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School board closes City of Franklin

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

District budget deficit revised to $5.4 million 

 

As expected, the Board of Education officially voted to close City of Franklin Microsociety Magnet School next year at its Wednesday night meeting. 

The board also reviewed new budget figures suggesting that next year’s deficit, presumed for weeks to be more than $6 million, may be closer to $5.4 million. 

Each board member expressed regret over the Franklin decision, which will save the financially-strapped district an estimated $326,000. 

“It’s a painful reality to face,” said board President Shirley Issel. “I can’t help but feel a sense of failure.” 

Still, board members said the decision was unavoidable, arguing that low enrollment at the school makes it too expensive to operate. 

Superintendent Michele Lawrence, who recommended the closure, also noted that six of the school’s 12 teachers have received notice that they may be laid off next year.  

Some of those notices may be rescinded by the end of the year as the budget picture clears up. But if the school stayed open next year, Lawrence argued, any layoffs would disrupt a faculty with specialized training in the school’s microsociety model, which mimics a small city. 

Lawrence added that long-planned construction on the building next year will be cheaper if it is completed in one phase, with no students in the building. Keeping the school open next year would require a more expensive two-phase construction project, and a mid-year shift of students from one side of the building to the other. 

Lew Jones, manager of facilities planning for the district, said completing construction in one phase will save the district $400,000 to $500,000 on the roughly $5 million project. 

The future use of the building is yet to be determined, although office space or a new elementary school have been suggested as possibilities. Lawrence plans to provide the board with a recommendation in the spring. 

The board made its decision after a series of Franklin parents made last-minute pleas for the school, and urged the district to conduct itself differently in the event of any future school closures. No such closures are expected this year. 

Many parents said they first learned of the Franklin closure plan through press accounts in the Daily Planet. Wednesday night, parent Michiko Morillo urged district leaders to talk directly to community members about any proposed closure in the future. 

“Come talk to them directly,” Morillo said. “It does cause a great deal of hard feelings.” 

Franklin principal Barbara Penny-James made her first public comments on the closure, noting that her work at Franklin was one of the most “inspiring experiences” of her career, and expressing concern that the microsociety model may disappear from Berkeley’s educational landscape. 

Board member Terry Doran said the district should look into retaining elements of the microsociety curriculum at other schools. Under the microsociety program, students train as entrepreneurs and political leaders in their own model city. 

 

Smaller deficit? 

Before approving the Franklin closure, board members reviewed the latest budget figures provided by the Fiscal Crisis and Management Assistance Team, or FCMAT, a state agency that has been providing the district with financial advice since October. 

According to FCMAT, the district budgeted for nearly $1 million in state aid this year to help defray energy costs, but never allocated that money for a project, salaries or any other expenditure. As a result, the current estimate on next year’s budget shortfall has been revised down, from over $6 million to $5.4 million. 

“We’re optimistic, but guarded,” said Lawrence, discussing the latest figures. The superintendent said that liabilities for lawsuits and other expenses have not yet been built into the budget, and could raise the $5.4 million estimate at some point. 

 

New interdistrict permit policy reviewed 

At the end of the night, the board reviewed draft language for a new interdistrict permit policy, which governs the admittance of non-residents to Berkeley schools. 

The new policy emphasizes that non-residents will only be allowed to attend Berkeley schools if there is adequate space, and if they maintain good attendance, discipline and academic performance. 

Lawrence said that permits will be reviewed as students move from elementary school to middle school, and from middle school to high school. But the superintendent emphasized that space concerns will not prevent the current crop of eighth graders on interdistrict permits from attending Berkeley High School next year. 

Doran had previously warned that current, interdistrict eighth graders are expecting to attend BHS next year, and that it would be unfair to retract their permits so late in the year. 

 

 

 


Palestinians want more than just peace

Josh May
Friday March 22, 2002

Editor: 

 

I felt compelled to write and express my anger. Today (March 21) was the second suicide bombing by Palestinian terrorists in Israel since the cease fire talks were started by Anthony Zinni. Yesterday the Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for a bomb that killed seven and wounded many more, including many Israeli Arabs. Today the Al-Aqsa brigade blew up at least three Israelis and wounded as many as 40 others as they walked on a street in Jerusalem. The Al-Aqsa brigade is part of Fatah, and both organizations are controlled by and claim loyalty to Yasir Arafat. 

As I sat watching the news of the attack I heard a Palestinian spokesperson on television blame Ariel Sharon and Israel for the latest Palestinian attack. This ignores the fact that 1) Sharon had withdrawn Israeli troops from the territories, 2) Sharon was cooperating and making concessions in the cease fire talks with Zinni, and 3) the terrorist group that claimed responsibility for the bombing is directly controlled by Arafat.. 

Why should Israel negotiate with Arafat? Either Arafat is refusing to stop terrorism against Israelis or he lacks the ability to control his own people. In either case Israel gets only terrorism and rhetoric when it deals with the Palestinians. The vast majority of all Israelis and Jews believe that the occupation of Palestinians by Israel is wrong and needs to stop, but how can this happen when the terrorism doesn't let up for one minute? 

Israel’s greatest fear is that Palestinians want more than a peaceful state in the West Bank and Gaza — they want to destroy the State of Israel. Who can blame Israelis for thinking this — a poll last weekend by the Arab An Najah University in Nablus found that 87.5 percent of Palestinians want to “liberate all of Palestine.” The Palestinian culture is one that makes heroes and martyrs of gunmen and suicide bombers. Palestinians tell their children that they will one day return to their old land in Israel and throw out the Jews who live their now. Palestinians want their own state in the West Bank, Gaza, and East Jerusalem and they want to overwhelm the Jewish state of Israel. 

They do not understand the nature of the two-state solution imposed by the U.N. Israel, Gaza, and the West Bank combined are the size of New Jersey. Israel is surrounded by hostile Arab countries and hundreds of millions of Arabs who make no secret of their desire to get rid of the Jewish state. 

What has Arafat ever done to reassure Israel and Jews everywhere that the Palestinian people only want a peaceful state to coexist with Israel, and that the Palestinians don’t want to see the destruction of the Jewish state? 

Nothing. I am afraid that until Arafat or someone else on the Palestinian side starts to act like a leader of a future peaceful nation and cracks down on terrorism, there will be no peace. 

 

 

 

Josh May 

Boalt Hall Law School student


Not your typical fairy tale

by John Angell Grant, Special to the Daily Planet
Friday March 22, 2002

Berkeley’s adventurous Shotgun Players were scheduled to open their season Saturday in the new 99-seat Allston Street Theater in the Gaia building in downtown Berkeley.  

But when it turned out, incredibly, that the building’s management had not applied for per- 

 

mits to house a theater in their new space, Shotgun was forced to look elsewhere, at the 11th hour, for a place to perform. 

The generous folks at Berkeley Rep then jumped into the breech and leased the Berkeley Rep Thrust Stage to the smaller company at a discounted rate to help Shotgun get its season off the ground. 

The theater group opened Saturday with a world premiere titled “A Fairy’s Tail,” written especially for Shotgun by San Francisco playwright Adam Bock. Bock is the author of the acclaimed “Five Flights,” currently running at Thick House in San Francisco to rave responses. 

In 1999, Shotgun produced Bock’s “Swimming in the Shallows,” which won several Bay Area Theater Critics Circle awards, including outstanding new play and outstanding production. 

“A Fairy’s Tail” is a twisted adult fairly tale in which three strangers join forces and set off for the land of the giant to avenge sudden family deaths. Director Patrick Dooley casts his shows well, and this is no exception. He gets striking performances from his actors. 

Beth Donohue is frightening in her dumpy bloomers as nasty 9-year-old Missy What’s-Her-Face, the ringleader of the trio. Her cohorts include sweet simpleton Norbert Longlegs, an amusing presence with his straw boater hat, blazer, grimacing face and slow mind. 

Trish Mulholland rounds out the trio playing Mrs. Piffle, a housemaid who moves like a herky-jerky wind-up doll. 

Five other actors provide a chorus of sorts, and double in smaller roles. Reid Davis has a funny scene as a fish that gets caught by Norbert for breakfast, and then talks himself off the hook by offering council to the three on their quest. 

Katie Bales Frassinelli is a narcissistic princess who balks at helping the trio because the giant has killed some of her rival princesses and she’s hoping for more princess deaths that will push her up the princess rankings into the top ten.  

The show’s fairy tale structure also employs a narrator, the smooth and expressive Ana Bayat. It’s all a bit like Alice through the looking glass, with adult twists.  

The three wanderers have adventures. In one amusing scene they step gingerly through the Fart Swamp, in a ballet choreographed to the sounds of different kinds of fart noises. 

But this is not a great play. The story just doesn’t have enough meat on it. The top of the play is busy with information where a lot happens to a variety of characters before they are well established. 

Later on, not much happens. It seemed especially difficult to get the thin story up and rolling again after intermission. In the end, the quest for the giant plays out anticlimactically in a facile and didactic way. 

Silly jokes like the narrator quitting in the middle of the show and then coming back don’t really have a payoff in the larger story. The indistinct motif of Norbert and his boyfriend who drowns in quicksand at the top of the play isn’t substantial enough to justify the title "A Fairy’s Tail." 

Because the show’s infantile inanity seems to be an end in itself, it wears thin after a while, and the play starts to feel like it’s written in baby talk. 

There is an original score of recorded songs composed by Clive Worsley and Kristin Miltner, with lyrics by Worsley and Bock. "Why did I dare to hope that I would fly forever" sung by Norbert early on is a touching ballad of loss.  

The songs often, however, feel like they’re tacked on to the play as bits not quite connected to the larger story as a whole. 

According to director Dooley, the company moved into the Berkeley Rep space the day before the Saturday opening. The show had to be reconfigured, re-blocked and relit in about 24 hours. 

The opening night performance suffered a bit from trying to telescope a grassroots show designed for the 99-seat Gaia proscenium stage to the grander 400-seat Berkeley Rep thrust stage. 

Opening night felt like a dress rehearsal at times. But the skillful actors connected with their audience before long, and found a groove. 

Shotgun has been wandering around Berkeley for ten years performing in a variety of spaces that include La Val’s Subterranean, Hinkel Park, the Eighth Street Theater, Julia Morgan and Speakeasy Theater. They will be performing their next show at the former U.C. Theater on University Avenue. 

It’s a pity they’re having problems with the Gaia space that was supposed to be their new home. Shotgun is one of the most exciting and skillful new theater companies in the Bay Area, and a credit to Berkeley.  

I hope they can resolve their problems and find a permanent home in Berkeley. It would be a pity if Berkeley lost Shotgun to San Francisco, as we did the Magic Theater some years ago. 

 

 

.  

Planet theater reviewer John Angell Grant has written for "American Theatre," "Backstage West," "Callboard," and many other publications. E-mail him at jagplays@yahoo.com or fax him at 1-419-781-2516. 

 

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Art & Entertainment Calendar

Staff
Friday March 22, 2002

 

924 Gilman Mar. 22: Tsunami Bomb, No Motiv; Mar. 29: Limpwrist, All You Can Eat, The Subtonics, The Bananas, Sharp Knife; Mar. 30: 9 Shocks Terror, What Happens Next?, Phantom Limbs, The Curse, Onion Flavored Rings; All shows begin a 8 p.m. 924 Gillman St., 525-9926 

 

Anna’s Bistro Mar. 22: Anna & Ellen Hoffman Jazz Tunes; 10 p.m., Hideo Date; Mar. 23: Robin Gregory; 10 p.m., Ducksan Distones Jazz Sextet; Mar. 24: Christy Dana Jazz Group; Mar. 25: Renegade Sidemen; Mar. 26: Jason Martineau and Dave Sayen; Mar. 27: David Widelock Jazz Duo; Mar. 28: Randy Moore Jazz Trio; Mar. 29: Anna & Ellen Hoffman; 10 p.m. Hideo Date; Mar. 30: Robin Gregory; 10 p.m. Ducksan Distones Jazz Sextet; Music starts at 8 p.m. unless noted, 1801 University Ave., 849-2662. 

 

Ashkenaz Music and Dance Community Center Mar. 23: A Benefit for Forest Defense with The Funky Nixons, The Gary Gates Band, The Shut-Ins, $8 - $20; Mar. 29: Alpha Yaya Diallo; 1317 San Pablo Ave., 548-0425. 

 

Blake’s Mar. 22: Shady Lady, View From Here; $6; Mar. 23: Mystic Roots, LZ & Ezell Funkstaz, $5; Mar. 24: Passenger, The Shreep, $3; Mar. 25: The Steve Gannon Band & Mz. Dee, $4; 2367 Telegraph Ave., 877-488-6533. 

 

Cafe Eclectica Mar. 22: 8 p.m., The Teethe, The Natural Dreamers, Yasi, $3; Mar. 23: 8 p.m., Guest DJs and MCs, $5; 1309 Solano Ave., Albany, 527-2344, Shows are All Ages.  

 

Cal Performances Apr. 7: 3 p.m., Murray Perahia, classical pianist. $28 - $48; Zellerbach Hall, UC Berkeley, 642-9988 

 

Cato’s Ale House Mar. 24: Lost Coast Jazz Trio; Mar. 27: Vince Wallace Trio; Mar. 31: Phillip Greenlief Trio; 3891 Piedmont Ave., Oakland, 655-3349 

 

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

 

Freight & Salvage Mar. 22: Marley’s Ghost, $17.50; Mar. 24: Teresa Trull & Barbara Higbie, $18.50; Mar. 27: Paul Thorn, $16.50; Mar. 28: Old Blind Dogs, $17.50; Mar. 29: Jack Hardy, $16.50; Mar. 30: Faye Carol, $17.50; 1111 Addison St., 548-1761, folk@freightandsalvage.org 

 

Jazzschool Mar. 24: 4:30 p.m., Alegria, $6-$12; Mar. 30: 4:30 p.m., Dmitri Matheny Orchestra presents “The Emerald Buddha”; 2087 Addison St., 845-5373, www.jazzschool.com. 

 

Tuva Space 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 

 

“Jazz Concert” Mar. 24: 2 p.m., Terry Gibbs and the Mike Vax Orchestra. $10 - $18. Longfellow School for the Arts, 1500 Derby St. 420-4560, www.bigbandjazz.net 

 

“Recital” Mar. 24: 3 p.m., Cal Performances presents pianist, Richard Goode, and vocalist, Randall Scarlata. $48. Hertz Hall, UC Berkeley campus, 642-9988, www.calperfs.berkeley.edu 

 

“Jewish Music Festival” Through Mar 24: Several performers will perform Jewish music and dance from across the world. Call Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center for Acts, times and dates. 925-866-9559, www.brjcc.org 

 

Dance 

 

“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 

 

“Women’s Voices, Then and Now” Mar. 15 through Mar. 24: Fri. 8 p.m., Sat. 2 p.m., Voices from a 1915 graveyard blend with voices from 1982 to present a vivid depiction of the lives of American women. $10. Unitarian Universalist Church of Berkeley, 1 Lawson Rd., Kensington, 525-0302 

 

“Persimmony Jones” Mar. 16: 12 p.m., Designed for a young audience, this is the story of a young girl trying to find her place in the world. As Persimmony travels through different lands on her search, she is forced to reexamine her own ideas about tolerance and acceptance. Free. Berkeley Repertory Theatre’s Thrust Stage, 2025 Addison St., 647-2978 

 

“Curtain Up” Mar. 22 through Mar. 24: 8 p.m., Musical theater veteran Martin Charnin and Broadway conductor/comoser Keith Levenson join forces to create a semi-staged version of Gershwin and Kaufman’s 1927 musical comedy “Strike Up the Band”. $24 - $46. Zellerbach Hall, UC Berkeley Campus, 642-9988 

 

“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 

 

“Impact Briefs 5: The East Bay Hit” Through Mar. 30: Fri. - Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 7 p.m., A collection of seven plays all about the ups and downs of in the Bay Area. $12, $7 students. La Val’s Subterranean Theatre, 1834 Euclid, 464-4468, tickets@impattheatre.com. 

 

“The Merchant of Venice” Through Mar. 31: Wed. - Thurs. 7 p.m., Fri. - Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m., Women in Time Productions presents Shakespeare’s famous romantic comedy replete with masks and revelry, balcony scenes, and midnight escapes. $25, half-price on Wed. The Berkeley City Club, 2315 Durant Ave. 925-798-1300 

 

“Knock Knock” Through Apr. 14: Wed. - Sat. 8 p.m., Sun 2 p.m., 7 p.m., A comedic farce about two eccentric retirees whose comfortable philosophical arguments are interrupted by a series of strange visitors. $26 - $35. Aurora Theatre, 2081 Addison St., 843-4822, www.auroratheatre.org 

 

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

 

“A Fairy’s Tail” Mar. 16 through Apr. 7: 8 p.m. Fri. and Sat., 5 p.m. Sun., 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. Directed by Patrick Dooley. $10 - $25. Mar. 16 - 31:Thrust Stage at Berkeley Rep, 2025 Addison St.; Apr. 4 - 7: UC Theatre on University Ave.; 704-8210, www.shotgunplayers.org. 

 

 

 

Film 

 

Pacific Film Archive Mar. 11: A Star is Born, 3 p.m.; Flesh, 7 p.m.; Mar. 12: An eye Unruled: An Evening with Stan Brakhage, 7:30 p.m.; Mar. 13: The Bicycle Thief, 3 p.m.; Daughter from Danang, 7:30 p.m.; Mar. 14: The Student I, 7 p.m.; Mar. 16: Shaping Identities Through Community, 7 p.m.; The Wolf, 9:30 p.m.; Mar. 17: For the Love of It: Amateur Filmmaking, 5:30; Mar. 18: Cabaret; 3 p.m.; Carnal Knowledge, 7 p.m.; Mar. 19: Stranger with a Camera, 7:30 p.m.; Mar. 20: Sunset Blvd., 3 p.m.; Chemical Valley, 7:30 p.m.; Mar. 21: Hazel Dickens: It’s Hard to Tell the Singer From the Song, 7:30 p.m.; Mar. 22: A Thousand and One Voices: The Music of Islam, 7:30 p.m.; Mar. 23: In a Lonely Place, 7 p.m.; The Big Heat; 8:55 p.m.; 2527 Bancroft Way, 642-1412 

 

“Asian American Film Fest” Mar. 13: Daughter From Danang; Pacific Film Archive, 2527 Bancroft Way, 642-1412. 

 

Exhibits  

 

“Trace of a Human” 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 

 

“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” 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 

 

“The Works of Alexander Nepote” Through Mar. 29: Nepote was a 20th century artist whose medium is a process of layered painting of torn pieces of watercolor paper, fused together in images that speak of the spirit that underlies and is embodied in the landscape he views. Check museum for times. Bade Museum, Pacific School of Religion, 1798 Scenic Ave., 849-8272 

 

“Trace of a Human” Through Mar. 30: An exhibit of mixed media sculpture by Jim Freeman, and acrylic paintings on canvas by Krystyna Mleczko. Tues. - Sat. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Ardency Gallery, 709 Broadway, Oakland, 836-0831, gallery709@aol.com 

 

“Journey of Self-discovery” Through Mar. 30: Community Works artist Adriana Diaz and Willard Junior High students joined together to explore gender stereotypes, advertising, and other influential elements in society in a project that culminated in two life-size portraits that explore self-identity. Free. La Pena Cultural Center, 3105 Shattuck Ave. 845-3332. 

 

“West Oakland Today” Through Mar. 30: Sergio De La Torre presents “thehousingproject”, an open house/video installation that explores desire surrounding one’s sense of home and place. Marcel Diallo presents “Scrapyard Ghosts”, an installation that presents a glimpse into the process of one man’s conversation with the living past through objects of iron, wood, rock dirt and other debris unearthed at an old scrapyard site in West Oakland’s Lower Bottom neighborhood. Pro Arts, 461 Ninth St., Oakland  

 

"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. 

 

“Portraits of the Afghan People: 1984 - 1992” Through Apr. 6: An exhibit of black and white photographs by Bay Area photographer Patricia Monaco. Free. Mon. - Fri. 8:30 a.m. - 6:30 p.m., Sat. 9 a.m. - 3 p.m. Photolab Gallery, 2235 Fifth St., 644-1400 

 

“The Zoom of the Souls” Mar. 23 through Apr. 13: An exhibit of oil paintings by Mark P. Fisher. Sat. 1 p.m. - 6 p.m. Bay Area Music Foundation, 462 Elwood Ave. #9, Oakland, 836-5223 

 

“Sibila Savage & Sylvia Sussman” Through Apr. 13: Photographer, Sibila Savage presents photographs documenting the lives of her immigrant grandparents, and Painter, Sylvia Sussman displays her abstract landscapes on unstretched canvas. Free. Wed. - Sun. 12 p.m. - 5 p.m. Berkeley Art Center, 1275 Walnut St. 64-6893, www.berkeleyartcenter.org 

 

“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.  

 

“Art is Education” Mar. 18 through Apr. 19th: A group exhibition of over 50 individual artworks created by Oakland Unified School District students, Kindergarten through 12th grade. Mon. - Fri. 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Craft and Cultural Arts Gallery, State of California Office Building Atrium, 1515 Clay St., Oakland, 238-6952, www.oaklandculturalarts.org 

 

“Expressions of Time and Space” Mar. 18 through April 17: Calligraphy by Ronald Y. Nakasone. Julien Designs 1798 Shattuck Ave., 540-7634, RyNakasone@aol.com.  

 

“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. 

 

“Quilted Paintings” Mar. 3 through May 4: Contemporary wall quilts by Roberta Renee Baker, landscapes, abstracts, altars and story quilts. Free. The Coffee Mill, 3363 Grand Ave., Oakland 465-4224 

 

“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 

 

“Masterworks of Chinese Painting” Mar. 13 through May 26: An exhibition of distinguished works representing virtually every period and phase of Chinese painting over the last 900 years, including figure paintings and a selection of botanical and animal subjects. Prices vary. Wed. - Sun. 11 a.m. - 7 p.m. The University of California, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, 2626 Bancroft Way, 642-4889, www.bampfa.berkeley.edu 

 

“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” 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 

 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center Mar. 17: 3 p.m., Suzan Hagstrom reads from her book “Sara’s Children: The Destruction of Chielnik,” chronicling the survival of one brother and four sisters in Nazi death camps. Free. 1414 Walnut St. 848-0237 x127 

 

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. 

 

Cody’s on Fourth St. 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. 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.  

 

Easy Going Travel Shop & Bookstore Mar. 7: Carl Parkes, author of “Moon Handbook: Southeast Asia”, presents a slide show exploring his travels in the region; Mar. 12: William Fienne describes his personal journey from Texas to North Dakota as he follows the northern migration of snow geese; Mar. 14: Gary Crabbe and Karen Misuraca present slides and read from their book, “The California Coast”; Mar. 19: Barbara and Robert Decker present a slide show focusing on the volcanoes of California and the Cascade Mountain Range; Mar. 21: Stefano DeZerega discusses opportunities for study, travel, and work in Latin America, Africa, Asia, the Middle East, or Eastern Europe; All readings are free and start at 7:30 p.m., 1385 Shattuck Ave. at Rose, 843-3533. 

 

GAIA Building Mar. 14: 7 - 9 p.m., Lecture with Patricia Evans speaking from her book, “Controlling People: How to recognize, Understand and Deal with People Who Are Trying to Control You.”; Mar. 19: Reading and slide show with Carol Wagner, “Survival of the Spirit: Lives of Cambodian Buddhists.”; March 21: 6 - 9 p.m., 1st Berkeley Edgework Books Salon; Mar. 22: 6:30 - 9:30 p.m., Book Reading and Jazz Concert with David Rothenberg; All events are held in the Rooftop Gardens Solarium, 7th Floor, GAIA Building, 2116 Allston Way, 848-4242. 

 

Gathering Tribes Mar. 15: 6:30 p.m., Susan Lobo and Victoria Bomberry will be conducting readings from “American Indians And The Urban Experience.”; 1573 Solano Ave., 528-9038, www.gatheringtribes.com.  

 

UC Berkeley Lunch Poems Reading Series Mar. 7: Marilyn Hacker reads from her most recent book, “Squares and Courtyards”. Free. Morrison Library in Doe Library, UC Berkeley campus, 642-0137, www.berkeley.edu/calendar/events/poems. 

 

University of Creation Spirituality Mar. 21: 7 - 9 p.m., Turning to One Another: Simple Conversations to Restore Hope to the Future, An Evening with Author Margaret J. Wheatley, $10-$15 donation; 2141 Broadway, Oakland, 835-4827 x29, darla@berkana.org. 

 

 

Poetry 

 

Poetry Flash @ Cody’s Mar. 3: Myung Mi Kim, Harryette Mullen & Geoffrey O’Brien; Mar. 6: Bill Berkson, Albert Flynn DeSilver; Mar. 10: Leslie Scalapino, Dan Farrell; Mar. 13: Lucille Lang Day, Risa Kaparo; Mar. 20: Edward Smallfield, Truong Tran; Mar. 24: Susan Griffin, Honor Moore; All events begin at 7:30 p.m., $2 donation. 2454 Telegraph Ave., 845-7852, www.codysbooks.com.  

 

Poetry Reading @ South Branch Berkeley Public Library Mar. 2: Bay Area Poets Coalition is holding an open reading. 3 p.m. - 5 p.m. Free. 1901 Russell St. 

 

Word Beat Mar. 9: Sonia Greenfield and Megan Breiseth; Mar. 16, Q. R. Hand and Lu Pettus; Mar. 23: Lee Gerstmann and Sam Pierstorffs; Mar. 30: Eleanor Watson-Gove and Jim Watson-Gove; All shows 7 - 9 p.m., Coffee With A Beat, 458 Perkins, Oakland. 526-5985, www.angelfire.com/poetry/wordbeat. 

 

Fellowship Café Mar. 15: 7:30 p.m., Eliot Kenin, poetry, storytellers, singers and musicians. $5-$10. Fellowship Hall, 1924 Cedar St., 540-0898. 

 

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. 

 

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. 

 

Lawrence Hall of Science Mar. 16: 1 - 4 p.m., Moviemaking for children 8 years old and up; Mar. 20: Spring Equinox; “Jurassic Park: Dinosaur Auditions Live Science Demonstrations” A directed activity in which children “audtion” to be a dinosaur in an upcoming movie. They’ll learn about the variety of dinosaurs in the Jurassic Park exhibit as well as dress up, act, and roar like a dinosaur. Through May 12: Mon. - Fri. 10:30 a.m., 11:30 a.m., 12:30 p.m.; Sat. - Sun. 12 p.m., 1 p.m., 2 p.m. 3 p.m. $8 adults, $6 children. Centenial Dr. just above the UC campus and just below Grizzly Peak Blvd. 642-5132 

 

UC Berkeley Phoebe Hearst Museum of Anthropology will close its exhibition galleries for renovation. It will reopen in early 2002.  

 

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 March 22, 2002

 

Friday, March 22 

 

City Commons Club 

12:30 p.m. 

Berkeley City Club 

2315 Durant Ave. 

Robert Kruger, first vice-president, and Larry Miller, certified financial planner and senior vice-president, Solomon Smith Barney; “Investing in the Market Post 9-11.” $1. 848-3533. 

 

Berkeley Women in Black 

noon - 1 p.m. 

Bancroft and Telegraph Ave. 

Standing in solidarity with Israeli and Palestinian women to urge an end to the occupation and push the peace process forward. 548-6310, wibberkeley.org. 

 

 

The Nature of Work: Joanna Macy and Matthew Fox in Dialogue 

7 - 9 p.m. 

University of Creation Spirituality 

2141 Broadway, Oakland 

Matthew Fox, Ph.D., founder and president of the University of Creation Spirituality, will engage in dialogue on the nature of work with Joanna Macy, Ph.D., an eco-philosopher and scholar of Buddhism, general systems theory, and deep ecology. $10-$15 donation. 835-4827 x29, www.creationspirituality.org. 

 

International Women’s Day Celebration 

7 p.m. 

Revolution Books 

2425 Channing Way 

Cultural and video presentations, speakers, discussion and refreshments. Donation requested. 848-1196. 

 

Berkeley Design Advocates 

Design Awards 

5:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Art Center 

1275 Walnut St. 

Design Awards for building projects in Berkeley will be presented by Berkeley Design Advocates (BDA). Projects completed over the past two years were selected based on their quality of design, how well they fit into their surroundings, their innovative qualities and how well they contribute to urban life. 528-2778. 

 

 

Saturday, March 23 

 

5th Annual Summit – Last  

Chance for Smart Growth? 

10 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. 

Laney College Forum 

900 Fallon St., Oakland 

Regional public agencies will soon hold workshops to select from among three alternative visions for regional growth and finalize one Bay Area vision. Summit participants will learn about these alternatives and provide input that will affect future government policy. 740-3103, robert@transcoalition.org. 

 

Jazz Clinic 

2 p.m. 

Longfellow School for the Arts 

1500 Derby St. 

Terry Gibbs and the Mike Vax Jazz Orchestra will be holding a jazz clinic. $5, 420-4560, www.bigbandjazz.net. 

 

Berkeley Dispute  

Resolution Service 

10 a.m. - 2 p.m. 

BDRS Office 

1968 San Pablo Ave.  

The community is invited to learn about mediation and the conflict resolution services and resources available through BDRS. Children’s activities and refreshments provided. 428-1811. 

