editorials

Today in History

Staff
Tuesday February 26, 2002

Today’s Highlight in History: 

Two hundred years ago, on Feb. 26, 1802, French literary giant Victor Hugo was born in Besancon. 

On this date: 

In 1815, Napoleon Bonaparte escaped from the Island of Elba to begin his second conquest of France. 

In 1848, the Second French Republic was proclaimed. 

In 1919, Congress established Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona. 

In 1929, President Coolidge signed a measure establishing Grand Teton National Park. 

In 1940, the United States Air Defense Command was created. 

In 1951, the 22nd Amendment to the Constitution, limiting a president to two terms of office, was ratified. 

In 1952, Prime Minister Winston Churchill announced that Britain had developed its own atomic bomb. 

In 1962, after becoming the first American to orbit the Earth, John Glenn told a joint meeting of Congress, “Exploration and the pursuit of knowledge have always paid dividends in the long run.” 

In 1987, the Tower Commission, which probed the Iran-Contra affair, issued its report, which rebuked President Reagan for failing to control his national security staff. 

In 1993, a bomb built by a group of Islamic extremists exploded in the parking garage of New York’s World Trade Center, killing six people and injuring more than 1,000 others. 

 

Ten years ago:  

 

The Supreme Court ruled unanimously that sexually harassed students may sue to collect monetary damages from their schools and school officials. The Supreme Court of Ireland cleared the way for a 14-year-old girl to leave the country for an abortion. 

 

Five years ago:  

 

President Clinton defended White House fund-raising tactics as “entirely appropriate,” a day after the disclosure of documents putting Clinton at the center of all-out fund-raising efforts. Israel’s Cabinet voted to build a new Jewish neighborhood in disputed east Jerusalem. “Change the World” won four Grammy awards, including record of the year; Celine Dion’s “Falling Into You” won album of the year and best pop album. 

One year ago: 

A U.N. tribunal convicted a Bosnian Croat political leader (Dario Kordic) and a military commander (Mario Cerkez) of war crimes for ordering the systematic murder and persecution of Muslim civilians during the Bosnian war. 

 

Today’s Birthdays:  

 

Actor Mason Adams is 83. Actor Tony Randall is 82. Actress Betty Hutton is 81. Singer Fats Domino is 74. Political columnist Robert Novak is 71. Singer Johnny Cash is 70. Country-rock musician Paul Cotton (Poco) is 59. Actor-director Bill Duke is 59. Singer Mitch Ryder is 57. Rock musician Jonathan Cain (Journey) is 52. Singer Michael Bolton is 49. Actor Greg Germann (“Ally McBeal”) is 44.


OBITUARIES

The Associated Press
Monday February 25, 2002

LOS ANGELES — Academy Award-winning animator Chuck Jones, best known for making Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Elmer Fudd, Porky Pig and other beloved characters come to life, died Friday of congestive heart failure. He was 89. 

Jones worked on more than 300 animated films in a career that spanned more than 60 years. Three of his films won Academy Awards and he was awarded an honorary Oscar in 1996 for lifetime achievement. He also received an honorary life membership from the Directors Guild of America. 

Jones also produced, directed and wrote the screenplay for the animated television classic “Dr. Seuss’ How the Grinch Stole Christmas.” 

One of Jones’ most popular films, “What’s Opera, Doc?” was inducted into the National Film Registry in 1992 for being “among the most culturally, historically and aesthetically significant films of our time.” 

Three of Jones’ films won Academy Awards: “For Scent-imental Reasons,” “So Much for So Little” and “The Dot and the Line.” 

After graduating from Chouinard Art Institute (now the California Institute of Arts), he began making a living drawing pencil portraits at a Los Angeles marketplace. He landed his first job washing animation cels in 1932, working for legendary Disney animator Ub Iwerks. 

A few years later, he became an animator at the Leon Schlesinger Studio, which was later sold to Warner Bros. He headed his own unit at the Warner Bros. Animation Dept. until it closed in 1962. 