 

Hunger Hike in Joaquin Miller Park 

9:30 a.m. 

Ranger Station, Sanborn Dr. 

Hike through the East Bay redwoods while raising money to help people in need. Hikers are encouraged to collect pledges. Funds raised will benefit the Food Bank’s hunger relief efforts. $20. 834-3663 x327, ilund@secondharvest.org.  

 

Our School Information Event for 

Prospective Parents 

10 a.m. - noon 

St. John’s Community Center, Room 203 

2727 College Ave. 

An event for prospective parents to learn about Our School’s approach to education. 704-0701, www.ourschoolsite.ws.  

 

March and Rally for Justice  

11 a.m. 

12th & Broadway BART 

Assemble at BART then march to Oakland Federal Building, then 1 p.m. rally in Jack London Square. In support of airport screeners, port workers, and service industry workers and against all racist and anti-immigrant laws and policies. 524-3791, labor4justice@aspenlinx.com. 

 

 

Sunday, March 24 

 

Invitational Karatedo Tournament 

11 a.m. 

Oakland YMCA Main Gymnasium 

2350 Broadway 

A tournament promoting Japanese Karatedo. Spectators are welcome and admitted for free. 522-6016, jbtown501@aol.com. 

 

Stagebridge’s 11th Annual 

Family Matinee Theatre and 

Ice Cream Social 

3 p.m. 

First Congregational Church 

2501 Harrison, Oakland 

Premiere of Linda Spector’s “Chicken Sunday and Other Grandparent Tales,” followed by an old fashioned ice cream social. $8 general, $4 children. 444-4755, www.stagebridge.org.  

 

 

Monday, March 25 

 

Free Legal Workshop 

“Too Sick to Work: 

Cash Assistance and Health Insurance if Cancer Prevents You From Working” 

12:30 - 2 p.m. 

Highland Hospital 

1411 E. 31st St., Oakland 

Classroom B 

This workshop will provide information about State and Federal disability programs that provide cash benefits and health insurance for people unable to work due to a serious health condition. 601-4040 x302, www.wcrc.org.  

 

Transportation and the  

Environment in Berkeley 

7 - 8:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Adult School Room 7 

1222 University Ave. 

Matt Nichols of the Bay Area Air Quality Management District will discuss the impacts of your transportation decisions, and the resulting impacts on local pollution and our health. 981-5435, energy@ci.berkeley.ca.us. 

 

 

Tuesday, March 26 

 

Tuesday Tea Party 

6 - 8 p.m. 

First Congregational Church 

Harrison and 27th St., Oakland 

Open gatherings to build a new peace movement. 839-5877. 

 

 

 

Wednesday, March 27 

 

City Commons Club, 

Great Decisions Program 

10 a.m. - noon 

Berkeley City Club 

2315 Durant Ave. 

Dan Kammen, professor of Energy and Resources Group and director of Energy and Science, UC Berkeley; “Energy and the Environment.” 

$5. 848-3533. 

 

Prose Writers’ Workshop 

7 - 9 p.m. 

Berkeley/Richmond Jewish  

Community Center Library 

1414 Walnut St. 

From Op-ed to fiction, memoir to the feature article. Workshop format. Free. 524-3034. 

 

Berkeley Gray Panthers  

General Meeting 

1:30 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

The Clean Money Campaign  

 

and the League of Women Voters will talk about Clean Money, Clean Politics: Campaign Finance Reform in a Democracy. 548-9696, graypanthers@hotmail.com. 

 

 

 

Thursday, March 28 

 

Seed Swap 

7 - 9 p.m. 

Ecology Center 

2530 San Pablo Ave. 

Bay Area Seed Interchange Library's annual Seed Swap. Bring seed and envelopes. A raffle for live plants. 823-4769. 

 

 

Friday, March 29 

 

City Commons Club 

12:30 p.m. 

Berkeley City Club 

2315 Durant Ave. 

Peter Hillier, assistant city manager, transportation; “Bringing About a Paradigm Shift.” $1. 848-3533. 

 

Berkeley Women in Black 

noon - 1 p.m. 

Bancroft and Telegraph Ave. 

Standing in solidarity with Israeli and Palestinian women to urge an end to the occupation and push the peace process forward. 548-6310, wibberkeley.org. 

 

 

– Compiled by Guy Poole 


Confusion reigns at ACCAL track meet

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

New scoring system has coaches wondering who they’re running against at league’s first meet 

 

Berkeley High hosted the first track & field meet of the ACCAL season on Thursday, but the results won’t be in until Saturday. That’s because none of the coaches at the meet knew exactly who they were competing against. 

The league instituted a new type of meet this season, a “double dual” format. With four teams running, throwing and jumping, no one knew how the meet would be scored. 

“This new meet was not explained very well to us at the league meeting,” Berkeley head coach Darrell Hampton said. “I’ll have to call the league office and have them walk me through how to score this thing.” 

So Berkeley, Pinole Valley, Richmond and Hercules all went against each other on Thursday not knowing who they were trying to beat. Berkeley won the most events, but Hampton couldn’t say if they would end up winning overall. 

Thursday also marked the emergence of the Berkeley distance program. Always a poor sister in the track program in the past, the ’Jackets’ contingent of cross-country runners dominated, winning all six distance events. Alex Enscoe, a sophomore who won the league’s cross-country title in the fall, won the 1,600- and 3,200-meter races as the boys took five of the top six spots in each event, while no other team even entered any girls into the distance races. 

“Our distance program is really coming together, and they can really help us this year,” Hampton said. “In the past our sprints have carried us, but now they’re helping us out.” 

The distance events should be a strong point for Berkeley throughout the season, as Alameda is the only other ACCAL school with a comparable group of runners. 

This is a rebuilding year for Hampton’s girls’ sprints, traditionally the team’s strength. The ’Jackets were beaten by the brand-new Hercules team on Thursday, as the newcomers won the 100- , 200- and 400-meter dashes as well as the 4x400 relay, with Meia Tezeno winning the 100 and 200. 

“I wasn’t surprised (Hercules) did so well,” Hampton said. “They’ve got a good program and they believe in it. That’s what happens.” 

Pinole Valley won most of the boys’ sprints, led by all-league tailback DeAndre MacFarland. McFarland won the 200 and 400, beating out Berkeley running back Germaine Baird in both races. Lodge James claimed the 100 crown for the Spartans, who also won the 4x100 relay. 

Berkeley’s Rebekah Payne was a triple-winner on Thursday, winning both hurdles races as well as the shotput. 

Hampton put a happy face on the confusion about scoring the meet, although the coaches from each school expressed displeasure with the new system. 

“This kids came out and had fun, and that’s the most important thing,” Hampton said. “Obviously we’ve still got some tweaking to do when it comes to the new system.”


Community comes out to voice opinions on Eastshore Park usage

By Jia-Rui Chong, Daily Planet staf
Friday March 22, 2002

Little leaguers in uniform, soccer dads, windsurfers, dog-lovers and conservationists crowded into the Florence Schwimley Little Theatre Thursday night to tell the planning team for the proposed Eastshore State Park how they want the 1,800 acres to be used. 

At the third of four regional meetings, the planning team presented its “preferred concept” for the park, which will connect the waterfronts from Emeryville to Richmond. The map blended the planning team’s two original concepts and comments from the public. 

Stephen Hammond, a member of the planning team, talked the audience of about 300 through the plan to create “a recreational facility harmonious with its natural setting.” 

With charts and maps, he explained that 10 percent of the land and 33 percent of the water will be marked for preservation to provide the greatest amount of protection. 

47 percent of the land and 57 percent of the water will be marked for recreation to allow the greatest amount of human use.  

49 percent of the land and 10 percent of the water will be marked for conservation to allow the less intrusive human use. 

“I want to emphasize that this is the basis for the General Plan. It is not detailed or site-specific. It establishes the general framework that will provide guidance to the state to fund improvements and enhancements to the park,” said Hammond. 

But the planning team still wanted to hear comments from the public, said Don Neuwirth, who was also part of the group drafting the General Plan.  

The lines to the microphones stretched to the back of the theater when the public comment session began. There were four main points of contention. 

• Athletes and their parents wanted more playing fields.  

Doug Fielding, who chairs the Association of Sports Field Users, said that while they were happy with the current playing fields on the Albany Plateau, they wanted more. He suggested that the North Basin Strip could be used. 

“We’re trying to get 10 playing fields in Eastshore State Park. It would only be two percent of the land,” he said.  

Many other speakers made the same suggestions. 

Councilmembers Polly Armstrong and Miriam Hawley, who have fought for more space for playing fields in Berkeley, supported their efforts. 

“There’s been a history of driving kids to kingdom-come to play games on Saturdays and Sundays,” said Armstrong. 

“It’s hard for traditional families, but for families with other demands, it shuts the kids out of playing.” 

• Bird-lovers and members of the various nature clubs wanted to protect more animal habitats. Some pointed to the encroachment of the proposed hostel and boat launch into Berkeley Meadow.  

Several of the speakers had been involved with saving the land from development in the late 1960s. 

“We see a unique opportunity for an urban park as well as for a wild-land park focusing on education and recreation related to wildlife habitat,” said Normal La Force of the Sierra Club. 

“But we have to think about what’s appropriate given the environmental values and conditions we have at this site.” 

Other conservationists were worried not so much about the playing fields as the large parking lots that would be needed for them. 

• Dog-lovers wanted to protect as much space as possible for leash-free frolicking. They wanted more space at Point Isabel and on the Albany Bulb. 

• Windsurfers pleaded for better access to water recreation areas. Because their equipment is heavy, parking lots cannot be too far away from the shore. 

Though all sides saw the need for compromise, they hoped it would not be at their expense. 

The planning team will take all of these comments into consideration as it develops the General Plan. They will also look at written comments submitted during the workshop. 

The planning team will be local briefings in April for those who missed the workshop. It will be developing the General Plan for the fourth regional meeting in May 2002. After that, there is an environmental review. The process is scheduled to wrap up in October 2002. 

For more information, visit www.eastshorestatepark.org.


Bicyclist says no to car-free Shattuck

Jef Poskanzer
Friday March 22, 2002

Editor:  

 

James K. Sayre writes: “Bicyclists are, by in [sic] large, an extremely self-righteous lot, asserting that the traffic laws don’t apply to them.” This is bigotry, plain and simple, and does not belong in Berkeley. I have been car-free for five years now. I bike everywhere, including shopping, laundry, everything. I ride safely and lawfully 100 percent of the time. I observe cars and I observe other bicyclists, since both can cause me grave bodily harm when operated by idiots. My experience is that the percentage of idiots is about the same on two wheels or four. 

However, I actually agree with Sayre that banning cars from downtown would be foolishness. Downtown Berkeley is in enough trouble already, with lots of storefronts still empty. It’s not particularly congested. One or two car-free side streets might work — say, Center and Allston between Shattuck and Oxford. But banning cars from Shattuck would just be silly. If you want an over-congested shopping street to turn into a pedestrian mall, take a look at 4th Street. 

 

Jef Poskanzer  

Berkeley


Cal freshman Jamal Sampson declares for NBA draft

Daily Planet Wire Services
Friday March 22, 2002

Cal freshman Jamal Sampson announced today that he is declaring himself eligible for the 2002 NBA Draft. A 6-foot-11, 235-pound forward from Inglewood, Sampson averaged 6.4 points and 6.5 rebounds while blocking 54 shots for the Bears during the 2001-02 season. 

“After careful consideration, I have decided to make myself eligible for the upcoming NBA Draft,” Sampson said. “I’ve talked to members of my family and other people familiar with the NBA and realized that this is the best decision for me at the this time.” 

Sampson said he does not plan on hiring an agent yet, leaving open the possibility of returning to school if his draft position is not favorable. 

“I have enjoyed this year at Cal,” Sampson said. “I like the team and the coaching staff, and it was a good decision for me to go to Cal. I felt that Coach (Ben) Braun and the staff have helped me prepare for the next level.” 

During his freshman year, Sampson started 31 of 32 games for the Bears and led the team in rebounding 16 times. He was voted MVP of the BCA Classic in November and was a Pac-10 All-Freshman selection in March. His 54 blocks are the third-highest total on Cal’s season list. 

Sampson scored a career-high 15 points twice, first vs. Fresno State Dec. 11. Against Washington Jan. 17, Sampson also poured in 15 points, to go with a career-best 17 rebounds, three assists and five blocks. 

“This decision was made by Jamal and his family,” Braun said. “I support him in the decision, but I’d personally like to see him come back to school, as I would with all players. Each person has to review his own opportunities and be responsible for his own path. Jamal is talking about an opportunity that has presented itself. It’s up to Jamal to make that decision. I hope his tenure at Cal was helpful to him.” 

Sampson entered Cal last fall after earning third team Parade All-America honors at Mater Dei High School in Southern California. As a senior, he averaged 15.5 ppg, 10 rpg and 2.4 bpg, helping Mater Dei to the state championship, a 33-2 record and a No. 4 national ranking from USA Today.


A Butterfly sails into town

Staff
Friday March 22, 2002

Julia Butterfly Hill, who gained international attention with her two-year tree-sit in an ancient redwood in Northern California, gets Katherine Yoshii’s signature for a Heritage Tree Preservation Ballot Initiative outside the Berkeley Bowl Thursday. The initiative, organized by Citizens Campaign for Old Growth and the Sierra Club Bay Chapter, aims to protect trees older than the state of California.  

Hill, who lived in the branches of a tree in Humbolt County, works out of an office just south of the Berkeley-Oakland border. She greeted old friends from her tree-sitting days, as well as introduced herself to newcomers to the issue.  

“This community is so active on so many issues,” said Hill. “People in the Berkeley area are so committed to taking charge of their lives. I really like that.” 

Hill will be appearing at Berkeley Bowl again this afternoon, as well as other markets in the Bay Area.  

 

For more information on the ballot initiative, visit www.ancienttrees.org.


Prejudicial statements promote hatred, deter peace

Terry Fletcher
Friday March 22, 2002

Editor: 

 

I seem to remember that several months ago the Daily Planet printed a letters policy in which is was stated that no letters that expressed racist or derogatory statements about a particular ethnic, religious or racial group would be printed. 

I was therefore quite surprised to see a statement in Gabe Kurtz’s latest letter that claimed that “muslims of the Gaza strip . . . froth at the mouth cyring for land. . . .” This statement clearly dehumanizes muslim Palestinians, making them seem more like vicious animals than human beings. 

I’m sure that Mr. Kurtz would be highly offended, as would I, if anyone stated that Jews “froth at the mouth.” 

Unfortunately, many U.S. and Israeli policies are based on these same sort of prejudicial ideas. Those of us who disagree with them are not naive, as Mr. Kurtz implies. We are able to see the humanity of both Jews and Arabs and realize that the only solution to the conflict is peace and justice for all peoples of the Middle East. 

 

Terry Fletcher 

Member, A Jewish Voice for Peace 

Berkeley


Actors hope to pad short list of black Oscar winners

By David Germain, The Associated Press
Friday March 22, 2002

LOS ANGELES — Halle Berry hopes this year’s three Academy Award nominations for black actors will be a source of optimism for minorities. Denzel Washington just figures academy voters went for the actors they felt turned in the best performances. 

And Will Smith jokes that win or lose, he’s already made history: “The first rapper to be nominated for an Oscar. That is cool.” 

This year’s awards present one of the best chances for a black to earn a lead-acting trophy since Sidney Poitier became the only black actor to do so, for 1963’s “Lilies of the Field.” 

Oscar nominations for Berry (“Monster’s Ball”), Smith (“Ali”) and Washington (“Training Day”) mark the first time in 29 years that three blacks have competed in the lead-acting categories. 

Best-actress may come down to Sissy Spacek for “In the Bedroom” and Berry, who won the lead-actress prize for “Monster’s Ball” this month at the Screen Actors Guild Awards. The best-actor race seems to be a dead heat between Russell Crowe for “A Beautiful Mind” and Washington, a five-time nominee who won the supporting-actor Oscar for “Glory.” 

In addition, two Oscar-winning black actors have major roles at the ceremony Sunday. Poitier receives an honorary Oscar for lifetime achievement. And Whoopi Goldberg, a supporting-actress winner for “Ghost,” is the show’s host. 

Only six blacks have won acting Oscars since the awards began in 1929, or 2.2 percent of the winners. The only previous year that produced three black nominees for best actor or actress was 1972: Cicely Tyson and Paul Winfield for “Sounder” and Diana Ross for “Lady Sings the Blues.” 

“When it happened in 1972, I bet you someone probably said this is a prelude of better things to come, and we found it hasn’t happened again for almost 30 years,” said Frank Smith Jr., acting board president of the Black Filmmakers Hall of Fame. 

Still, many in Hollywood view this year’s nominations as a hint that choicer roles are opening up for blacks in an industry that once relegated minorities largely to comic or caricatured parts. 

Of 39 nominations for blacks over the years, 31 have come since 1970, compared with eight in the preceding four decades. 

“There’s old Hollywood and new Hollywood. Old Hollywood was basically lily-white, with white actors in films generally to the exclusion of other races,” said director John Singleton, whose “Boyz N the Hood” established him as the only black filmmaker ever nominated for best director. “New Hollywood seems to realize that to make a hit movie, you need to have a multiplicity of people represented. 

“Because of that, American films are becoming more American in the sense that they look more like the whole of America looks.” 

As actors such as Washington, Smith and Berry find box-office success, some have been able to use their clout to get projects off the ground that showcase their talents in serious, potentially Oscar-worthy roles. 

“I don’t really know how it will transform the industry, but what I do know is that it will hopefully instill hope in other people of color,” Berry said of this year’s nominations. 

Berry previously won an Emmy for the title role in “Introducing Dorothy Dandridge.” Dandridge, who rose to stardom amid Hollywood racism of the 1940s and 1950s, was the first black nominated for a lead-acting Oscar, for 1954’s “Carmen Jones.” 

Four years later, Poitier became the second, for “The Defiant Ones.” 

Washington said he believes the quality of the performances alone resulted in this year’s three nominations. 

“It’s not about race,” he said. “This might suggest that they are doing us a favor because we are black.” 

The Oscar recognition, though, “might also suggest that there are better roles for African-Americans,” Washington said. 

Smith, who joined the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences last year, said greater representation in that group is critical to Oscar success for blacks. The academy provides no demographic breakdown of its 5,700 voting members, but academy executives concede the percentage of minorities is far lower than in the general population. 

“The academy is made up ... (mostly) of white Americans, so for the most part, white American films are going to be nominated and white American actors are going to win,” said Smith, who urged more blacks to apply for membership. 

“We all just want to be judged as human beings.”


ACCAL Jamboree offers a preview of boys’ volleyball

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

El Cerrito aiming at third straight title 

 

Four of the six ACCAL boys’ volleyball teams got a sneak peek at each other Thursday in Berkeley at the league’s Volleyball Jamboree. Berkeley head coach Justin Caraway was encouraged by what he saw. 

“We’ll win some games this year. Heck, we could even win some matches,” Caraway said. 

That may not sound like deafening praise, but almost anything would be an improvement over last season. The ’Jackets didn’t win a single match in 2001. In fact, they managed to win just a single game. But with all but two players back this season and the league not looking very strong, Caraway expects his team to show him a little more. 

“We can probably win at least one match,” he said. “ We just need to know that we’re not going to get slaughtered every game.” 

One team the ’Jackets won’t be beating is El Cerrito. The Gauchos have won the last two league titles, going 10-0 in the ACCAL last season, and return the reigning league MVP in Michael Gonzalez. Although Alameda and Richmond didn’t show up to Thursday’s event, El Cerrito is clearly the prohibitive favorite again this year. 

“You never know until you see everyone, but I’ve got a good team back this year,” said head coach Fred Gonzalez (Michael’s father). 

Gonzalez pointed to a strong junior varsity program and several players with club experience as the keys to his program’s dominance. Berkeley, on the other hand, is just establishing a new junior varsity program this season and doesn’t get many players who have grown up with the game. 

“I’m constantly fighting the battle of no volleyball at the middle school level (in Berkeley),” Caraway said. “There’s still the perception that volleyball is a girls’ sport at this school (the Lady ’Jackets have never lost an ACCAL match), and I don’t get the carryover from basketball that other schools do.” 

Still Caraway does have some good players back, including team MVP Robin Roach and setter Joel Li. Roach is still just a junior, and the current squad has just one senior. 

“If we can get a little bit of success this year, then next year with Robin as a senior, we shouldn’t be too bad,” he said.


Today in History

Staff
Friday March 22, 2002

Friday, March 22, is the 81st day of 2002. There are 284 days left in the year. 

 

Highlight in History: 

On March 22, 1765, Britain enacted the Stamp Act to raise money from the American colonies. (The Act was repealed the following year.) 

On this date:  

In 1820, U.S. naval hero Stephen Decatur was killed in a duel with Commodore James Barron near Washington D.C. 

In 1882, Congress outlawed polygamy. 

In 1895, Auguste and Louis Lumiere showed their first movie to an invited audience in Paris. 

In 1933, during Prohibition, President Roosevelt signed a measure to make wine and beer containing up to 3.2 percent alcohol legal. 

In 1941, the Grand Coulee Dam in Washington state went into operation. 

In 1945, the Arab League was formed with the adoption of a charter in Cairo, Egypt. 

In 1946, the British mandate in Transjordan came to an end. 

In 1972, Congress sent the proposed Equal Rights Amendment to the Constitution to the states for ratification. (It fell three states short of the 38 needed for approval.) 

In 1991, high school instructor Pamela Smart, accused of manipulating her student-lover into killing her husband, was convicted in Exeter, N.H., of murder-conspiracy. 

In 1995, convicted Long Island Rail Road gunman Colin Ferguson was sentenced to life in prison for killing six people. 

Ten years ago: Twenty-seven people were killed when a US-Air jetliner crashed on takeoff from New York’s LaGuardia Airport; 24 people survived. France’s governing Socialist Party was rebuffed in regional elections. President Bush and German Chancellor Helmut Kohl wrapped up a weekend of informal talks by reiterating their resolve to break a deadlock on global trade talks. 

Five years ago: A day after a suicide bomber killed three women in Tel Aviv, Israeli troops clashed with hundreds of Palestinians in Hebron. Tara Lipinski, at age 14 years and ten months, became the youngest women’s world figure skating champion. 

One year ago: An 18-year-old student opened fire at Granite Hills High School in El Cajon, Calif., wounding three classmates and two teachers before he was shot by a police officer. (Jason Hoffman later hanged himself while in jail.) Yevgeny Plushchenko captured the World Figure Skating Championships crown in Vancouver, British Columbia. Animation pioneer William Hanna died in Los Angeles at age 90. 

 

Today’s Birthdays: Actor Karl Malden is 90. Pantomimist Marcel Marceau is 79. USA Today founder Allen H. Neuharth is 78. Composer-lyricist Stephen Sondheim is 72. Actor William Shatner is 71. Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) is 68. Actor M. Emmet Walsh is 67. Singer-guitarist George Benson is 59. Singer Jeremy Clyde (Chad and Jeremy) is 58. Composer Andrew Lloyd Webber is 54. Actress Fanny Ardant is 53. Sportscaster Bob Costas is 50. Country singer James House is 47. Actress Lena Olin is 47. Singer-actress Stephanie Mills is 45. Actor Matthew Modine is 43. Actress Kellie Williams is 26.  

Actress Reese Witherspoon is 26. Rock musician John Otto (Limp Bizkit) is 25.


Two men, stabbed in South Berkeley

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet staff
Friday March 22, 2002

Two men were repeatedly stabbed by a robber on Acton Street in South Berkeley Monday at around 11:30 p.m., according to the Berkeley Police Department. Both victims are in stable condition at home and at Highland Hospital. 

The victims, 27-year-old James Celestin-Willis and his 33-year-old brother-in-law, Galen Jackson, were en route to Jackson’s sister’s home when the assailant pulled up in a green car and asked them to make change for a bill, according to Celestin-Willis. 

When they declined, Celestin-Willis said, the attacker, dressed in black, got out of his car, stabbed the victims and took their money. Celestin-Willis said he suffered wounds on his back, neck and arm, while Jackson was stabbed in the back and arm. 

Jackson said he fell to the pavement and called for his wife, who was in his sister’s home. Relatives brought Jackson into his sister’s house and called for an ambulance. 

Celestin-Willis ran from the scene. 

“I was in shock,” he said. “I ran, I left.” 

Police later found Celestin-Willis at the corner of Alcatraz and California streets, on the pavement. 

Both men were taken to Highland Hospital in Oakland. Celestin-Willis said he was released Thursday. Jackson was still in the hospital when reached by the Daily Planet Thursday.


Assembly OKs $25 billion education bond issue for November and 2004 ballots

By Stefanie Frith, The Associated Press
Friday March 22, 2002

SACRAMENTO — By an overwhelming margin, the state Assembly Thursday approved placing $25.3 billion worth of education bonds before voters this November and in 2004, sending the issue to the state Senate. 

The Assembly voted 71-6 for the bill, which authorizes the placement of two bond measures before voters. A $13 billion bond proposal will go on the November 2002 ballot and would be followed in 2004 with a $12.3 billion bond issue. 

That’s about three times higher than the record $9.2 billion bond voters approved in 1998. That money has been spent, however. 

Gov. Gray Davis wants a bond issue on the November ballot, spokeswoman Hilary McLean said, so “students well into California’s future will benefit from the school improvements this bond will fund.” 

The bond’s passage is “the biggest thing we’ve done since I took office,” said Assemblyman Robert Hertzberg, a Van Nuys Democrat and former Assembly speaker. 

“Everything that’s great about California starts with its schools and our kids,” said Hertzberg, co-author of the bill, said. 

He predicted the measure — which was ultimately agreed upon by a bipartisan conference committee — will pass the Senate easily. 

The bill will go to the Senate the first week of April and Dave Sebeck, a spokesman for Senate Pro Tem John Burton, said Senate members will debate and act on it that day. 

The Office of Public School Construction estimates that more than $21.1 billion in state bonds are needed in the next four years for K-12 school construction alone. 

Also, the state estimates that California Community Colleges will teach nearly 2 million students in the next two years and more than 75 percent of its buildings are more than 40 years old. 

To cope with population growth, the state Department of Education estimates that California will need more than 2,500 classrooms each year for the next four years. 

Superintendent of Public Instruction Delaine Eastin said that if California expects children to meet the state’s academic standards, “we must provide them with a safe, clean and modern environment in which to do so.” 

Money from the bonds will help low-performing and overcrowded schools, design upgrades and expand buildings at community colleges, and campuses of the California State University and the University of California. 

Dwayne Brooks, director of facilities for the California Department of Education, said this bill also allows school districts to apply for funds of up to four years, plus a one-year extension. 

That will help school districts pay for land on which to build schools, Brooks said. The bond deal would also set aside $1.7 billion for critically overcrowded schools. 

Assembly Speaker Herb Wesson, D-Culver City, called the vote a victory for California’s children. 

“In order to learn, a child truly needs good teachers, and we have that,” Wesson said. “They need the proper tools and an environment conducive for learning. And this takes care of the environment.” 

Wesson pointed out that more than 60 percent of K-12 classrooms are over 25 years old, more than 60 percent of UC buildings are at least 30 years old and more than 75 percent of community college facilities are over 40 years old. 

Districts around the state have passed local school bonds and are starting construction, but more than $4 billion in projects have been held up because no state matching funds have been available, according to the Department of Education. 


Legislators, students say list of tests is too long, biased

By Stefanie Frith, The Associated Press
Friday March 22, 2002

SACRAMENTO — With the SAT 9, the High School Exit Exam, Golden State Exams, SAT I and SAT II, California students face too long of a required list of standardized tests, a group of students told the California Teacher’s Association and legislators on Thursday. 

Students at the meeting said the Legislature should condense the list required of students in grades 3-11. 

Some of that is happening now, said Robert Spurlock, the state’s assistant education secretary. He cited a law passed last year that created a study of how students may bypass taking Advanced Placement exams if they have high enough scores on the Golden States Exams. Those are voluntary tests in 13 subjects given to seventh through 12th graders. Students who do well get a special seal on their diploma. 

But Jeff Orlinsky, a member of the California Teacher’s Association, said each test has its own special purpose. 

”(For high school students), only the Stanford 9 and the High School Exit Exam are required,” Orlinsky said. “The rest are voluntary.” However, there is a long list of tests required of elementary school students. 

While many tests are technically voluntary, students feel compelled to take them anyway, said Susan Chen, a junior at East Los Angeles’ Woodrow Wilson High School. 

“We are tired of testing. The tests are all my high school can talk about,” Chen said. “And tests like the SAT I and SAT II and the Golden States are voluntary, but it’s the norm now to take them if you want to be a part of the real world.” 

Sen. Betty Karnette, D-Long Beach, agreed, saying, “We could combine some of these tests. Everybody wants to test everybody on everything. I think that’s absurd.” 

However, the state needs standardized tests to measure school performance, said Phil Spears, director of standards and assessment for the California Department of Education. Spears did not attend the meeting at the Capitol sponsored by the LegiSchool Project at California State University, Sacramento. 

Spears said students are probably upset with being held accountable for their own actions, such as with the High School Exit Exam. If a student doesn’t pass this exam, they cannot graduate. 

The state Department of Education said a problem might be that some schools have failed to embrace the academic content standards for grades K-12 that lay out what students should know for each grade level. Spears said this has put their students at a disadvantage because they are not mastering the standards. 

Therefore, some schools devote a lot of time to teaching students how to take the test, including hours spent on learning how to fill in bubbles for multiple choice tests. 

Spurlock said the state is fighting this by working with test writers in California to phase in tests that measure the standards taught in California schools. 

Using comments from meetings such as Thursday’s, the state is consolidating some of the tests, Spurlock said. 

Now is a time of increased interest in standardized testing, because most tests are taken in the spring and President Bush recently signed a bill requiring annual state tests in reading and mathematics for every child in grades three through eight, beginning in the 2005-06 school year. 


Victims of Russian mob said to be from Los Angeles

By Paul Wilborn, The Associated Press
Friday March 22, 2002

LOS ANGELES — Five people whose bodies were pulled from a reservoir near Sacramento were Los Angeles area residents who were abducted, blackmailed and killed by Russian mobsters, the U.S. attorney said Thursday. 

The victims included two filmmakers, an accountant, an electronics executive and a home builder. More than $5.5 million in ransom was demanded of relatives, U.S. Attorney spokesman Thom Mrozek said. 

Mat Shatz, the stepfather of one victim, called the alleged kidnappers “bad people who come to this country, who are impatient and want to have money.” 

Six men of Russian descent were in custody, all without bond, charged in indictments with hostage-taking or receiving ransom money. Four are scheduled to go to trial April 30, two have already pleaded innocent and are scheduled to go on trial April 9. 

One victim, Meyer Muscatel, a wealthy San Fernando Valley homebuilder, was identified earlier. His body was found floating in 200-foot-deep New Melones Lake on Oct. 18, his hands bound and a plastic bag over his head. 

On Sunday, divers found Alexander Umansky, 35, of Sherman Oaks, and Georgy Safiev, 37, of Beverly Hills, said FBI spokesman Nick Rossi. 

On Monday, the body of Nick Kharabadze, 29, of Woodland Hills was found and accountant Rita Pekler, 39, of Encino, was recovered Tuesday, he said. 

Muscatel was suffocated, but the FBI has not provided a cause of death for the other four. 

Umansky and Pekler vanished in December, the other two in January, authorities and relatives said. 

Iouri Mikhel and Jurijus Kadamovas threatened to kill their victims if ransom demands were not met, while Petro Krylov and Ainar Altmanis allegedly “aided and abetted” the plot, the indictment charges. 

Andrei Agueev and Andrei Liapine were arrested last month and accused helping to transfer $240,000 in ransom paid to the kidnappers for Umansky’s release. 

Agueev’s defense lawyer, Victor Sherman, alleges the U.S. government “kidnapped” the Dubai businessman from his home. Liapine is a Russian citizen who lived in the United Arab Emirates. 

Agueev was helping a friend who wanted to open a business bank account, Sherman said Thursday. “He is totally innocent and the government has no evidence to indicate that any funds sent to his bank account came from any kidnapping.” 

Krylov worked for Umansky for 18 months at Hard Wired Auto Accessories before being fired in 2001, Mrozek said. 

Federal authorities have “very little evidence linking (Krylov) to these events,” Krylov’s attorney, George Buehler, said. 

The day he disappeared, Umansky told employees he was going to meet a client to demonstrate electronic equipment. That was Dec. 13. 

Umansky’s father found three copies of a ransom note faxed to his son’s business demanding $234,628. Umansky’s brother, who lives in San Francisco, received a copy of the fax the same day. 

All the faxes were sent from Russia, Mrozek said. 

Umansky’s family wired $90,000 to a bank in New York on Dec. 17. Umansky called his brother that day asking if the money had been sent. 

For two weeks, the kidnappers threatened to kill Umansky if the rest of the ransom wasn’t paid, Mrozek said. On Dec. 27, the family wired $146,000 that was later traced to an account in the Middle East. 

Authorities say the account was controlled by Argueev and Liapine. 

Some of the ransom money was wired to a Bank of America account in Studio City, Mrozek said, noting Mikhel and Kadamovas were signatories on that account. 

Three victims — Safiev, Kharabadze and Pekler — knew each other. Safiev and Kharabadze co-owned the Matador Media film production company, while Pekler did accounting work for the company. 

Safiev disappeared on Jan. 20. He called his company on Jan. 24 and answered “yes” when asked if he had been kidnapped, Mrozek said. 

According to the indictment, Mikhel and Kadamovas abducted Safiev in an effort to force a business associate to pay $5 million in ransom. 

At their home in Los Angeles, Kharabadze’s family said he was a University of Southern California graduate who moved from former Soviet Republic of Georgia when he was 17. 

He shared a house with his stepfather, Shatz, and his mother, Russian actress Rusiko Kiknadze. 

Kiknadze fell to the floor sobbing Thursday. 

“Do these murderers have mothers?” she said in Russian, as family members tried to console her. 

Shatz said the family never received any ransom demands from kidnappers. 

According to his family, Kharabadze worked as a sound editor on a number of films, including “Air Force One,” in which the U.S. president’s plane is hijacked by Russian dissidents. 

Pekler, the mother of a young son, owned an accounting company with a number of small business clients including Matador Media, employee Nelli Faktrovich said. 

Faktrovich last saw her boss on Dec. 5 as Pekler left for a lunch appointment with a client. 

Russian criminals often work in family groups or clans. Extortion, financial scams and other frauds are common. They are not connected in a chain-of-command organization like American crime syndicates. 

The criminal networks are often broken down along ethnic or religious lines, said Dr. Louise Shelley, an international crime expert at American University in Washington, D.C. 

——— 

Eds: AP Writer Christina Almeida contributed to this report. 


Secretary faces first-degree murder charge in lawyer’s death

The Associated Press
Friday March 22, 2002

STOCKTON — Prosecutors charged a Sacramento student with first-degree murder Thursday for her alleged role in helping a woman poison her husband. 

If convicted of the murder with special circumstances charge, Sarah Elizabeth Dutra, 21, could face the death penalty, a San Joaquin County judge said in court. 

Dutra also was a secretary for lawyer Larry McNabney, who disappeared last September after being seen at a Los Angeles horse show. 

Dutra, who did not enter a plea, may be represented by the same attorney who defended a Sacramento woman convicted of poisoning her elderly tenants. 

Kevin Clymo defended Dorothea Puente, a 61-year-old woman who was sentenced to prison on nine murder counts for poisoning elderly tenants to get their pension and disability benefits. 

Clymo made a special appearance Thursday and will either return to court April 3 with Dutra or decline to take the case. 

Dutra is accused of murder and conspiring to kill the 53-year-old McNabney with an overdose of horse tranquilizer. 

Authorities said Dutra and McNabney’s wife, Laren Renee Sims Jordan, 36, implicated each other this week after Jordan was captured in Florida Monday night following a nationwide hunt. While married to McNabney, Sims Jordan was known as Elisa McNabney. 

San Joaquin County sheriff’s deputies said Dutra, who was class president at Vacaville High School, confessed Tuesday and was jailed on suspicion of murder and conspiracy charges. She is a senior majoring in art studio at California State University, Sacramento. 

“The judge asked her if she understood the charges and she said yes,” said prosecutor Lester Fleming. “Then he informed her that the maximum penalty is death. You don’t often get a completely quiet courtroom, but you could have heard a pin drop.” 

Fleming said District Attorney John Phillip will make the decision to seek the death penalty. If convicted, Dutra also could receive life in prison without parole. 

On Wednesday, a judge gave Sims Jordan the opportunity to waive extradition during a hearing at the Okaloosa County Courthouse in Crestview, Fla., but her court-appointed public defender told her not to sign anything yet, said Rick Hord, an Okaloosa sheriff’s spokesman. 

Nellie Stone, a spokeswoman for the San Joaquin County Sheriff’s Department, said Thursday that San Joaquin investigators were preparing to request a warrant from Gov. Gray Davis. 

“The governor will do anything within his power to assist the extradition of Laren Sims back to California,” said Byron Tucker, a Davis spokesman. 

While it may take two weeks for San Joaquin prosecutors to file the paperwork, they will do what’s necessary to get Sims Jordan back, Stone said. 

That return could be three to six months away if Jordan fights extradition, Stone said. But a governor’s warrant would speed the process to about 30 days. 

Stone said investigators were on their way to Brooksville, Fla., Thursday to visit Haylei Jordan, Sims Jordan’s 17-year-old daughter to get a statement. 

Sims Jordan is currently being held without bond in Florida’s Okaloosa County Jail on parole-violation charges. 

Sims Jordan spent seven months in Florida prison from 1991 to 1992 for violating probation from a 1989 grand theft and fraud conviction. She’s charged with violating parole by leaving Florida to move to Las Vegas around 1994. 

In an off-camera interview with KCRA-TV Thursday night in Florida, Sims Jordan said she was afraid to leave McNabney because of alleged abuse. 

On Tuesday, Dunn said she gave a three-page written statement that she and Dutra had poisoned McNabney in a hotel in Los Angeles. He died later at their home in Woodbridge and Sims Jordan said she eventually buried his body in a nearby vineyard. 


Dog mauling jury didn’t believe defendants

By Linda Deutsch, The Associated Press
Friday March 22, 2002

LOS ANGELES — Jurors who convicted a San Francisco couple in the dog mauling death of a neighbor said Thursday they did not believe chief defendant Marjorie Knoller and were surprised that she took the witness stand at all. 

“From our point of view, her testimony was not believable,” said Don Newton, 64, foreman of the seven-man, five-woman panel that convicted the couple in the death of Diane Whipple, 33, who was attacked by the couple’s two huge dogs last year. 

Newton said the jurors also found that her husband, Robert Noel, was probably as responsible as she was for the events. 

“Robert Noel didn’t seem to be a very nice person,” he said. 

The seven-man, five-woman jury included many dog owners. 

Jeanne Sluiman, 52, said Knoller’s testimony had so many inconsistencies that the jurors had to go beyond it to other facts in order to make their decisions. 

That opinion was echoed by juror Shawn Antonio, 27, who said, “Because her stories were so fabricated, it was difficult. She’d come up with 10 scenarios of what happened and the only other witness is no longer with us.” 

The jurors were asked their impressions of Knoller’s flamboyant defense attorney, Nedra Ruiz. 

“She’s an amazingly dramatic person,” said Newton. “She’s an incredible actress and I think to some extent she was counterproductive.” 

Several jurors said they felt that Ruiz put on an act of being disorganized and found her antics, such as crawling on the floor, a distraction. 

“I believe what she had to work with was hard,” Sluiman said, “and maybe that’s what looked like the disorganization.” 

Antonio commented, “She was so passionate you couldn’t help but get involved, but she was so scattered it threw you off.” 

The jurors said they waited until the last to decide the most serious charge — second-degree murder against Knoller — realizing it was the most serious and the most difficult. 

“It was a painful decision,” said Newton. “The question of implied malice was a difficult question to decide, but we did decide there was implied malice in her actions.” 

The jurors said they concluded there were numerous warnings to the couple about the danger of the dogs and the couple ignored them. 

“We decided there was not simply one action,” said Newton. “It was a series of actions and failures to heed warnings.” 

Antonio said that the jurors played over several times in the jury room a tape of a TV interview in which Knoller avowed no responsibility for Whipple’s death. 

“There was no kind of sympathy, no kind of apologies,” he said. “It helped us a lot.” 

The jurors said they thought that if the defendants cared, they would have heeded the warnings of a veterinarian who wrote to the couple early on about the danger the huge presa canario dogs posed. 

“If someone wasn’t arrogant they would have had to heed that warning,” Sluiman said. 

The also said that the efforts by Ruiz to challenge the qualifications of the veterinarian and an official of the Humane Society worked against her. 

During the trial Ruiz spent an hour trying to disqualify Randall Lockwood, the last witness in the case, from telling about the danger the dogs posed. 

“I placed a lot of credibility in Dr. Lockwood’s testimony,” said Sluiman, “and also that he was being fought so desperately to be discredited. He knew what he was talking about.” 

She said that “we all agreed (Noel) was not someone we liked but it’s not how we decided the case.” 

Unlike Knoller, Noel did not testify during the trial. During deliberations the jury asked to hear a reading of his testimony to the grand jury that indicted the couple. 

“The reason why we asked for Noel’s previous testimony was in regard to whether we could convict him of manslaughter although he was not present at the time,” Newton said. “It made it clear that he was not any different than Marjorie Knoller in this. He was equally responsible.” 

The jurors said they were a very diverse group in age and occupations, but found that when they got behind closed doors they were in agreement. 

Vanessa Caroline, 19, said the reading of Noel’s testimony was helpful because “we based so much on memory.” 

Antonio asked to make one thing clear: “We really didn’t go into this deciding that we would hate these people.” 


Charges in dog-attack case defined

The Associated Press
Friday March 22, 2002

Marjorie Knoller and Robert Noel are scheduled to be sentenced May 10 in San Francisco for their convictions in the January 2001 death of Diane Whipple. After the verdicts, the state Supreme Court, acting through the state Bar of California, suspended Knoller and Noel from practicing law. 

Following are definitions of the charges for which they were convicted and the possible sentences. 

Marjorie Knoller: — Second-degree murder: defined as the malicious but non-deliberate and non-premeditated killing of a human being without certain aggravating factors, such as robbery, arson, rape or the use of explosives, poison, armor-piercing bullets or torture. Malice is implied when no considerable provocation appears, or when the circumstances attending the killing show an abandoned and malignant heart. Punishable by 15 years to life in prison. — Involuntary manslaughter: defined as the non-malicious killing of a human being in the commission of an unlawful act not amounting to a felony or a lawful act that might produce death, in an unlawful manner, or without due caution and circumspection. Punishable by two, three or four years in prison. — Keeping a mischievous animal that kills a person: defined as a person allowing a mischievous animal, knowing its propensities, to go at large or keeping it without ordinary care; with the animal killing a person who has taken all precautions a reasonable person would ordinarily take in such a situation. Punishable by two, three or four years in prison. 

Robert Noel: — Involuntary manslaughter. — Keeping a mischievous animal that kills a person.


Neighbors applaud guilty verdicts for Knoller and Noel

By Ron Harris, The Associated Press
Friday March 22, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — All was quiet in front of Diane Whipple’s apartment house Thursday — no flowers, no cards, just a handwritten note taped near the front entrance. 

“Justice! Diane & Sharon. We are with you,” it read. 

Neighbors and friends of Whipple, incensed for more than a year about the dog mauling that left the lacrosse coach dead at her doorstep, reacted emotionally when a jury found the animals’ caretakers guilty on all five charges they faced. 

Marjorie Knoller and Robert Noel, San Francisco attorneys who kept the dogs for two California prison inmates, were convicted by a Los Angeles jury despite their claims they had no idea the dogs, Bane and Hera, would turn into killers. 

Neighbors applauded the verdict, calling it swift justice for the Jan. 26, 2001, death of Whipple. Both Knoller and Noel were convicted of involuntary manslaughter and having a mischievous dog that killed someone. Knoller also was found guilty of second-degree murder. 

“I’m satisfied. Justice has been served. Now we can start with closure to this,” said Ed Nahigian, a cobbler who works a few blocks away from the building where Whipple was killed. 

Nahigian knew Noel, Knoller, Whipple and her partner, Sharon Smith, as customers to his shoe repair store. Noel and Knoller lived down the hallway from Whipple. Nahigian also said the judge in the case is a customer. 

“I pray that he gives the maximum sentence to these two individuals because in my opinion, and I knew everybody involved here, they deserve it. They really deserve it,” Nahigian said. “Diane Whipple’s memory will live with me in my mind and my heart until I die.” 

Nahigian testified to the grand jury that he “felt overwhelmed” by one of the couple’s huge presa canarios on one occasion. 

Mark Dobson reflected on the case at his home accessories store, Dobson Gray. His 170-pound great Dane, Joseph, was tied to a pole and lounged outside on a piece of bedding, eating biscuits. Dobson said justice had been served. 

“I think it was quite fair. What’s absurd about this whole case is that individuals would have two dogs trained to kill living in a residential apartment,” Dobson said. 

He anticipated harsher laws for dog owners in San Francisco and beyond. 

“I think it was just a bomb waiting to go off,” Dobson said. 

Christy Davidge was a member of Whipple’s lacrosse team at nearby St. Mary’s College for more than a year. She said the coach left a lasting impression on the team, and the guilty verdicts will not totally ease the pain of losing Whipple. 

“I think that personally, either way whatever had happened with the trial, it’s not going to bring her back to us,” Davidge said, speaking on behalf of her fellow team members. “I think she had us look at life a little differently, and when you looked at it through her eyes and saw how much she loved life, it affected us all.” 

In December 2000, Whipple hired her friend, Sarah Miller, to serve as an assistant coach for the Gaels’ lacrosse team. Miller said Thursday she was relieved with the jury’s verdict. 

“I’m very happy with the outcome,” Miller said. “I feel very happy and very relieved with the verdict of guilty across the board. They got what they deserved.” 

Silence and tension filled a room at the city’s largest gay community center, where onlookers leaned forward on the edge of their seats to hear the verdict on television. Whipple was a lesbian, and Knoller’s lawyer charged during the trial that her client was prosecuted in large part because of pressure from the gay community. 

Ruth Herring, development director of the National Center for Lesbian Rights, lit a single candle and held it aloft before the verdict was read. After the fifth guilty verdict was announced, Herring placed the candle on top of the television set. 

The candle was lit as a remembrance of Whipple’s life, Herring said. 

“Her death was a horror. No one can erase that,” Herring said. “Sharon chose to make it mean something. This is very, very big for all of us.” 

San Francisco’s gay community rallied around Whipple’s surviving partner as she lobbied for changes in the law that would allow her to file a wrongful death suit and seek damages from the laywer couple and the owners of the apartment building where the attack occurred. 

Carl Friedman, director of the city’s animal care and control department, said the verdict should send a warning message to careless owners to keep big dogs on a short leash. 

“If you’re a landlord, I think landlords are going to think twice about renting to people that might have big dogs,” he said. 

Friedman also said responsible owners of large dogs should take them to veterinarians or animal behaviorists and work with problem animals. 

“This is a wake-up call for everybody,” Friedman said. 


Home Matters: Composite deck planks are a home run

The Associated Press
Friday March 22, 2002

For all the homeowners for whom yearly deck upkeep is a fate worse than taking out the trash, note that composite deck materials are here, and here to stay, according to a deck pro at Lowes Home Improvement Warehouse. 

“Once composite material is installed, you can literally forget about it,” says John Karlesky, lumber marketing manager for Lowes. “It won’t rot, peel, warp, expand or contract, is splinter-free and it’s virtually impervious to water and sun. This is for people who want to enjoy their home without the hassle of deck repair. The average decks lasts 10 to 15 years. A deck with composites lasts indefinitely.” 

Composite deck materials initially weren’t a viable option to wood. It took manufacturers nearly 10 years to achieve the right combination of wood chips and plastics to make composites worth recommending. Vinyl and plastic planks are a fraction of the market because installation requires different techniques and equipment. 

So why don’t more consumers opt for composites? Karlesky says people simply don’t know of the materials. Installation contractors haven’t warmed to non-wood materials, fearing installation problems, but Karlesky says composites handle and install the same as the real thing. “It looks like wood, cuts like wood, installs like wood,” he says, “and it doesn’t take any more time to install than any other deck.” And it’s easier to buy. Because planks are literally the same from piece to piece without knotholes or twisted boards, buyers don’t need to sift through stacks of lumber searching for quality wood. 

And, James Carey and Morris Carey, licensed contractors and recognized experts on home-building and renovation, point out that such engineered decking is friendly to the environment as it recycles existing wood as opposed to requiring new timber to be cut and milled. 

There is a cost factor, however. Composite planks are two to three times the cost of real wood. Yet the overall cost of a deck is not two to three times greater. Composites are available only as planks and railings. Structural elements such as support posts and joists are less-costly treated wood or cedar. Karlesky estimates “The payback period is four to five years, and it still looks great. You won’t replace planks. It’s a better long-term value.” 

Composite wood is low maintenance, not maintenance-free. It should be cleaned regularly and can be stained or painted, but you’ll need to reapply stains and paints over time.” Karlesky advises use of 2- 1/4 inch stainless-steel trim head screws during installation. Non-stainless screws might rust and bleed into the deck. 

The material has other outdoor uses. Walkways, planters, and benches are ideal for spot use of composites. Even docks and hot tubs are candidates for non-wood because submerged uses don’t void the limited lifetime warranty. 

“Customers tell us it’s a losing battle to replace boards,” says Karlesky. “You put composites down, and walk away. It’s very esthetically pleasing. Your deck will look the same in five years as it does today.” 

 

—- 

Lowes is a national chain of nearly 750 home-improvement, appliance and gardening stores in 42 states. 


Two friends win $29 million in the Lottery

The Associated Press
Friday March 22, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Two friends who bought lottery tickets at a downtown smoke shop came forward Thursday to claim one-third of Wednesday’s $87 million California Lottery jackpot. 

Lottery spokeswoman Norma Minas said longtime friends Jerry McGovern and John Landers spent $10 and won $29 million. Because they took the cash value option, they will actually receive $14 million. 

“Jerry was driving into his office this morning when he heard on the radio that somebody who bought a ticket from D&T smoke shop had won the lottery and told his wife ’That is where I bought my ticket,”’ Minas said. When he arrived at his office he checked the Lottery’s Web site and learned he had the winning ticket. 

McGovern, who spent $9, will receive 90 percent of the total amount they won and Landers, who only spent $1, will receive 10 percent. 

The store will receive a commission of $150,000 for selling the winning ticket. 

It was the first of three winning tickets to be turned in, Minas said. 


Providian will pay $38 million to settle shareholders suit

By Michael Liedtke, The Associated Press
Friday March 22, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Embattled credit card issuer Providian Financial Corp. has agreed to pay $38 million to settle a class-action lawsuit filed by shareholders alleging the company inflated its profits by gouging its customers in the late 1990s. 

The proposed settlement, which still needs approval of a federal judge in Philadelphia, covers thousands of investors who bought Providian’s once high-flying stock between Jan. 21, 1999 and June 4, 1999. 

Before deducting attorney fees, the settlement works out to about $1.40 per share. The fees are expected to range between $9 million and $12 million, said New York lawyer Robert Finkel, who represented shareholders. 

Estimates on the shareholders’ damages during the period ran as high as $400 million. Finkel still believes Providian management defrauded shareholders but said proving the allegations in a trial might have been difficult because the company never restated its results during the period covered in the case. 

The tentative agreement doesn’t cover other class-action shareholder lawsuits filed late last year after San Francisco-based Providian shocked Wall Street by revealing huge loan losses that threatened to ruin the company. Those civil complaints are still in their preliminary stages. 

Providian doesn’t expect the settlement reached this week to affect its turnaround effort because the entire $38 million is covered by insurance, said spokesman Alan Elias. Providian didn’t acknowledge wrongdoing in making the settlement. 

The case revolved around allegations of abusive business practices that offered the first hint of trouble at Providian, which evolved from a small subsidiary of a Kentucky insurance company into one of the nation’s five largest credit card lenders. 

As it grew during the 1990s, Providian’s increased its profit partly by charging customers fees for everything from late payments to balance transfers. The aggressive sales practices helped Providian earn $296 million in 1998, but the shareholder suit alleged the profit was illusory because the way the company made its money. 

Acting on numerous customer complaints, authorities in California and Connecticut accused Providian of illegal business practices. The company wound up paying more than $400 million to settle the government investigations and class-action lawsuits filed on behalf of Providian’s credit card customers. 

During the first two weeks in 1999 after the government disclosed its investigations, Providian’s shares plunged from $62.06 to as low as $39.22. 

After settling the government’s complaints, Providian’s shares rallied and peaked at a split-adjusted $66.72 in October 2000. In late 2001, the stock fell to a low of $2.01 amid concerns that federal banking regulators would seize the company. 

Providian’s shares gained 25 cents Thursday to close at $6.15 on the New York Stock Exchange. 

——— 

On The Net: 

http://www.providian.com 


Bankrupt Global Crossing denies deceptive accounting

By Jim AbramsThe Associated Press
Friday March 22, 2002

WASHINGTON — Officials of the bankrupt fiber optics giant Global Crossing denied Thursday that deceptive accounting practices were part of their company’s financial collapse. “Global Crossing is no Enron,” they told skeptical lawmakers. 

“Some may see superficial similarities between Enron and Global Crossing,” chief executive officer John Legere and chief financial officer Dan Cohrs said in a statement to a House Financial Services Committee panel. 

Indeed, they noted that, like the energy trading corporation, Global Crossing had seen a collapse in its stock price, had executive stock sales and faced questions about accounting procedures and employee pension plans. The companies also shared the auditor Arthur Andersen. 

But the Global Crossing officials insisted the company’s problems, leading to a decision to file for bankruptcy protection in January, were a result of aggressive expansion, overcapacity in the telecommunications network market and the national economic downturn — not business improprieties. 

Even so, said Rep. John LaFalce of New York, the top Democrat on the committee, “Global Crossing may well have succeeded in keeping its share price inflated much longer than was justified based on its true value.” 

The Securities and Exchange Commission and the Justice Department are investigating the fourth-largest Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganization case in history. The company listed $12.4 billion in debts. 

Global Crossing was launched in 1997 and spent $15 billion building the world’s most extensive fiber-optic network. But with the economic slowdown, it cut some 9,000 jobs, closed 71 offices and saw its stock fall from a high of more than $60 a share to 30 cents before its bankruptcy filing. 

Much of Thursday’s hearing centered on whether Global Crossing deceived investors and employees about its financial status through the way it accounted for sales and purchases of network capacity known as Indefeasible Rights of Use, or IRUs. Of particular interest was the practice of “swaps,” where a telecommunications company sells capacity to a customer while buying a similar amount on the customer’s network. 

Rep. Sue Kelly, chairwoman of the oversight and investigations panel, said it appears such swaps, and the way revenues and costs are reflected in the books, “are being used as a quick and easy way to inflate earnings and make a company look more profitable than it really is.”  

º Kelly and others are promoting legislation to better ensure the independence and integrity of the accounting industry. 

Cohrs said, “We’re struggling to understand the right way to treat these transactions.” Asked if there was full disclosure of the deals, he responded, “We believe there was.” 

SEC deputy chief accountant John M. Morrissey, also a witness at the hearing, agreed that determining when to recognize revenue in an IRU transaction “can be quite complex.” 

Michael Salsbury, general counsel for the telecommunications company WorldCom, told the hearing that the real problems in the industry were the efforts of the Bell companies to retain their power and the government’s failure to enforce the law. “Those failures have destroyed far more market capitalization and robbed far more value from shareholders’ investments than any accounting issues.” 

But Michael Capuano, D-Mass., said the bookkeeping used by Global Crossing was “nothing more than a much more fancy and much larger Ponzi scheme” in which new investments are used to pay off old investors. 

A former Global Crossing finance executive, Roy Olofson, last August wrote a letter to the company’s general counsel warning about inflating revenues through misleading accounting techniques. But Cohrs and Legere said they had engaged an outside counsel to review the matter and found the allegations to be without merit. 

Also at issue was a company order preventing employees from making changes in their 401(k) pension plans for a month shortly before the company went bankrupt. 

Legere said the “lockdown” was a result of an effort to consolidate different pension plans, that it was announced two months in advance and that Global Crossing’s stock value changed minimally, from 83 cents to 67 cents, in those two months. 

——— 

On the Net: 

House Financial Services Committee: http://www.house.gov/financialservices/ 

Global Crossing: http://www.globalcrossing.com 


School board closes City of Franklin

By David Scharfenberg, Daily Planet staff
Thursday March 21, 2002

District budget deficit revised to $5.4 million 

 

As expected, the Board of Education officially voted to close City of Franklin Microsociety Magnet School next year at its Wednesday night meeting. 

The board also reviewed new budget figures suggesting that next year’s deficit, presumed for weeks to be more than $6 million, may be closer to $5.4 million. 

Each board member expressed regret over the Franklin decision, which will save the financially-strapped district an estimated $326,000. 

“It’s a painful reality to face,” said board President Shirley Issel. “I can’t help but feel a sense of failure.” 

Still, board members said the decision was unavoidable, arguing that low enrollment at the school makes it too expensive to operate. 

Superintendent Michele Lawrence, who recommended the closure, also noted that six of the school’s 12 teachers have received notice that they may be laid off next year.  

Some of those notices may be rescinded by the end of the year as the budget picture clears up. But if the school stayed open next year, Lawrence argued, any layoffs would disrupt a faculty with specialized training in the school’s microsociety model, which mimics a small city. 

Lawrence added that long-planned construction on the building next year will be cheaper if it is completed in one phase, with no students in the building. Keeping the school open next year would require a more expensive two-phase construction project, and a mid-year shift of students from one side of the building to the other. 

Lew Jones, manager of facilities planning for the district, said completing construction in one phase will save the district $400,000 to $500,000 on the roughly $5 million project. 

The future use of the building is yet to be determined, although office space or a new elementary school have been suggested as possibilities. Lawrence plans to provide the board with a recommendation in the spring. 