BHS boys’ face O’Dowd

Staff Report
Monday February 25, 2002

The Berkeley High boys’ basketball team received an at-large bid to the North Coast Section Division I playoffs on Sunday. The sixth-seeded ’Jackets will face No. 3 Bishop O’Dowd in a first-round game at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday. The game will be played at either Bishop O’Dowd’s gym or at Chabot College in Hayward, with the venue to be decided today.


Plane crashes near San Jose high school

The Associated Press
Saturday February 23, 2002

SAN JOSE — A small airplane hit a fence, clipped a tree and crash landed in a field near a high school Friday. 

No one was injured in the crash, according to a San Jose Fire Department employee. 

One man who witnessed the accident, Rich Williams, said he saw the plane bank hard, plow through a fence and hit a tree before coming to rest near Del Mar High School shortly after 6 p.m. 

The plane barely missed some high-voltage power lines in the area, Williams said. The plane also struck bleachers on an athletic field and finally spun to a stop near some baseball batting cages. 

“I saw this guy coming into the northwest struggling and sputtering,” Williams said. “He did a sharp bank heading south and he was out of fuel and I said ‘this guy is coming down.”’ 

The plane was intact after the crash and fire crews were on hand, though no fires broke out and damage in the area was minimal. Federal Aviation Administration investigators were at the scene late Friday, but the cause of the emergency crash landing had not been determined, local authorities said. 


Family, friends respond to reporter’s death

By Paul Chavez, The Associated Press
Friday February 22, 2002

LOS ANGELES — Family and friends of slain Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl mourned their loss Thursday, as news of his death reached the San Fernando Valley, where Pearl grew up and his parents still live. 

The State Department confirmed Thursday that Pearl, 38, was killed by the Pakistani kidnappers who abducted him Jan. 23. 

“Danny’s senseless murder is beyond our comprehension. Danny was a beloved son, a brother, an uncle, a husband and a father to a child who will never know him,” Pearl’s parents and two sisters said in a statement issued from their home in the Encino area of Los Angeles. 

Pearl grew up in the San Fernando Valley in northwest Los Angeles, graduating with honors in 1981 from Birmingham High School in Van Nuys. 

Caprice Young, president of the Los Angeles Unified School Board, called the death of her former Birmingham classmate “terrible news.” 

“He was a really great guy, really smart,” said Young, 36. “I like to think Americans are safe when they go abroad. Obviously, he was not. It’s terrible news.” 

At the suburban high school, faculty, staff and students observed a moment of silence after they were told of Pearl’s death. The school also has established a memorial scholarship fund in his name that will go to a journalism student. 

“We as a faculty and students are really very saddened by this,” Principal Doris Lasiter said. “We’ve been watching these events on a regular basis.” 

Yearbook pictures of Pearl show a high achiever who was a national merit finalist and a participant in the school’s Knowledge Bowl academic competition. 

The front page of the student newspaper, The Stars & Stripes, carries photos of Pearl and the headline: “BHS Alumnus Defying Death.” 

Michael Saunders, 38, a classmate of Pearl’s from elementary school through high school, said many of Pearl’s peers looked up to him. 

“I just remember he was very much a leader and very sharp, but no one ever said anything bad about him,” said Saunders, who lives in Westlake Village and is a vice president of investments for UBS PaineWebber. “He was a popular, nice guy, but a little on the reserved side... He was brilliant as far as scholastics go.” 

Classmate Diane Hirshberg said Pearl was intellectually “a level beyond” other students throughout elementary and high school. 

“But he was definitely more of a well-rounded person, not someone you saw as being completely isolated and bookish,” said Hirshberg, now an education policy analyst who lives in Berkeley. “He was always extremely smart, very funny, and one of the nicest people we were growing up with.” 

Pearl graduated from Stanford University in 1985 with a degree in communications. He later worked in western Massachusetts before joining the Wall Street Journal in Atlanta in 1990. 

He later reported from Washington, London and Paris — where he wrote about the Middle East — before moving to Asia as the newspaper’s South Asia bureau chief. 

Pearl’s wife, Mariane, is seven months pregnant with the couple’s first child. 


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.