The board made its decision after a series of Franklin parents made last-minute pleas for the school, and urged the district to conduct itself differently in the event of any future school closures. No such closures are expected this year. 

Many parents said they first learned of the Franklin closure plan through press accounts in the Daily Planet. Wednesday night, parent Michiko Morillo urged district leaders to talk directly to community members about any proposed closure in the future. 

“Come talk to them directly,” Morillo said. “It does cause a great deal of hard feelings.” 

Franklin principal Barbara Penny-James made her first public comments on the closure, noting that her work at Franklin was one of the most “inspiring experiences” of her career, and expressing concern that the microsociety model may disappear from Berkeley’s educational landscape. 

Board member Terry Doran said the district should look into retaining elements of the microsociety curriculum at other schools. Under the microsociety program, students train as entrepreneurs and political leaders in their own model city. 

 

Smaller deficit? 

Before approving the Franklin closure, board members reviewed the latest budget figures provided by the Fiscal Crisis and Management Assistance Team, or FCMAT, a state agency that has been providing the district with financial advice since October. 

According to FCMAT, the district budgeted for nearly $1 million in state aid this year to help defray energy costs, but never allocated that money for a project, salaries or any other expenditure. As a result, the current estimate on next year’s budget shortfall has been revised down, from over $6 million to $5.4 million. 

“We’re optimistic, but guarded,” said Lawrence, discussing the latest figures. The superintendent said that liabilities for lawsuits and other expenses have not yet been built into the budget, and could raise the $5.4 million estimate at some point. 

 

New interdistrict permit policy reviewed 

At the end of the night, the board reviewed draft language for a new interdistrict permit policy, which governs the admittance of non-residents to Berkeley schools. 

The new policy emphasizes that non-residents will only be allowed to attend Berkeley schools if there is adequate space, and if they maintain good attendance, discipline and academic performance. 

Lawrence said that permits will be reviewed as students move from elementary school to middle school, and from middle school to high school. But the superintendent emphasized that space concerns will not prevent the current crop of eighth graders on interdistrict permits from attending Berkeley High School next year. 

Doran had previously warned that current, interdistrict eighth graders are expecting to attend BHS next year, and that it would be unfair to retract their permits so late in the year. 

 

 

 


Palestinians want more than just peace

Josh May
Thursday March 21, 2002

Editor: 

 

I felt compelled to write and express my anger. Today (March 21) was the second suicide bombing by Palestinian terrorists in Israel since the cease fire talks were started by Anthony Zinni. Yesterday the Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for a bomb that killed seven and wounded many more, including many Israeli Arabs. Today the Al-Aqsa brigade blew up at least three Israelis and wounded as many as 40 others as they walked on a street in Jerusalem. The Al-Aqsa brigade is part of Fatah, and both organizations are controlled by and claim loyalty to Yasir Arafat. 

As I sat watching the news of the attack I heard a Palestinian spokesperson on television blame Ariel Sharon and Israel for the latest Palestinian attack. This ignores the fact that 1) Sharon had withdrawn Israeli troops from the territories, 2) Sharon was cooperating and making concessions in the cease fire talks with Zinni, and 3) the terrorist group that claimed responsibility for the bombing is directly controlled by Arafat.. 

Why should Israel negotiate with Arafat? Either Arafat is refusing to stop terrorism against Israelis or he lacks the ability to control his own people. In either case Israel gets only terrorism and rhetoric when it deals with the Palestinians. The vast majority of all Israelis and Jews believe that the occupation of Palestinians by Israel is wrong and needs to stop, but how can this happen when the terrorism doesn't let up for one minute? 

Israel’s greatest fear is that Palestinians want more than a peaceful state in the West Bank and Gaza — they want to destroy the State of Israel. Who can blame Israelis for thinking this — a poll last weekend by the Arab An Najah University in Nablus found that 87.5 percent of Palestinians want to “liberate all of Palestine.” The Palestinian culture is one that makes heroes and martyrs of gunmen and suicide bombers. Palestinians tell their children that they will one day return to their old land in Israel and throw out the Jews who live their now. Palestinians want their own state in the West Bank, Gaza, and East Jerusalem and they want to overwhelm the Jewish state of Israel. 

They do not understand the nature of the two-state solution imposed by the U.N. Israel, Gaza, and the West Bank combined are the size of New Jersey. Israel is surrounded by hostile Arab countries and hundreds of millions of Arabs who make no secret of their desire to get rid of the Jewish state. 

What has Arafat ever done to reassure Israel and Jews everywhere that the Palestinian people only want a peaceful state to coexist with Israel, and that the Palestinians don’t want to see the destruction of the Jewish state? 

Nothing. I am afraid that until Arafat or someone else on the Palestinian side starts to act like a leader of a future peaceful nation and cracks down on terrorism, there will be no peace. 

 

Josh May 

Boalt Hall Law School student


Not your typical fairy tale

by John Angell Grant, Special to the Daily Planet
Thursday March 21, 2002

Berkeley’s adventurous Shotgun Players were scheduled to open their season Saturday in the new 99-seat Allston Street Theater in the Gaia building in downtown Berkeley.  

But when it turned out, incredibly, that the building’s management had not applied for permits to house a theater in their new space, Shotgun was forced to look elsewhere, at the 11th hour, for a place to perform. 

The generous folks at Berkeley Rep then jumped into the breech and leased the Berkeley Rep Thrust Stage to the smaller company at a discounted rate to help Shotgun get its season off the ground. 

The theater group opened Saturday with a world premiere titled “A Fairy’s Tail,” written especially for Shotgun by San Francisco playwright Adam Bock. Bock is the author of the acclaimed “Five Flights,” currently running at Thick House in San Francisco to rave responses. 

In 1999, Shotgun produced Bock’s “Swimming in the Shallows,” which won several Bay Area Theater Critics Circle awards, including outstanding new play and outstanding production. 

“A Fairy’s Tail” is a twisted adult fairly tale in which three strangers join forces and set off for the land of the giant to avenge sudden family deaths. Director Patrick Dooley casts his shows well, and this is no exception. He gets striking performances from his actors. 

Beth Donohue is frightening in her dumpy bloomers as nasty 9-year-old Missy What’s-Her-Face, the ringleader of the trio. Her cohorts include sweet simpleton Norbert Longlegs, an amusing presence with his straw boater hat, blazer, grimacing face and slow mind. 

Trish Mulholland rounds out the trio playing Mrs. Piffle, a housemaid who moves like a herky-jerky wind-up doll. 

Five other actors provide a chorus of sorts, and double in smaller roles. Reid Davis has a funny scene as a fish that gets caught by Norbert for breakfast, and then talks himself off the hook by offering council to the three on their quest. 

Katie Bales Frassinelli is a narcissistic princess who balks at helping the trio because the giant has killed some of her rival princesses and she’s hoping for more princess deaths that will push her up the princess rankings into the top ten.  

The show’s fairy tale structure also employs a narrator, the smooth and expressive Ana Bayat. It’s all a bit like Alice through the looking glass, with adult twists.  

The three wanderers have adventures. In one amusing scene they step gingerly through the Fart Swamp, in a ballet choreographed to the sounds of different kinds of fart noises. 

But this is not a great play. The story just doesn’t have enough meat on it. The top of the play is busy with information where a lot happens to a variety of characters before they are well established. 

Later on, not much happens. It seemed especially difficult to get the thin story up and rolling again after intermission. In the end, the quest for the giant plays out anticlimactically in a facile and didactic way. 

Silly jokes like the narrator quitting in the middle of the show and then coming back don’t really have a payoff in the larger story. The indistinct motif of Norbert and his boyfriend who drowns in quicksand at the top of the play isn’t substantial enough to justify the title "A Fairy’s Tail." 

Because the show’s infantile inanity seems to be an end in itself, it wears thin after a while, and the play starts to feel like it’s written in baby talk. 

There is an original score of recorded songs composed by Clive Worsley and Kristin Miltner, with lyrics by Worsley and Bock. "Why did I dare to hope that I would fly forever" sung by Norbert early on is a touching ballad of loss.  

The songs often, however, feel like they’re tacked on to the play as bits not quite connected to the larger story as a whole. 

According to director Dooley, the company moved into the Berkeley Rep space the day before the Saturday opening. The show had to be reconfigured, re-blocked and relit in about 24 hours. 

The opening night performance suffered a bit from trying to telescope a grassroots show designed for the 99-seat Gaia proscenium stage to the grander 400-seat Berkeley Rep thrust stage. 

Opening night felt like a dress rehearsal at times. But the skillful actors connected with their audience before long, and found a groove. 

Shotgun has been wandering around Berkeley for ten years performing in a variety of spaces that include La Val’s Subterranean, Hinkel Park, the Eighth Street Theater, Julia Morgan and Speakeasy Theater. They will be performing their next show at the former U.C. Theater on University Avenue. 

It’s a pity they’re having problems with the Gaia space that was supposed to be their new home. Shotgun is one of the most exciting and skillful new theater companies in the Bay Area, and a credit to Berkeley.  

I hope they can resolve their problems and find a permanent home in Berkeley. It would be a pity if Berkeley lost Shotgun to San Francisco, as we did the Magic Theater some years ago. 

 

 

.  

Planet theater reviewer John Angell Grant has written for "American Theatre," "Backstage West," "Callboard," and many other publications. E-mail him at jagplays@yahoo.com or fax him at 1-419-781-2516. 

 


Arts & Entertainment Calendar

Staff
Thursday March 21, 2002

 

924 Gilman Mar. 22: Tsunami Bomb, No Motiv; Mar. 29: Limpwrist, All You Can Eat, The Subtonics, The Bananas, Sharp Knife; Mar. 30: 9 Shocks Terror, What Happens Next?, Phantom Limbs, The Curse, Onion Flavored Rings; All shows begin a 8 p.m. 924 Gillman St., 525-9926 

 

Anna’s Bistro Mar. 22: Anna & Ellen Hoffman Jazz Tunes; 10 p.m., Hideo Date; Mar. 23: Robin Gregory; 10 p.m., Ducksan Distones Jazz Sextet; Mar. 24: Christy Dana Jazz Group; Mar. 25: Renegade Sidemen; Mar. 26: Jason Martineau and Dave Sayen; Mar. 27: David Widelock Jazz Duo; Mar. 28: Randy Moore Jazz Trio; Mar. 29: Anna & Ellen Hoffman; 10 p.m. Hideo Date; Mar. 30: Robin Gregory; 10 p.m. Ducksan Distones Jazz Sextet; Music starts at 8 p.m. unless noted, 1801 University Ave., 849-2662. 

 

Ashkenaz Music and Dance Community Center Mar. 23: A Benefit for Forest Defense with The Funky Nixons, The Gary Gates Band, The Shut-Ins, $8 - $20; Mar. 29: Alpha Yaya Diallo; 1317 San Pablo Ave., 548-0425. 

 

Blake’s Mar. 22: Shady Lady, View From Here; $6; Mar. 23: Mystic Roots, LZ & Ezell Funkstaz, $5; Mar. 24: Passenger, The Shreep, $3; Mar. 25: The Steve Gannon Band & Mz. Dee, $4; 2367 Telegraph Ave., 877-488-6533. 

 

Cafe Eclectica Mar. 22: 8 p.m., The Teethe, The Natural Dreamers, Yasi, $3; Mar. 23: 8 p.m., Guest DJs and MCs, $5; 1309 Solano Ave., Albany, 527-2344, Shows are All Ages.  

 

Cal Performances Apr. 7: 3 p.m., Murray Perahia, classical pianist. $28 - $48; Zellerbach Hall, UC Berkeley, 642-9988 

 

Cato’s Ale House Mar. 24: Lost Coast Jazz Trio; Mar. 27: Vince Wallace Trio; Mar. 31: Phillip Greenlief Trio; 3891 Piedmont Ave., Oakland, 655-3349 

 

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

 

Freight & Salvage Mar. 22: Marley’s Ghost, $17.50; Mar. 24: Teresa Trull & Barbara Higbie, $18.50; Mar. 27: Paul Thorn, $16.50; Mar. 28: Old Blind Dogs, $17.50; Mar. 29: Jack Hardy, $16.50; Mar. 30: Faye Carol, $17.50; 1111 Addison St., 548-1761, folk@freightandsalvage.org 

 

Jazzschool Mar. 24: 4:30 p.m., Alegria, $6-$12; Mar. 30: 4:30 p.m., Dmitri Matheny Orchestra presents “The Emerald Buddha”; 2087 Addison St., 845-5373, www.jazzschool.com. 

 

Tuva Space 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 

 

“Jazz Concert” Mar. 24: 2 p.m., Terry Gibbs and the Mike Vax Orchestra. $10 - $18. Longfellow School for the Arts, 1500 Derby St. 420-4560, www.bigbandjazz.net 

 

“Recital” Mar. 24: 3 p.m., Cal Performances presents pianist, Richard Goode, and vocalist, Randall Scarlata. $48. Hertz Hall, UC Berkeley campus, 642-9988, www.calperfs.berkeley.edu 

 

“Jewish Music Festival” Through Mar 24: Several performers will perform Jewish music and dance from across the world. Call Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center for Acts, times and dates. 925-866-9559, www.brjcc.org 

 

Dance 

 

“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 

 

“Women’s Voices, Then and Now” Mar. 15 through Mar. 24: Fri. 8 p.m., Sat. 2 p.m., Voices from a 1915 graveyard blend with voices from 1982 to present a vivid depiction of the lives of American women. $10. Unitarian Universalist Church of Berkeley, 1 Lawson Rd., Kensington, 525-0302 

 

“Persimmony Jones” Mar. 16: 12 p.m., Designed for a young audience, this is the story of a young girl trying to find her place in the world. As Persimmony travels through different lands on her search, she is forced to reexamine her own ideas about tolerance and acceptance. Free. Berkeley Repertory Theatre’s Thrust Stage, 2025 Addison St., 647-2978 

 

“Curtain Up” Mar. 22 through Mar. 24: 8 p.m., Musical theater veteran Martin Charnin and Broadway conductor/comoser Keith Levenson join forces to create a semi-staged version of Gershwin and Kaufman’s 1927 musical comedy “Strike Up the Band”. $24 - $46. Zellerbach Hall, UC Berkeley Campus, 642-9988 

 

“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 

 

“Impact Briefs 5: The East Bay Hit” Through Mar. 30: Fri. - Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 7 p.m., A collection of seven plays all about the ups and downs of in the Bay Area. $12, $7 students. La Val’s Subterranean Theatre, 1834 Euclid, 464-4468, tickets@impattheatre.com. 

 

“The Merchant of Venice” Through Mar. 31: Wed. - Thurs. 7 p.m., Fri. - Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m., Women in Time Productions presents Shakespeare’s famous romantic comedy replete with masks and revelry, balcony scenes, and midnight escapes. $25, half-price on Wed. The Berkeley City Club, 2315 Durant Ave. 925-798-1300 

 

“Knock Knock” Through Apr. 14: Wed. - Sat. 8 p.m., Sun 2 p.m., 7 p.m., A comedic farce about two eccentric retirees whose comfortable philosophical arguments are interrupted by a series of strange visitors. $26 - $35. Aurora Theatre, 2081 Addison St., 843-4822, www.auroratheatre.org 

 

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

 

“A Fairy’s Tail” Mar. 16 through Apr. 7: 8 p.m. Fri. and Sat., 5 p.m. Sun., 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. Directed by Patrick Dooley. $10 - $25. Mar. 16 - 31:Thrust Stage at Berkeley Rep, 2025 Addison St.; Apr. 4 - 7: UC Theatre on University Ave.; 704-8210, www.shotgunplayers.org. 

 

 

 

Film 

 

Pacific Film Archive Mar. 11: A Star is Born, 3 p.m.; Flesh, 7 p.m.; Mar. 12: An eye Unruled: An Evening with Stan Brakhage, 7:30 p.m.; Mar. 13: The Bicycle Thief, 3 p.m.; Daughter from Danang, 7:30 p.m.; Mar. 14: The Student I, 7 p.m.; Mar. 16: Shaping Identities Through Community, 7 p.m.; The Wolf, 9:30 p.m.; Mar. 17: For the Love of It: Amateur Filmmaking, 5:30; Mar. 18: Cabaret; 3 p.m.; Carnal Knowledge, 7 p.m.; Mar. 19: Stranger with a Camera, 7:30 p.m.; Mar. 20: Sunset Blvd., 3 p.m.; Chemical Valley, 7:30 p.m.; Mar. 21: Hazel Dickens: It’s Hard to Tell the Singer From the Song, 7:30 p.m.; Mar. 22: A Thousand and One Voices: The Music of Islam, 7:30 p.m.; Mar. 23: In a Lonely Place, 7 p.m.; The Big Heat; 8:55 p.m.; 2527 Bancroft Way, 642-1412 

 

“Asian American Film Fest” Mar. 13: Daughter From Danang; Pacific Film Archive, 2527 Bancroft Way, 642-1412. 

 

Exhibits  

 

“Trace of a Human” 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 

 

“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” 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 

 

“The Works of Alexander Nepote” Through Mar. 29: Nepote was a 20th century artist whose medium is a process of layered painting of torn pieces of watercolor paper, fused together in images that speak of the spirit that underlies and is embodied in the landscape he views. Check museum for times. Bade Museum, Pacific School of Religion, 1798 Scenic Ave., 849-8272 

 

“Trace of a Human” Through Mar. 30: An exhibit of mixed media sculpture by Jim Freeman, and acrylic paintings on canvas by Krystyna Mleczko. Tues. - Sat. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Ardency Gallery, 709 Broadway, Oakland, 836-0831, gallery709@aol.com 

 

“Journey of Self-discovery” Through Mar. 30: Community Works artist Adriana Diaz and Willard Junior High students joined together to explore gender stereotypes, advertising, and other influential elements in society in a project that culminated in two life-size portraits that explore self-identity. Free. La Pena Cultural Center, 3105 Shattuck Ave. 845-3332. 

 

“West Oakland Today” Through Mar. 30: Sergio De La Torre presents “thehousingproject”, an open house/video installation that explores desire surrounding one’s sense of home and place. Marcel Diallo presents “Scrapyard Ghosts”, an installation that presents a glimpse into the process of one man’s conversation with the living past through objects of iron, wood, rock dirt and other debris unearthed at an old scrapyard site in West Oakland’s Lower Bottom neighborhood. Pro Arts, 461 Ninth St., Oakland  

 

"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. 

 

“Portraits of the Afghan People: 1984 - 1992” Through Apr. 6: An exhibit of black and white photographs by Bay Area photographer Patricia Monaco. Free. Mon. - Fri. 8:30 a.m. - 6:30 p.m., Sat. 9 a.m. - 3 p.m. Photolab Gallery, 2235 Fifth St., 644-1400 

 

“The Zoom of the Souls” Mar. 23 through Apr. 13: An exhibit of oil paintings by Mark P. Fisher. Sat. 1 p.m. - 6 p.m. Bay Area Music Foundation, 462 Elwood Ave. #9, Oakland, 836-5223 

 

“Sibila Savage & Sylvia Sussman” Through Apr. 13: Photographer, Sibila Savage presents photographs documenting the lives of her immigrant grandparents, and Painter, Sylvia Sussman displays her abstract landscapes on unstretched canvas. Free. Wed. - Sun. 12 p.m. - 5 p.m. Berkeley Art Center, 1275 Walnut St. 64-6893, www.berkeleyartcenter.org 

 

“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.  

 

“Art is Education” Mar. 18 through Apr. 19th: A group exhibition of over 50 individual artworks created by Oakland Unified School District students, Kindergarten through 12th grade. Mon. - Fri. 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Craft and Cultural Arts Gallery, State of California Office Building Atrium, 1515 Clay St., Oakland, 238-6952, www.oaklandculturalarts.org 

 

“Expressions of Time and Space” Mar. 18 through April 17: Calligraphy by Ronald Y. Nakasone. Julien Designs 1798 Shattuck Ave., 540-7634, RyNakasone@aol.com.  

 

“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. 

 

“Quilted Paintings” Mar. 3 through May 4: Contemporary wall quilts by Roberta Renee Baker, landscapes, abstracts, altars and story quilts. Free. The Coffee Mill, 3363 Grand Ave., Oakland 465-4224 

 

“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 

 

“Masterworks of Chinese Painting” Mar. 13 through May 26: An exhibition of distinguished works representing virtually every period and phase of Chinese painting over the last 900 years, including figure paintings and a selection of botanical and animal subjects. Prices vary. Wed. - Sun. 11 a.m. - 7 p.m. The University of California, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, 2626 Bancroft Way, 642-4889, www.bampfa.berkeley.edu 

 

“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” 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 

 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center Mar. 17: 3 p.m., Suzan Hagstrom reads from her book “Sara’s Children: The Destruction of Chielnik,” chronicling the survival of one brother and four sisters in Nazi death camps. Free. 1414 Walnut St. 848-0237 x127 

 

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. 

 

Cody’s on Fourth St. 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. 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.  

 

Easy Going Travel Shop & Bookstore Mar. 7: Carl Parkes, author of “Moon Handbook: Southeast Asia”, presents a slide show exploring his travels in the region; Mar. 12: William Fienne describes his personal journey from Texas to North Dakota as he follows the northern migration of snow geese; Mar. 14: Gary Crabbe and Karen Misuraca present slides and read from their book, “The California Coast”; Mar. 19: Barbara and Robert Decker present a slide show focusing on the volcanoes of California and the Cascade Mountain Range; Mar. 21: Stefano DeZerega discusses opportunities for study, travel, and work in Latin America, Africa, Asia, the Middle East, or Eastern Europe; All readings are free and start at 7:30 p.m., 1385 Shattuck Ave. at Rose, 843-3533. 

 

GAIA Building Mar. 14: 7 - 9 p.m., Lecture with Patricia Evans speaking from her book, “Controlling People: How to recognize, Understand and Deal with People Who Are Trying to Control You.”; Mar. 19: Reading and slide show with Carol Wagner, “Survival of the Spirit: Lives of Cambodian Buddhists.”; March 21: 6 - 9 p.m., 1st Berkeley Edgework Books Salon; Mar. 22: 6:30 - 9:30 p.m., Book Reading and Jazz Concert with David Rothenberg; All events are held in the Rooftop Gardens Solarium, 7th Floor, GAIA Building, 2116 Allston Way, 848-4242. 

 

Gathering Tribes Mar. 15: 6:30 p.m., Susan Lobo and Victoria Bomberry will be conducting readings from “American Indians And The Urban Experience.”; 1573 Solano Ave., 528-9038, www.gatheringtribes.com.  

 

UC Berkeley Lunch Poems Reading Series Mar. 7: Marilyn Hacker reads from her most recent book, “Squares and Courtyards”. Free. Morrison Library in Doe Library, UC Berkeley campus, 642-0137, www.berkeley.edu/calendar/events/poems. 

 

University of Creation Spirituality Mar. 21: 7 - 9 p.m., Turning to One Another: Simple Conversations to Restore Hope to the Future, An Evening with Author Margaret J. Wheatley, $10-$15 donation; 2141 Broadway, Oakland, 835-4827 x29, darla@berkana.org. 

 

 

Poetry 

 

Poetry Flash @ Cody’s Mar. 3: Myung Mi Kim, Harryette Mullen & Geoffrey O’Brien; Mar. 6: Bill Berkson, Albert Flynn DeSilver; Mar. 10: Leslie Scalapino, Dan Farrell; Mar. 13: Lucille Lang Day, Risa Kaparo; Mar. 20: Edward Smallfield, Truong Tran; Mar. 24: Susan Griffin, Honor Moore; All events begin at 7:30 p.m., $2 donation. 2454 Telegraph Ave., 845-7852, www.codysbooks.com.  

 

Poetry Reading @ South Branch Berkeley Public Library Mar. 2: Bay Area Poets Coalition is holding an open reading. 3 p.m. - 5 p.m. Free. 1901 Russell St. 

 

Word Beat Mar. 9: Sonia Greenfield and Megan Breiseth; Mar. 16, Q. R. Hand and Lu Pettus; Mar. 23: Lee Gerstmann and Sam Pierstorffs; Mar. 30: Eleanor Watson-Gove and Jim Watson-Gove; All shows 7 - 9 p.m., Coffee With A Beat, 458 Perkins, Oakland. 526-5985, www.angelfire.com/poetry/wordbeat. 

 

Fellowship Café Mar. 15: 7:30 p.m., Eliot Kenin, poetry, storytellers, singers and musicians. $5-$10. Fellowship Hall, 1924 Cedar St., 540-0898. 

 

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. 

 

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. 

 

Lawrence Hall of Science Mar. 16: 1 - 4 p.m., Moviemaking for children 8 years old and up; Mar. 20: Spring Equinox; “Jurassic Park: Dinosaur Auditions Live Science Demonstrations” A directed activity in which children “audtion” to be a dinosaur in an upcoming movie. They’ll learn about the variety of dinosaurs in the Jurassic Park exhibit as well as dress up, act, and roar like a dinosaur. Through May 12: Mon. - Fri. 10:30 a.m., 11:30 a.m., 12:30 p.m.; Sat. - Sun. 12 p.m., 1 p.m., 2 p.m. 3 p.m. $8 adults, $6 children. Centenial Dr. just above the UC campus and just below Grizzly Peak Blvd. 642-5132 

 

UC Berkeley Phoebe Hearst Museum of Anthropology will close its exhibition galleries for renovation. It will reopen in early 2002.  

 

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
Thursday March 21, 2002

 


Friday, March 22

 

 

City Commons Club 

12:30 p.m. 

Berkeley City Club 

2315 Durant Ave. 

Robert Kruger, first vice-president, and Larry Miller, certified financial planner and senior vice-president, Solomon Smith Barney; “Investing in the Market Post 9-11.” $1. 848-3533. 

 

Berkeley Women in Black 

noon - 1 p.m. 

Bancroft and Telegraph Ave. 

Standing in solidarity with Israeli and Palestinian women to urge an end to the occupation and push the peace process forward. 548-6310, wibberkeley.org. 

 

 

The Nature of Work: Joanna Macy and Matthew Fox in Dialogue 

7 - 9 p.m. 

University of Creation Spirituality 

2141 Broadway, Oakland 

Matthew Fox, Ph.D., founder and president of the University of Creation Spirituality, will engage in dialogue on the nature of work with Joanna Macy, Ph.D., an eco-philosopher and scholar of Buddhism, general systems theory, and deep ecology. $10-$15 donation. 835-4827 x29, www.creationspirituality.org. 

 

International Women’s Day Celebration 

7 p.m. 

Revolution Books 

2425 Channing Way 

Cultural and video presentations, speakers, discussion and refreshments. Donation requested. 848-1196. 

 

Berkeley Design Advocates 

Design Awards 

5:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Art Center 

1275 Walnut St. 

Design Awards for building projects in Berkeley will be presented by Berkeley Design Advocates (BDA). Projects completed over the past two years were selected based on their quality of design, how well they fit into their surroundings, their innovative qualities and how well they contribute to urban life. 528-2778. 

 

 


Saturday, March 23

 

 

5th Annual Summit – Last  

Chance for Smart Growth? 

10 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. 

Laney College Forum 

900 Fallon St., Oakland 

Regional public agencies will soon hold workshops to select from among three alternative visions for regional growth and finalize one Bay Area vision. Summit participants will learn about these alternatives and provide input that will affect future government policy. 740-3103, robert@transcoalition.org. 

 

Jazz Clinic 

2 p.m. 

Longfellow School for the Arts 

1500 Derby St. 

Terry Gibbs and the Mike Vax Jazz Orchestra will be holding a jazz clinic. $5, 420-4560, www.bigbandjazz.net. 

 

Berkeley Dispute  

Resolution Service 

10 a.m. - 2 p.m. 

BDRS Office 

1968 San Pablo Ave.  

The community is invited to learn about mediation and the conflict resolution services and resources available through BDRS. Children’s activities and refreshments provided. 428-1811. 

 

Hunger Hike in Joaquin Miller Park 

9:30 a.m. 

Ranger Station, Sanborn Dr. 

Hike through the East Bay redwoods while raising money to help people in need. Hikers are encouraged to collect pledges. Funds raised will benefit the Food Bank’s hunger relief efforts. $20. 834-3663 x327, ilund@secondharvest.org.  

 

Our School Information Event for 

Prospective Parents 

10 a.m. - noon 

St. John’s Community Center, Room 203 

2727 College Ave. 

An event for prospective parents to learn about Our School’s approach to education. 704-0701, www.ourschoolsite.ws.  

 

March and Rally for Justice  

11 a.m. 

12th & Broadway BART 

Assemble at BART then march to Oakland Federal Building, then 1 p.m. rally in Jack London Square. In support of airport screeners, port workers, and service industry workers and against all racist and anti-immigrant laws and policies. 524-3791, labor4justice@aspenlinx.com. 

 

 


Sunday, March 24

 

 

Invitational Karatedo Tournament 

11 a.m. 

Oakland YMCA Main Gymnasium 

2350 Broadway 

A tournament promoting Japanese Karatedo. Spectators are welcome and admitted for free. 522-6016, jbtown501@aol.com. 

 

Stagebridge’s 11th Annual 

Family Matinee Theatre and 

Ice Cream Social 

3 p.m. 

First Congregational Church 

2501 Harrison, Oakland 

Premiere of Linda Spector’s “Chicken Sunday and Other Grandparent Tales,” followed by an old fashioned ice cream social. $8 general, $4 children. 444-4755, www.stagebridge.org.  

 

 


Monday, March 25

 

 

Free Legal Workshop 

“Too Sick to Work: 

Cash Assistance and Health Insurance if Cancer Prevents You From Working” 

12:30 - 2 p.m. 

Highland Hospital 

1411 E. 31st St., Oakland 

Classroom B 

This workshop will provide information about State and Federal disability programs that provide cash benefits and health insurance for people unable to work due to a serious health condition. 601-4040 x302, www.wcrc.org.  

 

Transportation and the  

Environment in Berkeley 

7 - 8:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Adult School Room 7 

1222 University Ave. 

Matt Nichols of the Bay Area Air Quality Management District will discuss the impacts of your transportation decisions, and the resulting impacts on local pollution and our health. 981-5435, energy@ci.berkeley.ca.us. 

 

 


Tuesday, March 26

 

 

Tuesday Tea Party 

6 - 8 p.m. 

First Congregational Church 

Harrison and 27th St., Oakland 

Open gatherings to build a new peace movement. 839-5877. 

 

 

 


Wednesday, March 27

 

 

City Commons Club, 

Great Decisions Program 

10 a.m. - noon 

Berkeley City Club 

2315 Durant Ave. 

Dan Kammen, professor of Energy and Resources Group and director of Energy and Science, UC Berkeley; “Energy and the Environment.” 

$5. 848-3533. 

 

Prose Writers’ Workshop 

7 - 9 p.m. 

Berkeley/Richmond Jewish  

Community Center Library 

1414 Walnut St. 

From Op-ed to fiction, memoir to the feature article. Workshop format. Free. 524-3034. 

 

Berkeley Gray Panthers  

General Meeting 

1:30 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

The Clean Money Campaign  

 

and the League of Women Voters will talk about Clean Money, Clean Politics: Campaign Finance Reform in a Democracy. 548-9696, graypanthers@hotmail.com. 

 

 

 


Thursday, March 28

 

 

Seed Swap 

7 - 9 p.m. 

Ecology Center 

2530 San Pablo Ave. 

Bay Area Seed Interchange Library's annual Seed Swap. Bring seed and envelopes. A raffle for live plants. 823-4769. 

 

 


Friday, March 29

 

 

City Commons Club 

12:30 p.m. 

Berkeley City Club 

2315 Durant Ave. 

Peter Hillier, assistant city manager, transportation; “Bringing About a Paradigm Shift.” $1. 848-3533. 

 

Berkeley Women in Black 

noon - 1 p.m. 

Bancroft and Telegraph Ave. 

Standing in solidarity with Israeli and Palestinian women to urge an end to the occupation and push the peace process forward. 548-6310, wibberkeley.org. 

 

 

– Compiled by Guy Poole 


Confusion reigns at ACCAL track meet

By Jared Green,Daily Planet Staff
Thursday March 21, 2002

New scoring system has coaches wondering who they’re running against at league’s first meet 

 

Berkeley High hosted the first track & field meet of the ACCAL season on Thursday, but the results won’t be in until Saturday. That’s because none of the coaches at the meet knew exactly who they were competing against. 

The league instituted a new type of meet this season, a “double dual” format. With four teams running, throwing and jumping, no one knew how the meet would be scored. 

“This new meet was not explained very well to us at the league meeting,” Berkeley head coach Darrell Hampton said. “I’ll have to call the league office and have them walk me through how to score this thing.” 

So Berkeley, Pinole Valley, Richmond and Hercules all went against each other on Thursday not knowing who they were trying to beat. Berkeley won the most events, but Hampton couldn’t say if they would end up winning overall. 

Thursday also marked the emergence of the Berkeley distance program. Always a poor sister in the track program in the past, the ’Jackets’ contingent of cross-country runners dominated, winning all six distance events. Alex Enscoe, a sophomore who won the league’s cross-country title in the fall, won the 1,600- and 3,200-meter races as the boys took five of the top six spots in each event, while no other team even entered any girls into the distance races. 

“Our distance program is really coming together, and they can really help us this year,” Hampton said. “In the past our sprints have carried us, but now they’re helping us out.” 

The distance events should be a strong point for Berkeley throughout the season, as Alameda is the only other ACCAL school with a comparable group of runners. 

This is a rebuilding year for Hampton’s girls’ sprints, traditionally the team’s strength. The ’Jackets were beaten by the brand-new Hercules team on Thursday, as the newcomers won the 100- , 200- and 400-meter dashes as well as the 4x400 relay, with Meia Tezeno winning the 100 and 200. 

“I wasn’t surprised (Hercules) did so well,” Hampton said. “They’ve got a good program and they believe in it. That’s what happens.” 

Pinole Valley won most of the boys’ sprints, led by all-league tailback DeAndre MacFarland. McFarland won the 200 and 400, beating out Berkeley running back Germaine Baird in both races. Lodge James claimed the 100 crown for the Spartans, who also won the 4x100 relay. 

Berkeley’s Rebekah Payne was a triple-winner on Thursday, winning both hurdles races as well as the shotput. 

Hampton put a happy face on the confusion about scoring the meet, although the coaches from each school expressed displeasure with the new system. 

“This kids came out and had fun, and that’s the most important thing,” Hampton said. “Obviously we’ve still got some tweaking to do when it comes to the new system.”


Community comes out to voice opinions on Eastshore Park usage

By Jia-Rui Chong, Daily Planet staff
Thursday March 21, 2002

Little leaguers in uniform, soccer dads, windsurfers, dog-lovers and conservationists crowded into the Florence Schwimley Little Theatre Thursday night to tell the planning team for the proposed Eastshore State Park how they want the 1,800 acres to be used. 

At the third of four regional meetings, the planning team presented its “preferred concept” for the park, which will connect the waterfronts from Emeryville to Richmond. The map blended the planning team’s two original concepts and comments from the public. 

Stephen Hammond, a member of the planning team, talked the audience of about 300 through the plan to create “a recreational facility harmonious with its natural setting.” 

With charts and maps, he explained that 10 percent of the land and 33 percent of the water will be marked for preservation to provide the greatest amount of protection. 

47 percent of the land and 57 percent of the water will be marked for recreation to allow the greatest amount of human use.  

49 percent of the land and 10 percent of the water will be marked for conservation to allow the less intrusive human use. 

“I want to emphasize that this is the basis for the General Plan. It is not detailed or site-specific. It establishes the general framework that will provide guidance to the state to fund improvements and enhancements to the park,” said Hammond. 

But the planning team still wanted to hear comments from the public, said Don Neuwirth, who was also part of the group drafting the General Plan.  

The lines to the microphones stretched to the back of the theater when the public comment session began. There were four main points of contention. 

• Athletes and their parents wanted more playing fields.  

Doug Fielding, who chairs the Association of Sports Field Users, said that while they were happy with the current playing fields on the Albany Plateau, they wanted more. He suggested that the North Basin Strip could be used. 

“We’re trying to get 10 playing fields in Eastshore State Park. It would only be two percent of the land,” he said.  

Many other speakers made the same suggestions. 

Councilmembers Polly Armstrong and Miriam Hawley, who have fought for more space for playing fields in Berkeley, supported their efforts. 

“There’s been a history of driving kids to kingdom-come to play games on Saturdays and Sundays,” said Armstrong. 

“It’s hard for traditional families, but for families with other demands, it shuts the kids out of playing.” 

• Bird-lovers and members of the various nature clubs wanted to protect more animal habitats. Some pointed to the encroachment of the proposed hostel and boat launch into Berkeley Meadow.  

Several of the speakers had been involved with saving the land from development in the late 1960s. 

“We see a unique opportunity for an urban park as well as for a wild-land park focusing on education and recreation related to wildlife habitat,” said Normal La Force of the Sierra Club. 

“But we have to think about what’s appropriate given the environmental values and conditions we have at this site.” 

Other conservationists were worried not so much about the playing fields as the large parking lots that would be needed for them. 

• Dog-lovers wanted to protect as much space as possible for leash-free frolicking. They wanted more space at Point Isabel and on the Albany Bulb. 

• Windsurfers pleaded for better access to water recreation areas. Because their equipment is heavy, parking lots cannot be too far away from the shore. 

Though all sides saw the need for compromise, they hoped it would not be at their expense. 

The planning team will take all of these comments into consideration as it develops the General Plan. They will also look at written comments submitted during the workshop. 

The planning team will be local briefings in April for those who missed the workshop. It will be developing the General Plan for the fourth regional meeting in May 2002. After that, there is an environmental review. The process is scheduled to wrap up in October 2002. 

For more information, visit www.eastshorestatepark.org.


Bicyclist says no to car-free Shattuck

Jef Poskanzer
Thursday March 21, 2002

Editor:  

 

James K. Sayre writes: “Bicyclists are, by in [sic] large, an extremely self-righteous lot, asserting that the traffic laws don’t apply to them.” This is bigotry, plain and simple, and does not belong in Berkeley. I have been car-free for five years now. I bike everywhere, including shopping, laundry, everything. I ride safely and lawfully 100 percent of the time. I observe cars and I observe other bicyclists, since both can cause me grave bodily harm when operated by idiots. My experience is that the percentage of idiots is about the same on two wheels or four. 

However, I actually agree with Sayre that banning cars from downtown would be foolishness. Downtown Berkeley is in enough trouble already, with lots of storefronts still empty. It’s not particularly congested. One or two car-free side streets might work — say, Center and Allston between Shattuck and Oxford. But banning cars from Shattuck would just be silly. If you want an over-congested shopping street to turn into a pedestrian mall, take a look at 4th Street. 

 

Jef Poskanzer  

Berkeley


Return of E.T.: Everyone’s favorite alien gets a facelift

By David Germain,The Associated Press
Thursday March 21, 2002

LOS ANGELES — The wrinkly, crinkly munchkin from outer space is coming back to Earth, his fairy-tale journey a bit longer and more benign than when he first landed in theaters 20 years ago. 

Steven Spielberg’s “E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial” returns to theaters Friday, updated with a couple of previously unreleased scenes, visual enhancements, improved sound and excisions that have annoyed some purists who dislike tampering with beloved films. 

And “E.T.” is about as beloved as they come. Debuting June 11, 1982, the tale of a lovably homely alien befriended by a 10-year-old boy became a cultural sensation. The sight of E.T. and his buddy flying on a bicycle silhouetted against the moon is one of Hollywood most memorable images, and the film produced one of the pithiest movie quotes ever: “E.T., phone home.” 

Nominated for best picture and eight other Academy Awards, winning four, “E.T.” remained the all-time top-grossing film domestically for 14 years, till it was passed by the reissue of “Star Wars” and later “Titanic” and “Star Wars: Episode I — The Phantom Menace.” 

A film that delighted young children, “E.T.” also has been analyzed and overanalyzed, with E.T. examined as a Christlike figure and his fall to Earth compared to a reversal of Dorothy’s trip from mundane Kansas to glorious Oz. 

“People love to talk about ‘E.T.’ It holds an important place in their hearts, where they remember it from their childhood or it marks some key moment they remember in their adult lives,” said “E.T.” producer Kathleen Kennedy. 

Many changes in the re-release are cosmetic, relying on advancements in computer imagery to enrich E.T.’s motions and facial expressions, upgrade special effects and refine backgrounds. 

In a few instances, Spielberg replaced the animatronic E.T. puppet with a digitized version. That technique allowed him to restore a scene between E.T. and his human pal Elliott (Henry Thomas) in which the little alien splashes into a bathtub; the scene did not make the original film because the E.T. puppet was acting up. 

The other main addition is a scene where Elliott’s mother (Dee Wallace Stone) goes looking for the boy on Halloween. Cut for length in the 1982 release, Spielberg restored it because it offered a nice comic moment from 6-year-old co-star Drew Barrymore. 

Two alterations have mainly bothered hard-core fans. Spielberg digitally removed guns in the hands of the government agents pursuing E.T. and Elliott, replacing them with walkie-talkies. 

“The climate for guns was not as inflammatory in 1982 as it is now. ... I notice some people have accused me of being Pollyanna and too soft, and I’m sure the NRA is angry at me for taking out the guns,” Spielberg said in a studio interview provided by “E.T.” distributor Universal. 

Since soon after the film’s initial release, Spielberg had “regretted having police chasing children with guns drawn,” Kennedy said. 

Spielberg also had Wallace Stone record a new line to replace her character’s edict that her older son (Robert MacNaughton) could not go out on Halloween dressed as a “terrorist.” The word “hippie” was substituted. 

The terrorist line had been deleted from the film in video releases, and it was altered in the new theatrical release in light of the Sept. 11 attacks. 

“I don’t think anybody wants to make light of that in any way right now,” Wallace Stone said. 

Complaints circulated among critics and especially on Internet message boards when details of the “E.T.” revisions became known last year. 

“I feel that Spielberg, who is my favorite director, is going too far. ... Please leave your very best film alone,” one fan griped on a Web site devoted to Spielberg movies. 

Kennedy notes that both the original film and the updated version will be available on video releases later this year. 

“For purists, it’s not as though we’re erasing any sign of the original,” Kennedy said. 

The new version of “E.T.” opens in about 2,500 theaters, more than twice the number for the original’s debut. The film took in $359.2 million domestically in its initial run, which would equate to almost $700 million today factoring in ticket-price inflation. “E.T.” grossed $40.6 million more in a 1985 reissue, and its worldwide receipts topped $700 million. 

“Adding the new footage I would guess was a darn good business move,” Wallace Stone said. “It’s like getting some extra prize for going back to see it again.” 

The real value, though, is revisiting a tale of innocence, hope and compassion, she said. 

“I think there probably couldn’t be a better time for ‘E.T.’ to be coming back out,” Wallace Stone said. “After Sept. 11, we all had a choice about which way we wanted to go. Are we going to live in anger, live in the fear, live in the revenge? Or we could say, ‘You know what? That route is a mess. It doesn’t work for them, and it doesn’t work for us. It’s got to stop.”’ 

——— 

On the Net: 

http://www.et20.com 


Cal freshman Jamal Sampson declares for NBA draft

Daily Planet Wire Services
Thursday March 21, 2002

Cal freshman Jamal Sampson announced today that he is declaring himself eligible for the 2002 NBA Draft. A 6-foot-11, 235-pound forward from Inglewood, Sampson averaged 6.4 points and 6.5 rebounds while blocking 54 shots for the Bears during the 2001-02 season. 

“After careful consideration, I have decided to make myself eligible for the upcoming NBA Draft,” Sampson said. “I’ve talked to members of my family and other people familiar with the NBA and realized that this is the best decision for me at the this time.” 

Sampson said he does not plan on hiring an agent yet, leaving open the possibility of returning to school if his draft position is not favorable. 

“I have enjoyed this year at Cal,” Sampson said. “I like the team and the coaching staff, and it was a good decision for me to go to Cal. I felt that Coach (Ben) Braun and the staff have helped me prepare for the next level.” 

During his freshman year, Sampson started 31 of 32 games for the Bears and led the team in rebounding 16 times. He was voted MVP of the BCA Classic in November and was a Pac-10 All-Freshman selection in March. His 54 blocks are the third-highest total on Cal’s season list. 

Sampson scored a career-high 15 points twice, first vs. Fresno State Dec. 11. Against Washington Jan. 17, Sampson also poured in 15 points, to go with a career-best 17 rebounds, three assists and five blocks. 

“This decision was made by Jamal and his family,” Braun said. “I support him in the decision, but I’d personally like to see him come back to school, as I would with all players. Each person has to review his own opportunities and be responsible for his own path. Jamal is talking about an opportunity that has presented itself. It’s up to Jamal to make that decision. I hope his tenure at Cal was helpful to him.” 

Sampson entered Cal last fall after earning third team Parade All-America honors at Mater Dei High School in Southern California. As a senior, he averaged 15.5 ppg, 10 rpg and 2.4 bpg, helping Mater Dei to the state championship, a 33-2 record and a No. 4 national ranking from USA Today.


ACCAL Jamboree offers a preview of boys’ volleyball

By Jared Green,Daily Planet Staff
Thursday March 21, 2002

El Cerrito aiming at third straight title 

 

 

Four of the six ACCAL boys’ volleyball teams got a sneak peek at each other Thursday in Berkeley at the league’s Volleyball Jamboree. Berkeley head coach Justin Caraway was encouraged by what he saw. 

“We’ll win some games this year. Heck, we could even win some matches,” Caraway said. 

That may not sound like deafening praise, but almost anything would be an improvement over last season. The ’Jackets didn’t win a single match in 2001. In fact, they managed to win just a single game. But with all but two players back this season and the league not looking very strong, Caraway expects his team to show him a little more. 

“We can probably win at least one match,” he said. “ We just need to know that we’re not going to get slaughtered every game.” 

One team the ’Jackets won’t be beating is El Cerrito. The Gauchos have won the last two league titles, going 10-0 in the ACCAL last season, and return the reigning league MVP in Michael Gonzalez. Although Alameda and Richmond didn’t show up to Thursday’s event, El Cerrito is clearly the prohibitive favorite again this year. 

“You never know until you see everyone, but I’ve got a good team back this year,” said head coach Fred Gonzalez (Michael’s father). 

Gonzalez pointed to a strong junior varsity program and several players with club experience as the keys to his program’s dominance. Berkeley, on the other hand, is just establishing a new junior varsity program this season and doesn’t get many players who have grown up with the game. 

“I’m constantly fighting the battle of no volleyball at the middle school level (in Berkeley),” Caraway said. “There’s still the perception that volleyball is a girls’ sport at this school (the Lady ’Jackets have never lost an ACCAL match), and I don’t get the carryover from basketball that other schools do.” 

Still Caraway does have some good players back, including team MVP Robin Roach and setter Joel Li. Roach is still just a junior, and the current squad has just one senior. 

“If we can get a little bit of success this year, then next year with Robin as a senior, we shouldn’t be too bad,” he said.


A Butterfly sails into town

Staff
Thursday March 21, 2002

Julia Butterfly Hill, who gained international attention with her two-year tree-sit in an ancient redwood in Northern California, gets Katherine Yoshii’s signature for a Heritage Tree Preservation Ballot Initiative outside the Berkeley Bowl Thursday. The initiative, organized by Citizens Campaign for Old Growth and the Sierra Club Bay Chapter, aims to protect trees older than the state of California.  

Hill, who lived in the branches of a tree in Humbolt County, works out of an office just south of the Berkeley-Oakland border. She greeted old friends from her tree-sitting days, as well as introduced herself to newcomers to the issue.  

“This community is so active on so many issues,” said Hill. “People in the Berkeley area are so committed to taking charge of their lives. I really like that.” 

Hill will be appearing at Berkeley Bowl again this afternoon, as well as other markets in the Bay Area.  

 

For more information on the ballot initiative, visit www.ancienttrees.org.


Prejudicial statements promote hatred, deter peace

Terry Fletcher
Thursday March 21, 2002

Editor: 

 

I seem to remember that several months ago the Daily Planet printed a letters policy in which is was stated that no letters that expressed racist or derogatory statements about a particular ethnic, religious or racial group would be printed. 

I was therefore quite surprised to see a statement in Gabe Kurtz’s latest letter that claimed that “muslims of the Gaza strip . . . froth at the mouth cyring for land. . . .” This statement clearly dehumanizes muslim Palestinians, making them seem more like vicious animals than human beings. 

I’m sure that Mr. Kurtz would be highly offended, as would I, if anyone stated that Jews “froth at the mouth.” 

Unfortunately, many U.S. and Israeli policies are based on these same sort of prejudicial ideas. Those of us who disagree with them are not naive, as Mr. Kurtz implies. We are able to see the humanity of both Jews and Arabs and realize that the only solution to the conflict is peace and justice for all peoples of the Middle East. 

 

Terry Fletcher 

Member, A Jewish Voice for Peace 

Berkeley


Actors hope to pad short list of black Oscar winners

By David Germain,The Associated Press
Thursday March 21, 2002

LOS ANGELES — Halle Berry hopes this year’s three Academy Award nominations for black actors will be a source of optimism for minorities. Denzel Washington just figures academy voters went for the actors they felt turned in the best performances. 

And Will Smith jokes that win or lose, he’s already made history: “The first rapper to be nominated for an Oscar. That is cool.” 

This year’s awards present one of the best chances for a black to earn a lead-acting trophy since Sidney Poitier became the only black actor to do so, for 1963’s “Lilies of the Field.” 

Oscar nominations for Berry (“Monster’s Ball”), Smith (“Ali”) and Washington (“Training Day”) mark the first time in 29 years that three blacks have competed in the lead-acting categories. 

Best-actress may come down to Sissy Spacek for “In the Bedroom” and Berry, who won the lead-actress prize for “Monster’s Ball” this month at the Screen Actors Guild Awards. The best-actor race seems to be a dead heat between Russell Crowe for “A Beautiful Mind” and Washington, a five-time nominee who won the supporting-actor Oscar for “Glory.” 

In addition, two Oscar-winning black actors have major roles at the ceremony Sunday. Poitier receives an honorary Oscar for lifetime achievement. And Whoopi Goldberg, a supporting-actress winner for “Ghost,” is the show’s host. 

Only six blacks have won acting Oscars since the awards began in 1929, or 2.2 percent of the winners. The only previous year that produced three black nominees for best actor or actress was 1972: Cicely Tyson and Paul Winfield for “Sounder” and Diana Ross for “Lady Sings the Blues.” 

“When it happened in 1972, I bet you someone probably said this is a prelude of better things to come, and we found it hasn’t happened again for almost 30 years,” said Frank Smith Jr., acting board president of the Black Filmmakers Hall of Fame. 

Still, many in Hollywood view this year’s nominations as a hint that choicer roles are opening up for blacks in an industry that once relegated minorities largely to comic or caricatured parts. 

Of 39 nominations for blacks over the years, 31 have come since 1970, compared with eight in the preceding four decades. 

“There’s old Hollywood and new Hollywood. Old Hollywood was basically lily-white, with white actors in films generally to the exclusion of other races,” said director John Singleton, whose “Boyz N the Hood” established him as the only black filmmaker ever nominated for best director. “New Hollywood seems to realize that to make a hit movie, you need to have a multiplicity of people represented. 

“Because of that, American films are becoming more American in the sense that they look more like the whole of America looks.” 

As actors such as Washington, Smith and Berry find box-office success, some have been able to use their clout to get projects off the ground that showcase their talents in serious, potentially Oscar-worthy roles. 

“I don’t really know how it will transform the industry, but what I do know is that it will hopefully instill hope in other people of color,” Berry said of this year’s nominations. 

Berry previously won an Emmy for the title role in “Introducing Dorothy Dandridge.” Dandridge, who rose to stardom amid Hollywood racism of the 1940s and 1950s, was the first black nominated for a lead-acting Oscar, for 1954’s “Carmen Jones.” 

Four years later, Poitier became the second, for “The Defiant Ones.” 

Washington said he believes the quality of the performances alone resulted in this year’s three nominations. 

“It’s not about race,” he said. “This might suggest that they are doing us a favor because we are black.” 

The Oscar recognition, though, “might also suggest that there are better roles for African-Americans,” Washington said. 

Smith, who joined the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences last year, said greater representation in that group is critical to Oscar success for blacks. The academy provides no demographic breakdown of its 5,700 voting members, but academy executives concede the percentage of minorities is far lower than in the general population. 

“The academy is made up ... (mostly) of white Americans, so for the most part, white American films are going to be nominated and white American actors are going to win,” said Smith, who urged more blacks to apply for membership. 

“We all just want to be judged as human beings.”


Today in History

Staff
Thursday March 21, 2002

Friday, March 22, is the 81st day of 2002. There are 284 days left in the year. 

 

Highlight in History: 

On March 22, 1765, Britain enacted the Stamp Act to raise money from the American colonies. (The Act was repealed the following year.) 

On this date:  

In 1820, U.S. naval hero Stephen Decatur was killed in a duel with Commodore James Barron near Washington D.C. 

In 1882, Congress outlawed polygamy. 

In 1895, Auguste and Louis Lumiere showed their first movie to an invited audience in Paris. 

In 1933, during Prohibition, President Roosevelt signed a measure to make wine and beer containing up to 3.2 percent alcohol legal. 

In 1941, the Grand Coulee Dam in Washington state went into operation. 

In 1945, the Arab League was formed with the adoption of a charter in Cairo, Egypt. 

In 1946, the British mandate in Transjordan came to an end. 

In 1972, Congress sent the proposed Equal Rights Amendment to the Constitution to the states for ratification. (It fell three states short of the 38 needed for approval.) 

In 1991, high school instructor Pamela Smart, accused of manipulating her student-lover into killing her husband, was convicted in Exeter, N.H., of murder-conspiracy. 

In 1995, convicted Long Island Rail Road gunman Colin Ferguson was sentenced to life in prison for killing six people. 

Ten years ago: Twenty-seven people were killed when a US-Air jetliner crashed on takeoff from New York’s LaGuardia Airport; 24 people survived. France’s governing Socialist Party was rebuffed in regional elections. President Bush and German Chancellor Helmut Kohl wrapped up a weekend of informal talks by reiterating their resolve to break a deadlock on global trade talks. 

Five years ago: A day after a suicide bomber killed three women in Tel Aviv, Israeli troops clashed with hundreds of Palestinians in Hebron. Tara Lipinski, at age 14 years and ten months, became the youngest women’s world figure skating champion. 

One year ago: An 18-year-old student opened fire at Granite Hills High School in El Cajon, Calif., wounding three classmates and two teachers before he was shot by a police officer. (Jason Hoffman later hanged himself while in jail.) Yevgeny Plushchenko captured the World Figure Skating Championships crown in Vancouver, British Columbia. Animation pioneer William Hanna died in Los Angeles at age 90. 

 

Today’s Birthdays: Actor Karl Malden is 90. Pantomimist Marcel Marceau is 79. USA Today founder Allen H. Neuharth is 78. Composer-lyricist Stephen Sondheim is 72. Actor William Shatner is 71. Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) is 68. Actor M. Emmet Walsh is 67. Singer-guitarist George Benson is 59. Singer Jeremy Clyde (Chad and Jeremy) is 58. Composer Andrew Lloyd Webber is 54. Actress Fanny Ardant is 53. Sportscaster Bob Costas is 50. Country singer James House is 47. Actress Lena Olin is 47. Singer-actress Stephanie Mills is 45. Actor Matthew Modine is 43. Actress Kellie Williams is 26.  

Actress Reese Witherspoon is 26. Rock musician John Otto (Limp Bizkit) is 25.


Two men, stabbed in South Berkeley

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet staff
Thursday March 21, 2002

Two men were repeatedly stabbed by a robber on Acton Street in South Berkeley Monday at around 11:30 p.m., according to the Berkeley Police Department. Both victims are in stable condition at home and at Highland Hospital. 

The victims, 27-year-old James Celestin-Willis and his 33-year-old brother-in-law, Galen Jackson, were en route to Jackson’s sister’s home when the assailant pulled up in a green car and asked them to make change for a bill, according to Celestin-Willis. 

When they declined, Celestin-Willis said, the attacker, dressed in black, got out of his car, stabbed the victims and took their money. Celestin-Willis said he suffered wounds on his back, neck and arm, while Jackson was stabbed in the back and arm. 

Jackson said he fell to the pavement and called for his wife, who was in his sister’s home. Relatives brought Jackson into his sister’s house and called for an ambulance. 

Celestin-Willis ran from the scene. 

“I was in shock,” he said. “I ran, I left.” 

Police later found Celestin-Willis at the corner of Alcatraz and California streets, on the pavement. 

Both men were taken to Highland Hospital in Oakland. Celestin-Willis said he was released Thursday. Jackson was still in the hospital when reached by the Daily Planet Thursday.


Assembly OKs $25 billion education bond issue for November and 2004 ballots

By Stefanie Frith The Associated Press
Thursday March 21, 2002

SACRAMENTO — By an overwhelming margin, the state Assembly Thursday approved placing $25.3 billion worth of education bonds before voters this November and in 2004, sending the issue to the state Senate. 

The Assembly voted 71-6 for the bill, which authorizes the placement of two bond measures before voters. A $13 billion bond proposal will go on the November 2002 ballot and would be followed in 2004 with a $12.3 billion bond issue. 

That’s about three times higher than the record $9.2 billion bond voters approved in 1998. That money has been spent, however. 

Gov. Gray Davis wants a bond issue on the November ballot, spokeswoman Hilary McLean said, so “students well into California’s future will benefit from the school improvements this bond will fund.” 

The bond’s passage is “the biggest thing we’ve done since I took office,” said Assemblyman Robert Hertzberg, a Van Nuys Democrat and former Assembly speaker. 

“Everything that’s great about California starts with its schools and our kids,” said Hertzberg, co-author of the bill, said. 

He predicted the measure — which was ultimately agreed upon by a bipartisan conference committee — will pass the Senate easily. 

The bill will go to the Senate the first week of April and Dave Sebeck, a spokesman for Senate Pro Tem John Burton, said Senate members will debate and act on it that day. 

The Office of Public School Construction estimates that more than $21.1 billion in state bonds are needed in the next four years for K-12 school construction alone. 

Also, the state estimates that California Community Colleges will teach nearly 2 million students in the next two years and more than 75 percent of its buildings are more than 40 years old. 

To cope with population growth, the state Department of Education estimates that California will need more than 2,500 classrooms each year for the next four years. 

Superintendent of Public Instruction Delaine Eastin said that if California expects children to meet the state’s academic standards, “we must provide them with a safe, clean and modern environment in which to do so.” 

Money from the bonds will help low-performing and overcrowded schools, design upgrades and expand buildings at community colleges, and campuses of the California State University and the University of California. 

Dwayne Brooks, director of facilities for the California Department of Education, said this bill also allows school districts to apply for funds of up to four years, plus a one-year extension. 

That will help school districts pay for land on which to build schools, Brooks said. The bond deal would also set aside $1.7 billion for critically overcrowded schools. 

Assembly Speaker Herb Wesson, D-Culver City, called the vote a victory for California’s children. 

“In order to learn, a child truly needs good teachers, and we have that,” Wesson said. “They need the proper tools and an environment conducive for learning. And this takes care of the environment.” 

Wesson pointed out that more than 60 percent of K-12 classrooms are over 25 years old, more than 60 percent of UC buildings are at least 30 years old and more than 75 percent of community college facilities are over 40 years old. 

Districts around the state have passed local school bonds and are starting construction, but more than $4 billion in projects have been held up because no state matching funds have been available, according to the Department of Education. 


Legislators, students say list of tests is too long, biased

By Stefanie Frith,The Associated Press
Thursday March 21, 2002

SACRAMENTO — With the SAT 9, the High School Exit Exam, Golden State Exams, SAT I and SAT II, California students face too long of a required list of standardized tests, a group of students told the California Teacher’s Association and legislators on Thursday. 

Students at the meeting said the Legislature should condense the list required of students in grades 3-11. 

Some of that is happening now, said Robert Spurlock, the state’s assistant education secretary. He cited a law passed last year that created a study of how students may bypass taking Advanced Placement exams if they have high enough scores on the Golden States Exams. Those are voluntary tests in 13 subjects given to seventh through 12th graders. Students who do well get a special seal on their diploma. 

But Jeff Orlinsky, a member of the California Teacher’s Association, said each test has its own special purpose. 

”(For high school students), only the Stanford 9 and the High School Exit Exam are required,” Orlinsky said. “The rest are voluntary.” However, there is a long list of tests required of elementary school students. 

While many tests are technically voluntary, students feel compelled to take them anyway, said Susan Chen, a junior at East Los Angeles’ Woodrow Wilson High School. 

“We are tired of testing. The tests are all my high school can talk about,” Chen said. “And tests like the SAT I and SAT II and the Golden States are voluntary, but it’s the norm now to take them if you want to be a part of the real world.” 

Sen. Betty Karnette, D-Long Beach, agreed, saying, “We could combine some of these tests. Everybody wants to test everybody on everything. I think that’s absurd.” 

However, the state needs standardized tests to measure school performance, said Phil Spears, director of standards and assessment for the California Department of Education. Spears did not attend the meeting at the Capitol sponsored by the LegiSchool Project at California State University, Sacramento. 

Spears said students are probably upset with being held accountable for their own actions, such as with the High School Exit Exam. If a student doesn’t pass this exam, they cannot graduate. 

The state Department of Education said a problem might be that some schools have failed to embrace the academic content standards for grades K-12 that lay out what students should know for each grade level. Spears said this has put their students at a disadvantage because they are not mastering the standards. 

Therefore, some schools devote a lot of time to teaching students how to take the test, including hours spent on learning how to fill in bubbles for multiple choice tests. 

Spurlock said the state is fighting this by working with test writers in California to phase in tests that measure the standards taught in California schools. 

Using comments from meetings such as Thursday’s, the state is consolidating some of the tests, Spurlock said. 

Now is a time of increased interest in standardized testing, because most tests are taken in the spring and President Bush recently signed a bill requiring annual state tests in reading and mathematics for every child in grades three through eight, beginning in the 2005-06 school year. 


Victims of Russian mob said to be from Los Angeles

By Paul Wilborn,The Associated Press
Thursday March 21, 2002

LOS ANGELES — Five people whose bodies were pulled from a reservoir near Sacramento were Los Angeles area residents who were abducted, blackmailed and killed by Russian mobsters, the U.S. attorney said Thursday. 

The victims included two filmmakers, an accountant, an electronics executive and a home builder. More than $5.5 million in ransom was demanded of relatives, U.S. Attorney spokesman Thom Mrozek said. 

Mat Shatz, the stepfather of one victim, called the alleged kidnappers “bad people who come to this country, who are impatient and want to have money.” 

Six men of Russian descent were in custody, all without bond, charged in indictments with hostage-taking or receiving ransom money. Four are scheduled to go to trial April 30, two have already pleaded innocent and are scheduled to go on trial April 9. 

One victim, Meyer Muscatel, a wealthy San Fernando Valley homebuilder, was identified earlier. His body was found floating in 200-foot-deep New Melones Lake on Oct. 18, his hands bound and a plastic bag over his head. 

On Sunday, divers found Alexander Umansky, 35, of Sherman Oaks, and Georgy Safiev, 37, of Beverly Hills, said FBI spokesman Nick Rossi. 

On Monday, the body of Nick Kharabadze, 29, of Woodland Hills was found and accountant Rita Pekler, 39, of Encino, was recovered Tuesday, he said. 

Muscatel was suffocated, but the FBI has not provided a cause of death for the other four. 

Umansky and Pekler vanished in December, the other two in January, authorities and relatives said. 

Iouri Mikhel and Jurijus Kadamovas threatened to kill their victims if ransom demands were not met, while Petro Krylov and Ainar Altmanis allegedly “aided and abetted” the plot, the indictment charges. 

Andrei Agueev and Andrei Liapine were arrested last month and accused helping to transfer $240,000 in ransom paid to the kidnappers for Umansky’s release. 

Agueev’s defense lawyer, Victor Sherman, alleges the U.S. government “kidnapped” the Dubai businessman from his home. Liapine is a Russian citizen who lived in the United Arab Emirates. 

Agueev was helping a friend who wanted to open a business bank account, Sherman said Thursday. “He is totally innocent and the government has no evidence to indicate that any funds sent to his bank account came from any kidnapping.” 

Krylov worked for Umansky for 18 months at Hard Wired Auto Accessories before being fired in 2001, Mrozek said. 

Federal authorities have “very little evidence linking (Krylov) to these events,” Krylov’s attorney, George Buehler, said. 

The day he disappeared, Umansky told employees he was going to meet a client to demonstrate electronic equipment. That was Dec. 13. 

Umansky’s father found three copies of a ransom note faxed to his son’s business demanding $234,628. Umansky’s brother, who lives in San Francisco, received a copy of the fax the same day. 

All the faxes were sent from Russia, Mrozek said. 

Umansky’s family wired $90,000 to a bank in New York on Dec. 17. Umansky called his brother that day asking if the money had been sent. 

For two weeks, the kidnappers threatened to kill Umansky if the rest of the ransom wasn’t paid, Mrozek said. On Dec. 27, the family wired $146,000 that was later traced to an account in the Middle East. 

Authorities say the account was controlled by Argueev and Liapine. 

Some of the ransom money was wired to a Bank of America account in Studio City, Mrozek said, noting Mikhel and Kadamovas were signatories on that account. 

Three victims — Safiev, Kharabadze and Pekler — knew each other. Safiev and Kharabadze co-owned the Matador Media film production company, while Pekler did accounting work for the company. 

Safiev disappeared on Jan. 20. He called his company on Jan. 24 and answered “yes” when asked if he had been kidnapped, Mrozek said. 

According to the indictment, Mikhel and Kadamovas abducted Safiev in an effort to force a business associate to pay $5 million in ransom. 

At their home in Los Angeles, Kharabadze’s family said he was a University of Southern California graduate who moved from former Soviet Republic of Georgia when he was 17. 

He shared a house with his stepfather, Shatz, and his mother, Russian actress Rusiko Kiknadze. 

Kiknadze fell to the floor sobbing Thursday. 

“Do these murderers have mothers?” she said in Russian, as family members tried to console her. 

Shatz said the family never received any ransom demands from kidnappers. 

According to his family, Kharabadze worked as a sound editor on a number of films, including “Air Force One,” in which the U.S. president’s plane is hijacked by Russian dissidents. 

Pekler, the mother of a young son, owned an accounting company with a number of small business clients including Matador Media, employee Nelli Faktrovich said. 

Faktrovich last saw her boss on Dec. 5 as Pekler left for a lunch appointment with a client. 

Russian criminals often work in family groups or clans. Extortion, financial scams and other frauds are common. They are not connected in a chain-of-command organization like American crime syndicates. 

The criminal networks are often broken down along ethnic or religious lines, said Dr. Louise Shelley, an international crime expert at American University in Washington, D.C. 

——— 

Eds: AP Writer Christina Almeida contributed to this report. 


Secretary faces first-degree murder charge in lawyer’s death

The Associated Press
Thursday March 21, 2002

STOCKTON — Prosecutors charged a Sacramento student with first-degree murder Thursday for her alleged role in helping a woman poison her husband. 

If convicted of the murder with special circumstances charge, Sarah Elizabeth Dutra, 21, could face the death penalty, a San Joaquin County judge said in court. 

Dutra also was a secretary for lawyer Larry McNabney, who disappeared last September after being seen at a Los Angeles horse show. 

Dutra, who did not enter a plea, may be represented by the same attorney who defended a Sacramento woman convicted of poisoning her elderly tenants. 

Kevin Clymo defended Dorothea Puente, a 61-year-old woman who was sentenced to prison on nine murder counts for poisoning elderly tenants to get their pension and disability benefits. 

Clymo made a special appearance Thursday and will either return to court April 3 with Dutra or decline to take the case. 

Dutra is accused of murder and conspiring to kill the 53-year-old McNabney with an overdose of horse tranquilizer. 

Authorities said Dutra and McNabney’s wife, Laren Renee Sims Jordan, 36, implicated each other this week after Jordan was captured in Florida Monday night following a nationwide hunt. While married to McNabney, Sims Jordan was known as Elisa McNabney. 

San Joaquin County sheriff’s deputies said Dutra, who was class president at Vacaville High School, confessed Tuesday and was jailed on suspicion of murder and conspiracy charges. She is a senior majoring in art studio at California State University, Sacramento. 

“The judge asked her if she understood the charges and she said yes,” said prosecutor Lester Fleming. “Then he informed her that the maximum penalty is death. You don’t often get a completely quiet courtroom, but you could have heard a pin drop.” 

Fleming said District Attorney John Phillip will make the decision to seek the death penalty. If convicted, Dutra also could receive life in prison without parole. 

On Wednesday, a judge gave Sims Jordan the opportunity to waive extradition during a hearing at the Okaloosa County Courthouse in Crestview, Fla., but her court-appointed public defender told her not to sign anything yet, said Rick Hord, an Okaloosa sheriff’s spokesman. 

Nellie Stone, a spokeswoman for the San Joaquin County Sheriff’s Department, said Thursday that San Joaquin investigators were preparing to request a warrant from Gov. Gray Davis. 

“The governor will do anything within his power to assist the extradition of Laren Sims back to California,” said Byron Tucker, a Davis spokesman. 

While it may take two weeks for San Joaquin prosecutors to file the paperwork, they will do what’s necessary to get Sims Jordan back, Stone said. 

That return could be three to six months away if Jordan fights extradition, Stone said. But a governor’s warrant would speed the process to about 30 days. 

Stone said investigators were on their way to Brooksville, Fla., Thursday to visit Haylei Jordan, Sims Jordan’s 17-year-old daughter to get a statement. 

Sims Jordan is currently being held without bond in Florida’s Okaloosa County Jail on parole-violation charges. 

Sims Jordan spent seven months in Florida prison from 1991 to 1992 for violating probation from a 1989 grand theft and fraud conviction. She’s charged with violating parole by leaving Florida to move to Las Vegas around 1994. 

In an off-camera interview with KCRA-TV Thursday night in Florida, Sims Jordan said she was afraid to leave McNabney because of alleged abuse. 

On Tuesday, Dunn said she gave a three-page written statement that she and Dutra had poisoned McNabney in a hotel in Los Angeles. He died later at their home in Woodbridge and Sims Jordan said she eventually buried his body in a nearby vineyard. 


Dog mauling jury didn’t believe defendants

By Linda Deutsch, The Associated Press
Thursday March 21, 2002

LOS ANGELES — Jurors who convicted a San Francisco couple in the dog mauling death of a neighbor said Thursday they did not believe chief defendant Marjorie Knoller and were surprised that she took the witness stand at all. 

“From our point of view, her testimony was not believable,” said Don Newton, 64, foreman of the seven-man, five-woman panel that convicted the couple in the death of Diane Whipple, 33, who was attacked by the couple’s two huge dogs last year. 

Newton said the jurors also found that her husband, Robert Noel, was probably as responsible as she was for the events. 

“Robert Noel didn’t seem to be a very nice person,” he said. 

The seven-man, five-woman jury included many dog owners. 

Jeanne Sluiman, 52, said Knoller’s testimony had so many inconsistencies that the jurors had to go beyond it to other facts in order to make their decisions. 

That opinion was echoed by juror Shawn Antonio, 27, who said, “Because her stories were so fabricated, it was difficult. She’d come up with 10 scenarios of what happened and the only other witness is no longer with us.” 

The jurors were asked their impressions of Knoller’s flamboyant defense attorney, Nedra Ruiz. 

“She’s an amazingly dramatic person,” said Newton. “She’s an incredible actress and I think to some extent she was counterproductive.” 

Several jurors said they felt that Ruiz put on an act of being disorganized and found her antics, such as crawling on the floor, a distraction. 

“I believe what she had to work with was hard,” Sluiman said, “and maybe that’s what looked like the disorganization.” 

Antonio commented, “She was so passionate you couldn’t help but get involved, but she was so scattered it threw you off.” 

The jurors said they waited until the last to decide the most serious charge — second-degree murder against Knoller — realizing it was the most serious and the most difficult. 

“It was a painful decision,” said Newton. “The question of implied malice was a difficult question to decide, but we did decide there was implied malice in her actions.” 

The jurors said they concluded there were numerous warnings to the couple about the danger of the dogs and the couple ignored them. 

“We decided there was not simply one action,” said Newton. “It was a series of actions and failures to heed warnings.” 

Antonio said that the jurors played over several times in the jury room a tape of a TV interview in which Knoller avowed no responsibility for Whipple’s death. 

“There was no kind of sympathy, no kind of apologies,” he said. “It helped us a lot.” 

The jurors said they thought that if the defendants cared, they would have heeded the warnings of a veterinarian who wrote to the couple early on about the danger the huge presa canario dogs posed. 

“If someone wasn’t arrogant they would have had to heed that warning,” Sluiman said. 

The also said that the efforts by Ruiz to challenge the qualifications of the veterinarian and an official of the Humane Society worked against her. 

During the trial Ruiz spent an hour trying to disqualify Randall Lockwood, the last witness in the case, from telling about the danger the dogs posed. 

“I placed a lot of credibility in Dr. Lockwood’s testimony,” said Sluiman, “and also that he was being fought so desperately to be discredited. He knew what he was talking about.” 

She said that “we all agreed (Noel) was not someone we liked but it’s not how we decided the case.” 

Unlike Knoller, Noel did not testify during the trial. During deliberations the jury asked to hear a reading of his testimony to the grand jury that indicted the couple. 

“The reason why we asked for Noel’s previous testimony was in regard to whether we could convict him of manslaughter although he was not present at the time,” Newton said. “It made it clear that he was not any different than Marjorie Knoller in this. He was equally responsible.” 

The jurors said they were a very diverse group in age and occupations, but found that when they got behind closed doors they were in agreement. 

Vanessa Caroline, 19, said the reading of Noel’s testimony was helpful because “we based so much on memory.” 

Antonio asked to make one thing clear: “We really didn’t go into this deciding that we would hate these people.” 


Charges in dog-attack case defined

The Associated Press
Thursday March 21, 2002

Marjorie Knoller and Robert Noel are scheduled to be sentenced May 10 in San Francisco for their convictions in the January 2001 death of Diane Whipple. After the verdicts, the state Supreme Court, acting through the state Bar of California, suspended Knoller and Noel from practicing law. 

Following are definitions of the charges for which they were convicted and the possible sentences. 

Marjorie Knoller: — Second-degree murder: defined as the malicious but non-deliberate and non-premeditated killing of a human being without certain aggravating factors, such as robbery, arson, rape or the use of explosives, poison, armor-piercing bullets or torture. Malice is implied when no considerable provocation appears, or when the circumstances attending the killing show an abandoned and malignant heart. Punishable by 15 years to life in prison. — Involuntary manslaughter: defined as the non-malicious killing of a human being in the commission of an unlawful act not amounting to a felony or a lawful act that might produce death, in an unlawful manner, or without due caution and circumspection. Punishable by two, three or four years in prison. — Keeping a mischievous animal that kills a person: defined as a person allowing a mischievous animal, knowing its propensities, to go at large or keeping it without ordinary care; with the animal killing a person who has taken all precautions a reasonable person would ordinarily take in such a situation. Punishable by two, three or four years in prison. 

Robert Noel: — Involuntary manslaughter. — Keeping a mischievous animal that kills a person.


Neighbors applaud guilty verdicts for Knoller and Noel

By Ron Harris,The Associated Press
Thursday March 21, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — All was quiet in front of Diane Whipple’s apartment house Thursday — no flowers, no cards, just a handwritten note taped near the front entrance. 

“Justice! Diane & Sharon. We are with you,” it read. 

Neighbors and friends of Whipple, incensed for more than a year about the dog mauling that left the lacrosse coach dead at her doorstep, reacted emotionally when a jury found the animals’ caretakers guilty on all five charges they faced. 

Marjorie Knoller and Robert Noel, San Francisco attorneys who kept the dogs for two California prison inmates, were convicted by a Los Angeles jury despite their claims they had no idea the dogs, Bane and Hera, would turn into killers. 

Neighbors applauded the verdict, calling it swift justice for the Jan. 26, 2001, death of Whipple. Both Knoller and Noel were convicted of involuntary manslaughter and having a mischievous dog that killed someone. Knoller also was found guilty of second-degree murder. 

“I’m satisfied. Justice has been served. Now we can start with closure to this,” said Ed Nahigian, a cobbler who works a few blocks away from the building where Whipple was killed. 

Nahigian knew Noel, Knoller, Whipple and her partner, Sharon Smith, as customers to his shoe repair store. Noel and Knoller lived down the hallway from Whipple. Nahigian also said the judge in the case is a customer. 

“I pray that he gives the maximum sentence to these two individuals because in my opinion, and I knew everybody involved here, they deserve it. They really deserve it,” Nahigian said. “Diane Whipple’s memory will live with me in my mind and my heart until I die.” 

Nahigian testified to the grand jury that he “felt overwhelmed” by one of the couple’s huge presa canarios on one occasion. 

Mark Dobson reflected on the case at his home accessories store, Dobson Gray. His 170-pound great Dane, Joseph, was tied to a pole and lounged outside on a piece of bedding, eating biscuits. Dobson said justice had been served. 

“I think it was quite fair. What’s absurd about this whole case is that individuals would have two dogs trained to kill living in a residential apartment,” Dobson said. 

He anticipated harsher laws for dog owners in San Francisco and beyond. 

“I think it was just a bomb waiting to go off,” Dobson said. 

Christy Davidge was a member of Whipple’s lacrosse team at nearby St. Mary’s College for more than a year. She said the coach left a lasting impression on the team, and the guilty verdicts will not totally ease the pain of losing Whipple. 

“I think that personally, either way whatever had happened with the trial, it’s not going to bring her back to us,” Davidge said, speaking on behalf of her fellow team members. “I think she had us look at life a little differently, and when you looked at it through her eyes and saw how much she loved life, it affected us all.” 

In December 2000, Whipple hired her friend, Sarah Miller, to serve as an assistant coach for the Gaels’ lacrosse team. Miller said Thursday she was relieved with the jury’s verdict. 

“I’m very happy with the outcome,” Miller said. “I feel very happy and very relieved with the verdict of guilty across the board. They got what they deserved.” 

Silence and tension filled a room at the city’s largest gay community center, where onlookers leaned forward on the edge of their seats to hear the verdict on television. Whipple was a lesbian, and Knoller’s lawyer charged during the trial that her client was prosecuted in large part because of pressure from the gay community. 

Ruth Herring, development director of the National Center for Lesbian Rights, lit a single candle and held it aloft before the verdict was read. After the fifth guilty verdict was announced, Herring placed the candle on top of the television set. 

The candle was lit as a remembrance of Whipple’s life, Herring said. 

“Her death was a horror. No one can erase that,” Herring said. “Sharon chose to make it mean something. This is very, very big for all of us.” 

San Francisco’s gay community rallied around Whipple’s surviving partner as she lobbied for changes in the law that would allow her to file a wrongful death suit and seek damages from the laywer couple and the owners of the apartment building where the attack occurred. 

Carl Friedman, director of the city’s animal care and control department, said the verdict should send a warning message to careless owners to keep big dogs on a short leash. 

“If you’re a landlord, I think landlords are going to think twice about renting to people that might have big dogs,” he said. 

Friedman also said responsible owners of large dogs should take them to veterinarians or animal behaviorists and work with problem animals. 

“This is a wake-up call for everybody,” Friedman said. 


Home Matters: Composite deck planks are a home run

The Associated Press
Thursday March 21, 2002

For all the homeowners for whom yearly deck upkeep is a fate worse than taking out the trash, note that composite deck materials are here, and here to stay, according to a deck pro at Lowes Home Improvement Warehouse. 

“Once composite material is installed, you can literally forget about it,” says John Karlesky, lumber marketing manager for Lowes. “It won’t rot, peel, warp, expand or contract, is splinter-free and it’s virtually impervious to water and sun. This is for people who want to enjoy their home without the hassle of deck repair. The average decks lasts 10 to 15 years. A deck with composites lasts indefinitely.” 

Composite deck materials initially weren’t a viable option to wood. It took manufacturers nearly 10 years to achieve the right combination of wood chips and plastics to make composites worth recommending. Vinyl and plastic planks are a fraction of the market because installation requires different techniques and equipment. 

So why don’t more consumers opt for composites? Karlesky says people simply don’t know of the materials. Installation contractors haven’t warmed to non-wood materials, fearing installation problems, but Karlesky says composites handle and install the same as the real thing. “It looks like wood, cuts like wood, installs like wood,” he says, “and it doesn’t take any more time to install than any other deck.” And it’s easier to buy. Because planks are literally the same from piece to piece without knotholes or twisted boards, buyers don’t need to sift through stacks of lumber searching for quality wood. 

And, James Carey and Morris Carey, licensed contractors and recognized experts on home-building and renovation, point out that such engineered decking is friendly to the environment as it recycles existing wood as opposed to requiring new timber to be cut and milled. 

There is a cost factor, however. Composite planks are two to three times the cost of real wood. Yet the overall cost of a deck is not two to three times greater. Composites are available only as planks and railings. Structural elements such as support posts and joists are less-costly treated wood or cedar. Karlesky estimates “The payback period is four to five years, and it still looks great. You won’t replace planks. It’s a better long-term value.” 

Composite wood is low maintenance, not maintenance-free. It should be cleaned regularly and can be stained or painted, but you’ll need to reapply stains and paints over time.” Karlesky advises use of 2- 1/4 inch stainless-steel trim head screws during installation. Non-stainless screws might rust and bleed into the deck. 

The material has other outdoor uses. Walkways, planters, and benches are ideal for spot use of composites. Even docks and hot tubs are candidates for non-wood because submerged uses don’t void the limited lifetime warranty. 

“Customers tell us it’s a losing battle to replace boards,” says Karlesky. “You put composites down, and walk away. It’s very esthetically pleasing. Your deck will look the same in five years as it does today.” 

 

—- 

Lowes is a national chain of nearly 750 home-improvement, appliance and gardening stores in 42 states. 


Two friends win $29 million in the Lottery

The Associated Press
Thursday March 21, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Two friends who bought lottery tickets at a downtown smoke shop came forward Thursday to claim one-third of Wednesday’s $87 million California Lottery jackpot. 

Lottery spokeswoman Norma Minas said longtime friends Jerry McGovern and John Landers spent $10 and won $29 million. Because they took the cash value option, they will actually receive $14 million. 

“Jerry was driving into his office this morning when he heard on the radio that somebody who bought a ticket from D&T smoke shop had won the lottery and told his wife ’That is where I bought my ticket,”’ Minas said. When he arrived at his office he checked the Lottery’s Web site and learned he had the winning ticket. 

McGovern, who spent $9, will receive 90 percent of the total amount they won and Landers, who only spent $1, will receive 10 percent. 

The store will receive a commission of $150,000 for selling the winning ticket. 

It was the first of three winning tickets to be turned in, Minas said. 


Providian will pay $38 million to settle shareholders suit

By Michael Liedtke,The Associated Press
Thursday March 21, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Embattled credit card issuer Providian Financial Corp. has agreed to pay $38 million to settle a class-action lawsuit filed by shareholders alleging the company inflated its profits by gouging its customers in the late 1990s. 

The proposed settlement, which still needs approval of a federal judge in Philadelphia, covers thousands of investors who bought Providian’s once high-flying stock between Jan. 21, 1999 and June 4, 1999. 

Before deducting attorney fees, the settlement works out to about $1.40 per share. The fees are expected to range between $9 million and $12 million, said New York lawyer Robert Finkel, who represented shareholders. 

Estimates on the shareholders’ damages during the period ran as high as $400 million. Finkel still believes Providian management defrauded shareholders but said proving the allegations in a trial might have been difficult because the company never restated its results during the period covered in the case. 

The tentative agreement doesn’t cover other class-action shareholder lawsuits filed late last year after San Francisco-based Providian shocked Wall Street by revealing huge loan losses that threatened to ruin the company. Those civil complaints are still in their preliminary stages. 

Providian doesn’t expect the settlement reached this week to affect its turnaround effort because the entire $38 million is covered by insurance, said spokesman Alan Elias. Providian didn’t acknowledge wrongdoing in making the settlement. 

The case revolved around allegations of abusive business practices that offered the first hint of trouble at Providian, which evolved from a small subsidiary of a Kentucky insurance company into one of the nation’s five largest credit card lenders. 

As it grew during the 1990s, Providian’s increased its profit partly by charging customers fees for everything from late payments to balance transfers. The aggressive sales practices helped Providian earn $296 million in 1998, but the shareholder suit alleged the profit was illusory because the way the company made its money. 

Acting on numerous customer complaints, authorities in California and Connecticut accused Providian of illegal business practices. The company wound up paying more than $400 million to settle the government investigations and class-action lawsuits filed on behalf of Providian’s credit card customers. 

During the first two weeks in 1999 after the government disclosed its investigations, Providian’s shares plunged from $62.06 to as low as $39.22. 

After settling the government’s complaints, Providian’s shares rallied and peaked at a split-adjusted $66.72 in October 2000. In late 2001, the stock fell to a low of $2.01 amid concerns that federal banking regulators would seize the company. 

Providian’s shares gained 25 cents Thursday to close at $6.15 on the New York Stock Exchange. 

——— 

On The Net: 

http://www.providian.com 


Bankrupt Global Crossing denies deceptive accounting

By Jim Abrams'The Associated Press
Thursday March 21, 2002

WASHINGTON — Officials of the bankrupt fiber optics giant Global Crossing denied Thursday that deceptive accounting practices were part of their company’s financial collapse. “Global Crossing is no Enron,” they told skeptical lawmakers. 

“Some may see superficial similarities between Enron and Global Crossing,” chief executive officer John Legere and chief financial officer Dan Cohrs said in a statement to a House Financial Services Committee panel. 

Indeed, they noted that, like the energy trading corporation, Global Crossing had seen a collapse in its stock price, had executive stock sales and faced questions about accounting procedures and employee pension plans. The companies also shared the auditor Arthur Andersen. 

But the Global Crossing officials insisted the company’s problems, leading to a decision to file for bankruptcy protection in January, were a result of aggressive expansion, overcapacity in the telecommunications network market and the national economic downturn — not business improprieties. 

Even so, said Rep. John LaFalce of New York, the top Democrat on the committee, “Global Crossing may well have succeeded in keeping its share price inflated much longer than was justified based on its true value.” 

The Securities and Exchange Commission and the Justice Department are investigating the fourth-largest Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganization case in history. The company listed $12.4 billion in debts. 

Global Crossing was launched in 1997 and spent $15 billion building the world’s most extensive fiber-optic network. But with the economic slowdown, it cut some 9,000 jobs, closed 71 offices and saw its stock fall from a high of more than $60 a share to 30 cents before its bankruptcy filing. 

Much of Thursday’s hearing centered on whether Global Crossing deceived investors and employees about its financial status through the way it accounted for sales and purchases of network capacity known as Indefeasible Rights of Use, or IRUs. Of particular interest was the practice of “swaps,” where a telecommunications company sells capacity to a customer while buying a similar amount on the customer’s network. 

Rep. Sue Kelly, chairwoman of the oversight and investigations panel, said it appears such swaps, and the way revenues and costs are reflected in the books, “are being used as a quick and easy way to inflate earnings and make a company look more profitable than it really is.”  

º Kelly and others are promoting legislation to better ensure the independence and integrity of the accounting industry. 

Cohrs said, “We’re struggling to understand the right way to treat these transactions.” Asked if there was full disclosure of the deals, he responded, “We believe there was.” 

SEC deputy chief accountant John M. Morrissey, also a witness at the hearing, agreed that determining when to recognize revenue in an IRU transaction “can be quite complex.” 

Michael Salsbury, general counsel for the telecommunications company WorldCom, told the hearing that the real problems in the industry were the efforts of the Bell companies to retain their power and the government’s failure to enforce the law. “Those failures have destroyed far more market capitalization and robbed far more value from shareholders’ investments than any accounting issues.” 

But Michael Capuano, D-Mass., said the bookkeeping used by Global Crossing was “nothing more than a much more fancy and much larger Ponzi scheme” in which new investments are used to pay off old investors. 

A former Global Crossing finance executive, Roy Olofson, last August wrote a letter to the company’s general counsel warning about inflating revenues through misleading accounting techniques. But Cohrs and Legere said they had engaged an outside counsel to review the matter and found the allegations to be without merit. 

Also at issue was a company order preventing employees from making changes in their 401(k) pension plans for a month shortly before the company went bankrupt. 

Legere said the “lockdown” was a result of an effort to consolidate different pension plans, that it was announced two months in advance and that Global Crossing’s stock value changed minimally, from 83 cents to 67 cents, in those two months. 

——— 

On the Net: 

House Financial Services Committee: http://www.house.gov/financialservices/ 

Global Crossing: http://www.globalcrossing.com 


Struggling to walk with peace

By David ScharfenbergDaily Planet staff
Wednesday March 20, 2002

It’s been a struggle, but they’re finding peace. 

On Jan. 21, Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, five local women set out on an eight-month, cross-country peace walk that is scheduled to end in Washington, D.C. on Sept. 11, a year after the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. 

The “Peace-by-Peace” walk, initiated by twin sisters Angela and Lisa Porter of Berkeley, is not a political journey, they say, but a journey of discovery focused on the question: “what is peace?” 

Two of the walkers, Angela Porter, who does specialized body work in Oakland at the Breema Center, and Emily Hooker, a former employee of Berkeley’s Pedal Express bike messenger service, have returned to Berkeley to organize a March 23 fund raiser and update celebration. 

Porter and Hooker will rejoin the group, currently in Arizona, after the event. 

The women have faced, and overcome, exhaustion, interpersonal conflict and the fading of their own idealistic visions of the walk, according to Porter and Hooker. 

“Rather than trying to fulfill an image of what the peace walk was,” said Porter, “we are learning to live in peace together.” 

The learning process took some time, she added. 

“The first two weeks were anything but peaceful,” said Porter. “They were chaotic.” 

Part of the problem was that, apart from the Porter twins, none of the women, including Hooker, Amanda Cohen, of the Ecology Center in Berkeley, and Jo Laurence, an HIV outreach specialist for UC San Francisco, knew each other before the walk. 

“When you don’t know people, there’s a lack of communication,” said Hooker, noting that a series of small conflicts and misunderstandings roiled the group for the first couple of weeks, as the walkers made their way south through San Jose and into the Central Valley. 

Shortly thereafter, near Bakersfield, the walkers had a pair of lengthy, painful meetings with Patrick MacRauri, a longtime friend of the Porters, who was driving the group’s support vehicle. 

“It wasn’t working,” said Hooker. “It felt like he was the one who needed support.” 

MacRauri left shortly thereafter, but the meetings proved a turning point for the walkers. 

“It was the first time, for me, that we connected as a group,” said Hooker. 

But, Porter and Hooker said they have also connected with strangers along the way. 

Hooker said that, to her surprise, small-town conservatives have welcomed the liberal walkers, four of whom are lesbians. 

“It made us really question a lot of our perceptions,” said Hooker. 

The walkers told the story of a bartender near Adelanto, along Highway 395 east of Los Angeles, who was rude to the group at first, but after talking with the women, opened up about his father and experience as a soldier in Vietnam. 

“When I left, he was crying and hugging me,” said Porter. “Before, there was this wall of distance and fear and judgment, and all of a sudden, it just opened.” 

The walkers said that other strangers, even those who support the military action in Afghanistan, have engaged the group in meaningful discussions about peace and thanked them for taking the walk. 

The group, which has met with everyone from school children to homeless people to discuss peace, will make its way across the South in the coming months, walking a portion of the Trail of Tears and visiting several historic civil rights sites. 

But before then, Porter will give a trip update and several local musicians and dancers will perform at a 7 p.m. to midnight fund raiser Saturday night at the Berkeley Fellowship of Unitarian Universalists, 1924 Cedar St. “Peace-by-Peace” is asking for a $15 contribution, or whatever attendees can afford. 

Performers will include soul singer Edna Love, jazz artist Denise Perrier, folk singer Pear Michaels and Afro-Cuban dancer Margarita. 


BHS boys’ lacrosse suffers first loss of season

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Wednesday March 20, 2002

After winning their first four games by scores like 17-1 and 15-0, the Berkeley High boys’ lacrosse team may have felt invincible until Tuesday. But a tough game with University High (San Francisco) that ended in a last-minute loss may have brought the Yellowjackets back to earth. 

University’s Andrew Kirchner corralled a loose ball in front of the Berkeley goal and bounced a shot past ’Jacket goalie Marc Bloch to claim a 7-6 advantage with just 23 seconds left in the match. Bloch had just saved two point-blank shots by the Red Devils, but stopping three shots from such close range was too much to ask. 

Berkeley (4-1) looked out of sorts nearly the entire game, often struggling to get the right players on the field. Tuesday was the ’Jackets’ first game away from their home Astroturf, and the field at The Presidio in San Francisco had ankle-high grass, slowing down both the ball and the Berkeley players. 

“We were psychologically taken out of the game,” Berkeley head coach Jon Rubin said. “The grass took us out of our usual style of play. This was a learning experience for us, so hopefully it will be good for us.” 

Rubin said his team wasn’t used to making substitutions on the fly, and it clearly cost them on the final possessions of the game. The ’Jackets turned the ball over twice in the last two minutes on technicalities concerning positioning and substitution, not something one would expect from a team with 12 seniors. 

“We were completely out of whack on the defensive end,” Berkeley head coach Jon Rubin said. “We kept making mental errors, coming off when we shouldn’t have.” 

University’s comeback ruined some late heroics by Berkeley players. Down 4-3 late in the third quarter, Berkeley’s Sam Geller tied the score with a high shot that whistled by University goalie Nick Fram. A moment later, Cameran Sampson picked up a loose ball and bounced a shot into the net for a 5-4 lead. 

But the Red Devils (3-3) got two quick goals to start the fourth quarter from Colin Mistele, the first a sidewinder that threaded its way past two defenders and Bloch. Berkeley answered back with a nice goal from Erick Lindeman, who head-faked a defender and put a left-handed shot into the goal for a 6-6 tie. Both teams had opportunities down the stretch, but Berkeley’s turnovers made the difference. 

“Up to this point we’d given up just 10 shots on goal and four goals,” Rubin said. “We were able to just take the ball away from the other team. That didn’t happen today.” 

Neither team ever took more than a one-goal lead in the game, as University got two second-quarter goals from Thomas McKinley and Berkeley had solo goals by Julian Coffman and Lindeman. Strangely, the Berkeley players looked more fatigued than their opponents, despite have a roster nearly three times the size of the Red Devils. The second half was full of end-to-end action, both tiring and confusing the Berkeley regulars. 

Both goalies played well in the game, with Bloch standing out with several tough saves. 

“It could’ve been a different game with Marc didn’t make so many saves,” Rubin said. 

The ’Jackets are entering a tough stretch, with games against strong programs Menlo, St. Ignatius and Marin Catholic in the next two weeks. They then head into league play in the brand-new Shoreline Lacrosse League, which also includes Piedmont, College Prep and Bishop O’Dowd. Rubin said O’Dowd will likely be their main challenger for the league title, as the other two schools have just established their programs. This is the first season for lacrosse as a CIF-recognized sport, so the ’Jackets can look towards regional playoffs if they win their league.


Stop Bush-whacking our future

Jane Stillwater Berkeley
Wednesday March 20, 2002

Editor: 

 

How can we tell our children that adulthood is something to look forward to when they read in the papers daily that America is in a state of “indefinite war” and that we have targeted seven nations for nuclear destruction? 

And stop saying that “They hit us first”.  

We hit them first. We spent a CENTURY hitting them first. 

Let's stop spending trillions of dollars a year on producing killing machines. 

Let's start spending that money on education, health services, arts, etc. 

Let's use that money to buy the people of the world a sense that there WILL be a future someday. America can give this amazing gift to the world. 

Dropping bombs is NOT the way to create peace. Perhaps our leaders and generals think that if they only kill enough people the bad guys will be scared into submission. The human brain does not work that way. The human brain is hard-wired like this: The more someone is punished, the more they resist.  

Even serial killers and terrorists see their foul deeds as heroic acts of resistance. 

 

Jane Stillwater 

Berkeley


Staff
Wednesday March 20, 2002

 

924 Gilman Mar. 22: Tsunami Bomb, No Motiv; Mar. 29: Limpwrist, All You Can Eat, The Subtonics, The Bananas, Sharp Knife; Mar. 30: 9 Shocks Terror, What Happens Next?, Phantom Limbs, The Curse, Onion Flavored Rings; All shows begin a 8 p.m. 924 Gillman St., 525-9926 

 

The Albatross Mar. 20: Whiskey Brothers; Mar. 21: Keni “El Lebrijano”; All shows begin at 9 p.m. unless noted. 822 San Pablo Ave., 843-2473, albatrosspub@mindspring.com. 

 

Anna’s Bistro Mar. 20: Bob Schon Jazz Quintet; Mar. 21: Terence Brewer Jazz Trio; Mar. 22: Anna & Ellen Hoffman Jazz Tunes; 10 p.m., Hideo Date; Mar. 23: Robin Gregory; 10 p.m., Ducksan Distones Jazz Sextet; Mar. 24: Christy Dana Jazz Group; Mar. 25: Renegade Sidemen; Mar. 26: Jason Martineau and Dave Sayen; Mar. 27: David Widelock Jazz Duo; Mar. 28: Randy Moore Jazz Trio; Mar. 29: Anna & Ellen Hoffman; 10 p.m. Hideo Date; Mar. 30: Robin Gregory; 10 p.m. Ducksan Distones Jazz Sextet; Music starts at 8 p.m. unless noted, 1801 University Ave., 849-2662. 

 

Blake’s Mar. 20: Hebro, $3; Mar. 21: Ascension, $5; Mar. 22: Shady Lady, View From Here; $6; Mar. 23: Mystic Roots, LZ & Ezell Funkstaz, $5; Mar. 24: Passenger, The Shreep, $3; Mar. 25: The Steve Gannon Band & Mz. Dee, $4; 2367 Telegraph Ave., 877-488-6533. 

 

Cafe Eclectica Mar. 22: 8 p.m., The Teethe, The Natural Dreamers, Yasi, $3; Mar. 23: 8 p.m., Guest DJs and MCs, $5; 1309 Solano Ave., Albany, 527-2344, Shows are All Ages.  

 

Cato’s Ale House Mar. 20: Saul Kaye Quartet; Mar. 24: Lost Coast Jazz Trio; Mar. 27: Vince Wallace Trio; Mar. 31: Phillip Greenlief Trio; 3891 Piedmont Ave., Oakland, 655-3349 

 

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

 

Freight & Salvage Mar. 20: The Hot Club of Cowtown, $17.50; Mar. 21: Tish Hinojosa, $17.50; Mar. 22: Marley’s Ghost, $17.50; Mar. 24: Teresa Trull & Barbara Higbie, $18.50; Mar. 27: Paul Thorn, $16.50; Mar. 28: Old Blind Dogs, $17.50; Mar. 29: Jack Hardy, $16.50; Mar. 30: Faye Carol, $17.50; 1111 Addison St., 548-1761, folk@freightandsalvage.org 

 

Jazzschool Mar. 24: 4:30 p.m., Alegria, $6-$12; Mar. 30: 4:30 p.m., Dmitri Matheny Orchestra presents “The Emerald Buddha”; 2087 Addison St., 845-5373, www.jazzschool.com. 

 

Rose Street House of Music Mar. 21: 7:30 p.m., Rose Street on the Road/Indiegrrl Tour kickoff featuring Irina Rivkin, Making Waves, Francine Allen, Amber Jade, and Christene LeDoux, 594-4000 x687. 

 

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 

 

“Jazz Concert” Mar. 24: 2 p.m., Terry Gibbs and the Mike Vax Orchestra. $10 - $18. Longfellow School for the Arts, 1500 Derby St. 420-4560, www.bigbandjazz.net 

 

“Recital” Mar. 24: 3 p.m., Cal Performances presents pianist, Richard Goode, and vocalist, Randall Scarlata. $48. Hertz Hall, UC Berkeley campus, 642-9988, www.calperfs.berkeley.edu 

 

“Jewish Music Festival” Through Mar 24: Several performers will perform Jewish music and dance from across the world. Call Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center for Acts, times and dates. 925-866-9559, www.brjcc.org 

 

 

 

 

“Women’s Voices, Then and Now” Mar. 15 through Mar. 24: Fri. 8 p.m., Sat. 2 p.m., Voices from a 1915 graveyard blend with voices from 1982 to present a vivid depiction of the lives of American women. $10. Unitarian Universalist Church of Berkeley, 1 Lawson Rd., Kensington, 525-0302 

 

“Persimmony Jones” Mar. 16: 12 p.m., Designed for a young audience, this is the story of a young girl trying to find her place in the world. As Persimmony travels through different lands on her search, she is forced to reexamine her own ideas about tolerance and acceptance. Free. Berkeley Repertory Theatre’s Thrust Stage, 2025 Addison St., 647-2978 

 

“Curtain Up” Mar. 22 through Mar. 24: 8 p.m., Musical theater veteran Martin Charnin and Broadway conductor/comoser Keith Levenson join forces to create a semi-staged version of Gershwin and Kaufman’s 1927 musical comedy “Strike Up the Band”. $24 - $46. Zellerbach Hall, UC Berkeley Campus, 642-9988 

 

“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 

 

“Impact Briefs 5: The East Bay Hit” Through Mar. 30: Fri. - Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 7 p.m., A collection of seven plays all about the ups and downs of in the Bay Area. $12, $7 students. La Val’s Subterranean Theatre, 1834 Euclid, 464-4468, tickets@impattheatre.com. 

 

“The Merchant of Venice” Through Mar. 31: Wed. - Thurs. 7 p.m., Fri. - Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m., Women in Time Productions presents Shakespeare’s famous romantic comedy replete with masks and revelry, balcony scenes, and midnight escapes. $25, half-price on Wed. The Berkeley City Club, 2315 Durant Ave. 925-798-1300 

 

“Knock Knock” Through Apr. 14: Wed. - Sat. 8 p.m., Sun 2 p.m., 7 p.m., A comedic farce about two eccentric retirees whose comfortable philosophical arguments are interrupted by a series of strange visitors. $26 - $35. Aurora Theatre, 2081 Addison St., 843-4822, www.auroratheatre.org 

 

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

 

“A Fairy’s Tail” Mar. 16 through Apr. 7: 8 p.m. Fri. and Sat., 5 p.m. Sun., 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. Directed by Patrick Dooley. $10 - $25. Mar. 16 - 31:Thrust Stage at Berkeley Rep, 2025 Addison St.; Apr. 4 - 7: UC Theatre on University Ave.; 704-8210, www.shotgunplayers.org. 

 

 

 

Film 

 

Pacific Film Archive Mar. 11: A Star is Born, 3 p.m.; Flesh, 7 p.m.; Mar. 12: An eye Unruled: An Evening with Stan Brakhage, 7:30 p.m.; Mar. 13: The Bicycle Thief, 3 p.m.; Daughter from Danang, 7:30 p.m.; Mar. 14: The Student I, 7 p.m.; Mar. 16: Shaping Identities Through Community, 7 p.m.; The Wolf, 9:30 p.m.; Mar. 17: For the Love of It: Amateur Filmmaking, 5:30; Mar. 18: Cabaret; 3 p.m.; Carnal Knowledge, 7 p.m.; Mar. 19: Stranger with a Camera, 7:30 p.m.; Mar. 20: Sunset Blvd., 3 p.m.; Chemical Valley, 7:30 p.m.; Mar. 21: Hazel Dickens: It’s Hard to Tell the Singer From the Song, 7:30 p.m.; Mar. 22: A Thousand and One Voices: The Music of Islam, 7:30 p.m.; Mar. 23: In a Lonely Place, 7 p.m.; The Big Heat; 8:55 p.m.; 2527 Bancroft Way, 642-1412 

 

“Asian American Film Fest” Mar. 13: Daughter From Danang; Pacific Film Archive, 2527 Bancroft Way, 642-1412. 

 

Exhibits  

 

“Trace of a Human” 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 

 

“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” 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 

 

“The Works of Alexander Nepote” Through Mar. 29: Nepote was a 20th century artist whose medium is a process of layered painting of torn pieces of watercolor paper, fused together in images that speak of the spirit that underlies and is embodied in the landscape he views. Check museum for times. Bade Museum, Pacific School of Religion, 1798 Scenic Ave., 849-8272 

 

“Trace of a Human” Through Mar. 30: An exhibit of mixed media sculpture by Jim Freeman, and acrylic paintings on canvas by Krystyna Mleczko. Tues. - Sat. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Ardency Gallery, 709 Broadway, Oakland, 836-0831, gallery709@aol.com 

 

“Journey of Self-discovery” Through Mar. 30: Community Works artist Adriana Diaz and Willard Junior High students joined together to explore gender stereotypes, advertising, and other influential elements in society in a project that culminated in two life-size portraits that explore self-identity. Free. La Pena Cultural Center, 3105 Shattuck Ave. 845-3332. 

 

“West Oakland Today” Through Mar. 30: Sergio De La Torre presents “thehousingproject”, an open house/video installation that explores desire surrounding one’s sense of home and place. Marcel Diallo presents “Scrapyard Ghosts”, an installation that presents a glimpse into the process of one man’s conversation with the living past through objects of iron, wood, rock dirt and other debris unearthed at an old scrapyard site in West Oakland’s Lower Bottom neighborhood. Pro Arts, 461 Ninth St., Oakland  

 

"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. 

 

“Portraits of the Afghan People: 1984 - 1992” Through Apr. 6: An exhibit of black and white photographs by Bay Area photographer Patricia Monaco. Free. Mon. - Fri. 8:30 a.m. - 6:30 p.m., Sat. 9 a.m. - 3 p.m. Photolab Gallery, 2235 Fifth St., 644-1400 

 

“The Zoom of the Souls” Mar. 23 through Apr. 13: An exhibit of oil paintings by Mark P. Fisher. Sat. 1 p.m. - 6 p.m. Bay Area Music Foundation, 462 Elwood Ave. #9, Oakland, 836-5223 

 

“Sibila Savage & Sylvia Sussman” Through Apr. 13: Photographer, Sibila Savage presents photographs documenting the lives of her immigrant grandparents, and Painter, Sylvia Sussman displays her abstract landscapes on unstretched canvas. Free. Wed. - Sun. 12 p.m. - 5 p.m. Berkeley Art Center, 1275 Walnut St. 64-6893, www.berkeleyartcenter.org 

 

“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.  

 

“Art is Education” Mar. 18 through Apr. 19th: A group exhibition of over 50 individual artworks created by Oakland Unified School District students, Kindergarten through 12th grade. Mon. - Fri. 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Craft and Cultural Arts Gallery, State of California Office Building Atrium, 1515 Clay St., Oakland, 238-6952, www.oaklandculturalarts.org 

 

“Expressions of Time and Space” Mar. 18 through April 17: Calligraphy by Ronald Y. Nakasone. Julien Designs 1798 Shattuck Ave., 540-7634, RyNakasone@aol.com.  

 

“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. 

 

“Quilted Paintings” Mar. 3 through May 4: Contemporary wall quilts by Roberta Renee Baker, landscapes, abstracts, altars and story quilts. Free. The Coffee Mill, 3363 Grand Ave., Oakland 465-4224 

 

“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 

 

“Masterworks of Chinese Painting” Mar. 13 through May 26: An exhibition of distinguished works representing virtually every period and phase of Chinese painting over the last 900 years, including figure paintings and a selection of botanical and animal subjects. Prices vary. Wed. - Sun. 11 a.m. - 7 p.m. The University of California, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, 2626 Bancroft Way, 642-4889, www.bampfa.berkeley.edu 

 

“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” 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 

 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center Mar. 17: 3 p.m., Suzan Hagstrom reads from her book “Sara’s Children: The Destruction of Chielnik,” chronicling the survival of one brother and four sisters in Nazi death camps. Free. 1414 Walnut St. 848-0237 x127 

 

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. 

 

Cody’s on Fourth St. 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. 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.  

 

Easy Going Travel Shop & Bookstore Mar. 7: Carl Parkes, author of “Moon Handbook: Southeast Asia”, presents a slide show exploring his travels in the region; Mar. 12: William Fienne describes his personal journey from Texas to North Dakota as he follows the northern migration of snow geese; Mar. 14: Gary Crabbe and Karen Misuraca present slides and read from their book, “The California Coast”; Mar. 19: Barbara and Robert Decker present a slide show focusing on the volcanoes of California and the Cascade Mountain Range; Mar. 21: Stefano DeZerega discusses opportunities for study, travel, and work in Latin America, Africa, Asia, the Middle East, or Eastern Europe; All readings are free and start at 7:30 p.m., 1385 Shattuck Ave. at Rose, 843-3533. 

 

GAIA Building Mar. 14: 7 - 9 p.m., Lecture with Patricia Evans speaking from her book, “Controlling People: How to recognize, Understand and Deal with People Who Are Trying to Control You.”; Mar. 19: Reading and slide show with Carol Wagner, “Survival of the Spirit: Lives of Cambodian Buddhists.”; March 21: 6 - 9 p.m., 1st Berkeley Edgework Books Salon; Mar. 22: 6:30 - 9:30 p.m., Book Reading and Jazz Concert with David Rothenberg; All events are held in the Rooftop Gardens Solarium, 7th Floor, GAIA Building, 2116 Allston Way, 848-4242. 

 

Gathering Tribes Mar. 15: 6:30 p.m., Susan Lobo and Victoria Bomberry will be conducting readings from “American Indians And The Urban Experience.”; 1573 Solano Ave., 528-9038, www.gatheringtribes.com.  

 

UC Berkeley Lunch Poems Reading Series Mar. 7: Marilyn Hacker reads from her most recent book, “Squares and Courtyards”. Free. Morrison Library in Doe Library, UC Berkeley campus, 642-0137, www.berkeley.edu/calendar/events/poems. 

 

University of Creation Spirituality Mar. 21: 7 - 9 p.m., Turning to One Another: Simple Conversations to Restore Hope to the Future, An Evening with Author Margaret J. Wheatley, $10-$15 donation; 2141 Broadway, Oakland, 835-4827 x29, darla@berkana.org. 

 

 

Poetry 

 

Poetry Flash @ Cody’s Mar. 3: Myung Mi Kim, Harryette Mullen & Geoffrey O’Brien; Mar. 6: Bill Berkson, Albert Flynn DeSilver; Mar. 10: Leslie Scalapino, Dan Farrell; Mar. 13: Lucille Lang Day, Risa Kaparo; Mar. 20: Edward Smallfield, Truong Tran; Mar. 24: Susan Griffin, Honor Moore; All events begin at 7:30 p.m., $2 donation. 2454 Telegraph Ave., 845-7852, www.codysbooks.com.  

 

Poetry Reading @ South Branch Berkeley Public Library Mar. 2: Bay Area Poets Coalition is holding an open reading. 3 p.m. - 5 p.m. Free. 1901 Russell St. 

 

Word Beat Mar. 9: Sonia Greenfield and Megan Breiseth; Mar. 16, Q. R. Hand and Lu Pettus; Mar. 23: Lee Gerstmann and Sam Pierstorffs; Mar. 30: Eleanor Watson-Gove and Jim Watson-Gove; All shows 7 - 9 p.m., Coffee With A Beat, 458 Perkins, Oakland. 526-5985, www.angelfire.com/poetry/wordbeat. 

 

Fellowship Café Mar. 15: 7:30 p.m., Eliot Kenin, poetry, storytellers, singers and musicians. $5-$10. Fellowship Hall, 1924 Cedar St., 540-0898. 

 

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. 

 

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. 

 

Lawrence Hall of Science Mar. 16: 1 - 4 p.m., Moviemaking for children 8 years old and up; Mar. 20: Spring Equinox; “Jurassic Park: Dinosaur Auditions Live Science Demonstrations” A directed activity in which children “audtion” to be a dinosaur in an upcoming movie. They’ll learn about the variety of dinosaurs in the Jurassic Park exhibit as well as dress up, act, and roar like a dinosaur. Through May 12: Mon. - Fri. 10:30 a.m., 11:30 a.m., 12:30 p.m.; Sat. - Sun. 12 p.m., 1 p.m., 2 p.m. 3 p.m. $8 adults, $6 children. Centenial Dr. just above the UC campus and just below Grizzly Peak Blvd. 642-5132 

 

UC Berkeley Phoebe Hearst Museum of Anthropology will close its exhibition galleries for renovation. It will reopen in early 2002.  

 

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


Staff
Wednesday March 20, 2002


Wednesday, Mar. 20

 

 

City Commons Club, 

Great Decisions Program 

10 a.m. - noon 

Berkeley City Club 

2315 Durant Ave. 

Nunu Kidane, Epidemiologist, UC San Francisco; “AIDS in Africa.” $5. 848-3533. 

 

Prose Writers’ Workshop 

7 - 9 p.m. 

Berkeley/Richmond Jewish  

Community Center Library 

1414 Walnut St. 

From Op-ed to fiction, memoir to the feature article. Workshop format. Free. 524-3034. 

 

African Philosophy 

7 p.m. 

The Fellowship of Humanity 

390 27th St., Oakland 

We will interpret Nkrumah as a philosopher. Brief presentations followed by open discussion. 451-5818, HumanistHall@yahoo.com. 

 

Cealo is Coming 

7 - 9 p.m. 

St. John’s Presbyterian Church 

Fireside Room 

2727 College Ave. 

Gayuna Cealo is a Burmese monk who’s mission is to lead people to their true selves. $10 donation. 525-6472. 

 

Community Prayer Breakfast 

7:30 a.m. 

H’s Lordships Restaurant 

Berkeley Marina, 199 Seawall Dr. 

The 62nd year of the interfaith prayer breakfast celebrating spirituality in the community. $18. 549-4524, vicki@baymca.org. 

 


Thursday, March 21

 

 

Still the Source of Grace?  

Reading the Bible as a Gay Christian 

5 p.m.  

Pacific School of Religion chapel  

1798 Scenic Ave. 

With L. William Countryman, professor in biblical studies at 

Church Divinity School of the Pacific, and co-author with M.R. Ritley of “Gifted by Otherness: Gay and Lesbian Christians in the Church.” Free and open to the public. 849-8206. 

 

Simplicity Forum 

7 - 8:30 p.m. 

Claremont Branch Library 

2940 Benvenue Ave. 

People telling stories about the ways they have changed their lives by finding ways to work less, consume less, rush less, and have more time to build community with friends and family, as well as live more lightly upon the planet. 549-3509, www.simpleliving.net. 

 


Friday, March 22

 

 

City Commons Club 

12:30 p.m. 

Berkeley City Club 

2315 Durant Ave. 

Robert Kruger, first vice-president, and Larry Miller, certified financial planner and senior vice-president, Solomon Smith Barney; “Investing in the Market Post 9-11.” $1. 848-3533. 

 

Berkeley Women in Black 

noon - 1 p.m. 

Bancroft and Telegraph Ave. 

Standing in solidarity with Israeli and Palestinian women to urge an end to the occupation and push the peace process forward. 548-6310, wibberkeley.org. 

 

The Nature of Work: Joanna Macy and Matthew Fox in Dialogue 

7 - 9 p.m. 

University of Creation Spirituality 

2141 Broadway, Oakland 

Matthew Fox, Ph.D., founder and president of the University of Creation Spirituality, will engage in dialogue on the nature of work with Joanna Macy, Ph.D., an eco-philosopher and scholar of Buddhism, general systems theory, and deep ecology. $10-$15 donation. 835-4827 x29, www.creationspirituality.org. 

 

International Women’s Day Celebration 

7 p.m. 

Revolution Books 

2425 Channing Way 

Cultural and video presentations, speakers, discussion and refreshments. Donation requested. 848-1196. 

 

Berkeley Design Advocates 

Design Awards 

5:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Art Center 

1275 Walnut St. 

Design Awards for building projects in Berkeley will be presented by Berkeley Design Advocates (BDA). Projects completed over the past two years were selected based on their quality of design, how well they fit into their surroundings, their innovative qualities and how well they contribute to urban life. 528-2778. 

 


Saturday, March 23

 

 

5th Annual Summit – Last  

Chance for Smart Growth? 

10 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. 

Laney College Forum 

900 Fallon St., Oakland 

Regional public agencies will soon hold workshops to select from among three alternative visions for regional growth and finalize one Bay Area vision. Summit participants will learn about these alternatives and provide input that will affect future government policy. 740-3103, robert@transcoalition.org. 

 

Jazz Clinic 

2 p.m. 

Longfellow School for the Arts 

1500 Derby St. 

Terry Gibbs and the Mike Vax Jazz Orchestra will be holding a jazz clinic. $5, 420-4560, www.bigbandjazz.net. 

 

Berkeley Dispute  

Resolution Service 

10 a.m. - 2 p.m. 

BDRS Office 

1968 San Pablo Ave.  

The community is invited to learn about mediation and the conflict resolution services and resources available through BDRS. Children’s activities and refreshments provided. 428-1811. 

 

Hunger Hike in Joaquin Miller Park 

9:30 a.m. 

Ranger Station, Sanborn Dr. 

Hike through the East Bay redwoods while raising money to help people in need. Hikers are encouraged to collect pledges. Funds raised will benefit the Food Bank’s hunger relief efforts. $20. 834-3663 x327, ilund@secondharvest.org.  

 

Our School Information Event for 

Prospective Parents 

10 a.m. - noon 

St. John’s Community Center, Room 203 

2727 College Ave. 

An event for prospective parents to learn about Our School’s approach to education. 704-0701, www.ourschoolsite.ws.  

 

March and Rally for Justice  

11 a.m. 

12th & Broadway BART 

Assemble at BART then march to Oakland Federal Building, then 1 p.m. rally in Jack London Square. In support of airport screeners, port workers, and service industry workers and against all racist and anti-immigrant laws and policies. 524-3791, labor4justice@aspenlinx.com. 

 


Sunday, March 24

 

 

Invitational Karatedo Tournament 

11 a.m. 

Oakland YMCA Main Gymnasium 

2350 Broadway 

A tournament promoting Japanese Karatedo. Spectators are welcome and admitted for free. 522-6016, jbtown501@aol.com. 

 

Stagebridge’s 11th Annual 

Family Matinee Theatre and 

Ice Cream Social 

3 p.m. 

First Congregational Church 

2501 Harrison, Oakland 

Premiere of Linda Spector’s “Chicken Sunday and Other Grandparent Tales,” followed by an old fashioned ice cream social. $8 general, $4 children. 444-4755, www.stagebridge.org.  

 


Monday, March 25

 

 

Free Legal Workshop 

“Too Sick to Work: 

Cash Assistance and Health Insurance if Cancer Prevents You From Working” 

12:30 - 2 p.m. 

Highland Hospital 

1411 E. 31st St., Oakland 

Classroom B 

This workshop will provide information about State and Federal disability programs that provide cash benefits and health insurance for people unable to work due to a serious health condition. 601-4040 x302, www.wcrc.org.  

 

Transportation and the  

Environment in Berkeley 

7 - 8:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Adult School Room 7 

1222 University Ave. 

Matt Nichols of the Bay Area Air Quality Management District will discuss the impacts of your transportation decisions, and the resulting impacts on local pollution and our health. 981-5435, energy@ci.berkeley.ca.us. 

 


Tuesday, March 26

 

 

Tuesday Tea Party 

6 - 8 p.m. 

First Congregational Church 

Harrison and 27th St., Oakland 

Open gatherings to build a new peace movement. 839-5877. 

 


Wednesday, March 27

 

 

City Commons Club, 

Great Decisions Program 

10 a.m. - noon 

Berkeley City Club 

2315 Durant Ave. 

Dan Kammen, professor of Energy and Resources Group and director of Energy and Science, UC Berkeley; “Energy and the Environment.” 

$5. 848-3533. 

 

Prose Writers’ Workshop 

7 - 9 p.m. 

Berkeley/Richmond Jewish  

Community Center Library 

1414 Walnut St. 

From Op-ed to fiction, memoir to the feature article. Workshop format. Free. 524-3034. 

 

Berkeley Gray Panthers  

General Meeting 

1:30 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

The Clean Money Campaign and the League of Women Voters will talk about Clean Money, Clean Politics: Campaign Finance Reform in a Democracy. 548-9696, graypanthers@hotmail.com. 


Residents irked by ‘unfair process,’ confusion

By Jia-Rui Chong Daily Planet Staff
Wednesday March 20, 2002

At a meeting in which residents were unclear about what they could talk about, whether city officials could respond to their letters and how they could add items to the agenda, Tuesday night’s City Council meeting was all about fair process. 

Most of the audience showed up to discuss a senior housing project on Sacramento St, but many others wanted to discuss what they saw as unfair changes to the General Plan that would allow affordable housing to be built on the Santa Fe Right of Way. Still others came to protest that the issue of population density was not addressed in the General Plan. 

City Attorney Manuela Albuquerque had to clarify several times the city policy on restrictions intended to prevent unfair lobbying by individuals or organizations and explain that such rules about fairness also restricted public comment on appeals hearings from the Zoning Adjustments Board to the written record. 

Residents’ confusion and complaints about the process were most clear in the case of the senior housing project. 

It was frustrating for Carl Golden who was not even talking substantively about the Sacramento St. project but just about the process of the ZAB discussion that did not begin until midnight on March 15.  

He had to keep referring to “the thing we can’t talk about” when he was complaining about the lateness of the ZAB meeting. He also pointed out that city staff had changed parts of the plan without supplying clearly exhibited new models. 

Planning Manager Mark Rhoades tried to explain the plans presented at the ZAB meeting and the environmental impact reports to the council amid hisses from the audience.  

He said that ZAB voted to go forward with a plan by the city to build a 4-story unit of affordable housing. 

 

The decision came after months of staff study and presentations to neighbors, according to Rhoades. He said his office was satisfied “this project would not have a detrimental impact on the neighborhood.” 

But councilmembers were not satisfied. 

“I think there are significant issues about the fairness of the process,” said Dona Spring.  

Pointing to the fat sheaf of written comments that were submitted on the item and the number of people who came to discuss it, Spring said, “People want to be heard. I think we should set this for a public hearing.” 

Other councilmembers murmured their agreement.  

But Councilmember Linda Maio was concerned that the proposal was time-sensitive. She wanted to know about deadlines for tax credits to fund the project. 

Rhoades and Housing Director Stephen Barton explained that, if the city wanted help in funding this project, it had to two chances. The first round of funding would be considered March 29 and the second in late June. 

“I don’t like that a project like this came with a caveat that we better not endanger public funding,” said Councilmember Polly Armstrong.  

Although Armstrong favored building the project, she said she did not want to be rushed because once the building was constructed, it would be there permanently.  

She also worried that councilmembers in general were not listening to constituents’ concerns and that such an imperative was missing from the vision of Berkeley described in the General Plan. 

Agreeing that it was not necessarily the fault of the staff that the timing for this project was unfavorable, the council voted 8-1 to give the public a better opportunity to talk to the city at a public hearing. 

Only Kriss Worthington voted no, though Maio had expressed reservations about how difficult it was to find subsidies in a recession.  

By agreeing to a public hearing, Worthington said, the council was giving the nod to long, disorganized nights. He suggested that the public hearing on the senior housing project be set for another night. 

The motion was approved 6-3. Some councilmembers dissented because they thought it would allow boards and commissions to be lazy about getting through agendas. 

At the end of this vote, though, they wanted to make sure there was no confusion about the process.  

Dean clearly enumerated the ways residents could contact the City Clerk to find out about the date of the hearing and directed them to the web site www.ci.berkeley.ca.us. 

Dean then held up the ream of paper each of the councilmembers had in front of them.  

“I don’t want this again.” 

 


20mph limit will go far to ensure traffic doesn’t

Steve Magyary Berkeley
Wednesday March 20, 2002

Editor: 

 

Berkeley’s idea of enacting a 20 mph speed limit is superfluous, since the effective limit already approaches zero, given the number of diverters, blocked streets, potholes, mis-timed signals, drivers visioning Nirvana and Volvo drivers. 

Instead, Berkeley should pass an ordinance forbidding all “rolling-motion,” and mark entrances to the city with “You’re entering a Rolling-Motion Free Zone” signs.  

To manage the resultant walking congestion, residents could purchase $200 walking permits, allowing locomotion between 2 A.M. and 5 A.M.  

Walking-meters (failing 90% of the time) and luminescent orange flags would be provided to prevent injuries.  

Violators would be restricted to using the sewers, provided they did not endanger rats and their protected habitat. 

Administering the ordinance necessitates a progressive tax (those living in the hills paying a surcharge due to their gravitational advantage) and would be handled by the “Department for Unified Motion of Bodies” (DUMB), “personed” entirely by supervisors or those already moving at a glacial pace.  

Applicants are screened to ensure they come from friction-motion challenged and discriminated households or are couples engaged in long term same motion (i.e. friction-friction or rolling-rolling) relationships U.C. Berkeley’s entrance policy would give preference to those who haven’t passed the discriminatory and culturally-biased driving exam. Berkeley would cease business with companies using rolling motion and disinvest in the “Axles of Evil”: Ford, G.M. and Chrysler.  

Council would sever diplomatic relations with foreign and domestic naysayers and instead establish a sister-planetary relationship with Mars since it has visionarily enacted, enforced, and practiced such an ordinance. 

 

Steve Magyary 

Berkeley 


Today in History

Staff
Wednesday March 20, 2002

Wednesday, March 20 is the 79th day of 2002. There are 286 days left in the year. Spring arrives in the northern hemisphere at 2:16 p.m. Eastern time. 

 

Today’s Highlight in History: 

One hundred and fifty years ago, on March 20, 1852, Harriet Beecher Stowe’s influential novel about slavery, “Uncle Tom’s Cabin,” was first published. 

 

On this date: 

In 1413, England’s King Henry IV died; he was succeeded by Henry V. 

In 1727, physicist, mathematician and astronomer Sir Isaac Newton died in London. 

In 1828, Norwegian poet-dramatist Henrik Ibsen was born. 

In 1896, U.S. Marines landed in Nicaragua to protect U.S. citizens in the wake of a revolution. 

In 1952, at the Academy Awards, “An American in Paris” was named best picture; Humphrey Bogart best actor for “The African Queen”; Vivien Leigh best actress, Kim Hunter best supporting actress and Karl Malden best supporting actor for “A Streetcar Named Desire”; and George Stevens best director for “A Place in the Sun.” 

In 1969, John Lennon married Yoko Ono in Gibraltar. 

In 1976, kidnapped newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst was convicted of armed robbery for her part in a San Francisco bank holdup. 

In 1987, the Food and Drug Administration approved the sale of AZT, a drug shown to prolong the lives of some AIDS patients. 

In 1990, Namibia became an independent nation as the former colony marked the end of 75 years of South African rule. 

In 1995, in Tokyo, 12 people were killed, more than 5,500 others sickened when packages containing the poisonous gas sarin leaked on five separate subway trains. 

Ten years ago: Congress passed, and President Bush immediately vetoed, a Democratic tax cut for the middle class that would have been funded by a tax hike on the rich. 

Five years ago: President Clinton and Boris Yeltsin opened talks in Helsinki, Finland, on the issue of NATO expansion. Liggett Group, the maker of Chesterfield cigarettes, settled 22 state lawsuits by agreeing to warn on every pack that smoking is addictive and admitting the industry markets cigarettes to teen-agers. 

One year ago: The skipper of the USS Greeneville took the stand in a Navy court and accepted sole responsibility for the Feb. 9 collision of his submarine with a Japanese trawler off Hawaii that killed nine Japanese. New York native Lori Berenson, accused of aiding guerrillas in Peru, received a retrial in civilian court (she was later convicted of “terrorist collaboration”). Power-strapped California saw a second day of rolling blackouts. 

 

Today’s Birthdays: Actor Jack Kruschen is 80. Producer-director-comedian Carl Reiner is 80. Children’s TV host Fred Rogers is 74. Actor Hal Linden is 71. Singer Jerry Reed is 65. Former Canadian prime minister Brian Mulroney is 63. Country singer Don Edwards is 63. TV producer Paul Junger Witt is 59. Country singer-musician Ranger Doug (Riders in the Sky) is 56. Hockey Hall-of-Famer Bobby Orr is 54.


The vast middle ground of the Mid-East

Gabe Kurtz student UC Berkeley
Wednesday March 20, 2002

Editor: 

 

The vast majority of people do not take a stand on the Israel/Palestine issue. They merely say “its none of my business.”  

What’s worse are the individuals that espouse peace like a robot without examining why they are saying it. “Peace” just seems like the right thing to say, any death is wrong etc.  

There are always sacrifices that must be made, for any cause whether abolishionist, or a rebellion in the warsaw ghetto. Our cause is the same, requiring sacrifices for a sovereign jewish state — for the jews, founded by jews, and governed by jews.  

The arabs have the whole of northern africa, and most of the middle east. They still want Israel... so the question remains, why?  

The muslims of the gaza strip and west bank want Israel because they know that Jews would be killed in the process. They froth at the mouth crying for land but dreaming of a twenty first century holocaust.  

The problem is that people of the United States have trouble seeing through this rouse. They guess, but do not take a stand for fear of being politically incorrect.  

Now that the Palestinians motives have been lain bear the vast center of America must take a stand.  

Would they rather have minor skirmishes in defense of Israel or whole-scale bloodshed when her defenses are let down?  

 

Gabe Kurtz  

student UC Berkeley 

 


News of the Weird

Staff
Wednesday March 20, 2002

Brooklyn on a diet 

 

NEW YORK — Is New York City’s largest borough getting just a little too large? 

Maybe so, says Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz. He is urging his fellow Brooklynites to go on a two-month diet. 

Starting in mid-April, Markowitz will establish weigh-in stations at hospitals and government offices all around Brooklyn, which has the largest population of the city’s five boroughs. 

Those who participate will have their starting weight recorded, which will be compared with their heft two months later. 

The slightly pudgy Markowitz won’t let his constituents go it alone. He says he’ll be the first to weigh-in. 

Losing weight could be tough in the borough famous for its rich foods, including cheese cake and hot dogs. 

 

How a good person turns bitter 

 

KEYSTONE, Iowa — A driver who tried to be a good Samaritan had his car stolen, then destroyed, when he stopped to help at the scene of a traffic accident. 

Billy Lee was driving his 1999 Ford Escort to work in dense fog when he saw an accident in front of him. 

He stopped within feet of hitting a van and pulled to the side of the road to check on the other driver. That’s when he noticed a man peering into his car. 

“I just didn’t feel right about it, so I started running toward my car,” he said. Lee was about 50 feet away when the man jumped in and left in Lee’s car. 

The man, identified by the Iowa State Patrol as Brenton Roberts, 21, crashed about two miles later. Authorities said he then took a pickup from someone who stopped to help. 

He finally surrendered after police shot out a front tire on the stolen truck. Roberts faces more than 17 charges. 

Lee, 51, managed to make it to work after all that happened and tried to look at the bright side. 

“As bad as it was, it could have been worse,” he said Monday. 

——— 

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — With wads of cash strapped to his body and hoping to make some people happy, Kevin Shelton gave away $1 bills while strolling through a mall. 

In two hours, Shelton says he gave away about $7,000 — with only smiles and “thank yous” to show for it. 

“It’s what I choose to do,” he said Friday after the cash giveaway. “I think it’s making an impact.” 

Shelton, 32, says he earned his money buying and selling real estate in the Tampa Bay area. 

Reactions at the International Plaza varied — from hugs to lectures for not giving the money to the poor. 

Most shoppers happily took the free money and walked away giggling. Some vowed to give it away. Others planned to buy a lottery ticket. 

Shelton began doling out cash last year as a way to brighten people’s day and spark generosity. He swears it’s not a gimmick. He says he doesn’t keep track of what he gives away, but guesses it’s in the tens of thousands. 

——— 

TERRE HAUTE, Ind. (AP) — Some mourners whined and others wept as police officers and their canine partners turned out at a memorial service for a police dog that was stolen from its cage and shot. 

“Some may think of him as just a dog, but the reason we’re here today is to remember someone we consider an officer,” Vigo County Sheriff Bill Harris said Monday during the service for Rocky, a Dutch shepherd. 

Rocky disappeared from his cage on March 6 and was found shot to death a week later north of West Terre Haute. Investigators believe the dog may have been shot in revenge for recent drug arrests. 

“Rocky wasn’t stolen and killed. Rocky was kidnapped and murdered,” said Deputy Charlie Funk, the dog’s handler, who was wearing a black ribbon across his badge. 

The warden at the U.S. Penitentiary in Terre Haute gave Rocky to the Sheriff’s Department in June 2000. 


Brazilian leader in social movement speaks tonight at La Peña

By Jia-Rui Chong Daily Planet staff
Wednesday March 20, 2002

One of the defining moments for Wanusa Pereira Dos Santos was when a heavily armed police force rushed a settlement of 300 families, chased them up a hill and then set fire to their homes.  

Even when the police packed them on a bus and dropped them somewhere far away, they went back and built up their lives again. 

“The important point is that these people didn’t give up. They showed how strong they were in looking after their own rights,” said Pereira, who will be speaking tonight at 7:30 p.m. at La Peña Cultural Center about Brazil’s Landless Workers’ Movement (MST). The event will be in English and Portuguese. 

Speaking to the Daily Planet through a translator, Pereira explained that she is in Berkeley to spread the word about the MST, Latin America’s largest social movement that works to redistribute land in Brazil.  

Because the Brazilian constitution says that land has a social purpose, it is legal to take land that is not being used “productively” and work it. The MST also builds houses, schools and health clinics. 

“We really want our story to reach those who are willing to listen,” said Pereira. 

“In the U.S. there are people who follow the government and those who think freely and want a different world to emerge.” 

Pereira, who got involved with the organization as a college student studying social work, will be talking tonight about the history of the MST, its current projects and the problems with mainstream thinking about globalization.  

One of Pereira’s main topics will be about the free-trade bill before the Senate – what the movement calls “NAFTA on steroids” – and its effects on the entire American region. 

Her speech will draw from her extensive experience as one of the coordinators of the movement’s political education program. She organizes classrooms in the settlements where the history of Brazil and its political movements are taught and practical ways of moving toward a new Brazil that is fair to workers is discussed. 

Constantly under attack by the government, and especially the media, the workers in the MST need to be aware of their own rights and history, said Pereira. 

“There needs to be a raising of consciousness so we can have confidence in ourselves and resist,” she said.  

Pereira’s visit is hosted by the San Francisco-based Friends of the MST, a network that supports the MST in America and holds public educational events.  

Because of her importance to the movement – and to workers’ movements worldwide – the FMST is organizing a nationwide tour.  

“She is one of the most significant contacts with community groups and social groups and organizations in the U.S. For those struggling on the ground here, she has a big impact,” said FMST Program Coordinator Dawn Plummer. 

La Peña was chosen as a venue for Pereira’s appearance in the Bay Area because the cultural center has not only hosted art events, but also political events, said Eric Leenson, co-founder of the center. 

Leenson, also one of the co-founders of the FMST, has seen first-hand the effects of MST’s land reforms. 

“There’s a sense of empowerment for people who were poor and the hopeless. Through the movement, they can see a future for themselves that had not existed before,” he said. 

This is not something that should be limited to Brazil, Leenson added. “It’s part of a bigger struggle for the average working person to have a say in the economic workings of society.” 

Tickets to the La Peña event are on a sliding scale of $5-$15. For more information on the MST and Pereira’s visit, go to the FMST Web site at www.mstbrazil.org.


Jury deliberates in dog mauling case

The Associated Press
Wednesday March 20, 2002

LOS ANGELES — The dog-mauling trial that began with a defense attorney crawling on the courtroom floor during her opening statement neared its end with a judge threatening to lock her up if she didn’t sit down and keep quiet. 

Jurors began deliberating the case on Tuesday following a stormy closing rebuttal by the prosecution during which Nedra Ruiz was rebuked for her interruption. “Take your seat now and do not get up again or your next objection will be made from the holding cell behind you,” Superior Court Judge James L. Warren warned. 

Ruiz represents Marjorie Knoller, who is charged with second-degree murder, involuntary manslaughter and owning a mischievous dog that killed a person. She was walking her two huge presa canario dogs when they mauled neighbor Diane Whipple to death in January of 2000. 

Knoller, 46, could get 15 years to life in prison if convicted. Her 60-year-old husband, Robert Noel, faces involuntary manslaughter and keeping a mischievous dog that killed a person and could get up to four years. 


Bush administration comes under fire, despite announcement to increase aid

The Associated Press
Wednesday March 20, 2002

MONTERREY, Mexico — Days after the United States promised a 50 percent increase in foreign aid, the Bush administration is coming under fire for not doing enough — and not doing it right. 

Former President Jimmy Carter said Tuesday that President Bush’s pledge to increase aid by $5 billion over a three-year period was a minuscule amount compared to the country’s overall wealth. 

“With President Bush’s commitment carried out, we’ll be giving 12 parts of out of 10,000 of our Gross National Product,” Carter said. “That’s a tiny bit.” 

Carter, who spoke on the second day of the U.N. International Conference on Financing for Development in the northern city of Monterrey, also expressed concerns about Bush tying that aid to political conditions. 

“I hope there won’t be any political aspects to it because most of our aid now is given for political purposes,” Carter said. 

“If we set down strict criteria that that country can’t receive assistance before they prove that they’re going to be efficient, they will never get any help,” he said. “So we’re going to have to be generous and not just be demanding.” 

Last week, Bush pledged $5 billion more in foreign aid, and suggested the money be given away in the form of grants to countries with relatively stable financial and political systems. U2 singer Bono, who has argued against saddling poor nations with too many loans, helped him make the announcement. 

On Tuesday, U.S. Undersecretary of State Alan Larson said at the conference that Bush will likely raise aid levels even further in the future if he sees countries making efforts to reduce corruption, build a democracy and open doors to business. 

European leaders, who pledged last week to increase aid levels by $20 billion by 2006, argue that giving money out in grants instead of loans could eventually drain World Bank coffers at a time when development aid levels are already declining. 

“We may not be able to do as much for the least-developed countries,” EU Development Commissioner Poul Nielson said Tuesday on the sidelines of the conference. “The role of the bank is a bank.” 

The World Bank says more than 95 percent of all loans are repaid, allowing it to continue to hand out credit to needy countries, and bank officials have expressed concern that too many grants could cause future problems.


Body identified in Russian mob probe

The Associated Press
Wednesday March 20, 2002

SACRAMENTO — A bound, strangled body pulled from a Sierra foothill lake last fall was identified Tuesday as that of a Los Angeles-area real estate developer. 

Authorities believe Meyer Muscatel was one of multiple victims of a Los Angeles-area Russian mafia group that has dumped Muscatel and at least four others into New Melones Lake near Modesto in the Central Valley. 

A fifth body — apparently that of a woman — was pulled from the lake Tuesday night, said FBI spokesman Nick Rossi. It is the fourth body recovered from the lake since Sunday, but the first female. 

Muscatel’s body was found floating in the lake Oct. 18, hands bound and a plastic bag over its head. The 58-year-old Sherman Oaks homebuilder disappeared Oct. 11 after telling his family he was going to a business meeting. 

Muscatel’s Calaveras County death certificate says he was “smothered by the hands of another.” His throat and lower face were crushed, the death certificate says, though some injury could have been caused by hitting the water. 


Game not yet over for SF’s Musee Mecanique

By Paul Glader The Associated Press
Wednesday March 20, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — For decades, the Musee Mecanique, a beloved collection of mechanical games once played in saloons, carnivals and boardwalk arcades, has been one of the most authentic and bizarre tourist attractions on the West Coast. 

Seranaded by 15 player pianos, visitors to the dark, crowded basement of the historic Cliff House dispense fistfuls of change as if they were in Las Vegas, buying cheap entertainment from the 160 antique, coin-operated machines. 

A couple of quarters can activate a mechanical baseball game, pick a fight against a chain-driven arm-wrestler or induce a mighty, half-crazed belly laugh from Laughing Sal, a giant female figure that stood near the Fun House at the city’s long-gone Playland-at-the-Beach from 1940 to 1972. 

“We wanted to come here before they close,” said Eulos Horn, who challenged his girlfriend to a hand-operated boxing game, National K.O Fighters, a crude pugilistic ancestor to Mortal Kombat and other video games. 

Attendance has tripled on weekdays and quadrupled on weekends in the month since the Musee’s owners, Ed Zelinsky and his son Dan, announced that they’ll have to find a new home or close down by September, when renovations begin on the seismically flawed roadhouse restaurant upstairs. 

The repairs have been delayed for years. “There is asbestos and the roof is falling in on them as we speak,” said Carrie Strahan, who is managing the renovation for the Golden Gate National Recreation Area. 

Eventually, the Musee will be housed in a visitor’s center to be built just up the hill from Ocean Beach, where Zelinsky, 76, will be able to display more of the 300 machines he began collecting at age 11. 

Meanwhile, they’re hoping to move to a temporary home without damaging the fragile machines, which are full of gears, pulleys and wooden parts. Dan helps keep them in working order, using tape to patch tears in the brittle rolls of piano music and quietly seething when visitors occasionally take out their anger on the games. 

Will it soon be Game Over for this accumulation of Americana? Nostalgia-lovers hope not. They’ve rallied with petitions, and local media have campaigned to save the Musee. 

“The future of the world’s greatest museum of two-bit machines — player pianos, fortunetelling, hockey, race-car and other games — is indeed uncertain,” the San Francisco Chronicle said. “If this hands-on chunk of history is lost, the entire region will be the poorer.” 


Abandoned cats found to be owned by SF woman

By Paul Glader The Associated Press
Wednesday March 20, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — A woman suspected of animal cruelty for hoarding cats in Petaluma is now under scrutiny in Sausalito, where police are investigating a batch of 50 felines living in squalid conditions. 

Marilyn Barletta, 63, walked into Sausalito Police headquarters Monday and complained that her cats had been seized from an office space she had been renting for a few months. 

A veterinarian who owns the building told police the cats were kept in filthy living conditions. 

“He had been receiving complaints from other tenants about the smell and cat noise,” Sausalito police spokesman Kurtis Skoog said. “He went in there and thought the cats were not being cared for.” 

Skoog says the landlord didn’t want animal control to destroy the animals and sent them to a cat rescue organization in Los Angeles. He also cleaned the office space. 

The Marin Humane Society and police are investigating before deciding whether to press charges for animal cruelty. 

“She wanted to get the cats re-acclimated after they were spayed. That’s what she said,” Skoog recalled. 

Barletta currently faces four felony charges of animal cruelty for keeping 196 cats at a home in Petaluma. If found guilty, she could face up to five years in prison. 

She was arrested May 22 and charged with one felony count of animal cruelty. She has pleaded innocent and posted $50,000 bail. 

Barletta lives in San Francisco but bought the two-story Petaluma house solely for the cats, driving from her San Francisco home to Petaluma daily to feed the animals, though the house soon fell into disrepair with cat feces and warped floors. 

Barletta’s attorney L. Stephen Turer said he just heard about the Marin County cat stash today. He said his client appears to have been keeping the cats with hopes of adopting them out to other people. 

Turer said he doesn’t think she has more cats in other places and isn’t sure where she gets all the cats. 

“I don’t know,” he said. “I have wondered myself where she finds them.” 


Oakland company gets maximum fine for wastewater violation

The Associated Press
Wednesday March 20, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — The federal government fined an Oakland metal finishing company $385,000 and sentenced the owner to six months house arrest Tuesday for diverting wastewater directly into the sewer. 

The fine, the maximum allowed under the Clean Water Act, followed a federal and local investigation, which was prompted by reports that E-D Coat, Inc. was bypassing wastewater treatment systems. 

The Environmental Protection Agency and East Bay Municipal Utilities District found that the company had installed a bypass valve in its building that sent wastewater contaminated with metals straight into the sewer. 

Jerry Rossi, 59, of Alameda, E-D Coat’s owner, chief executive officer and president, and Jack Marlow, the company’s supervisor of the wastewater treatment facility pleaded guilty to violating the Clean Water Act. They each were sentenced to three years’ probation, in addition to Rossi’s six-month house arrest, and each were ordered to pay a criminal fine of $215,000 in addition to the EPA’s $385,000 civil fine. 

The bypass valve could be operated with the flip of a switch, according to the EPA. The agency is uncertain how long the company was bypassing treatment, but the valve was built into the buildings. 

“Usually, in criminal cases, the industry has a hose and pump and they’re pumping at night into their toilet or something,” said Greg V. Arthur, an environmental engineer for Clean Water Act compliance at the EPA. “Nobody has built-in ways to get around the treatment system. Never have I seen that.” 

The bypass valve allowed cyanide-bearing waste streams to be treated in a first step to remove the cyanide and acid, but it then directed the waste past the second step, which removes metals, and sent it directly to the sewage system. 

The buildings also had concealed pipes that drained waste through bathroom connections into the sewer. That waste was completely untreated, and officials found that acid from that had corroded sewer lines along Fourth Street in Oakland. 

The metal waste also could have shut down operations at the sewage treatment plant because the plant uses bacteria to dispose of waste, and the metals are toxic to the bacteria.


BART shut down after white powder found

The Associated Press
Wednesday March 20, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Authorities shut down two BART stations and stopped all trains into and out of the city for about an hour Tuesday after white powder was found in one of the cars. 

Fire, police and hazardous materials crews were sent to the Powell Street station to investigate. 

BART Police Sgt. John Junier said the powder was tested and found to be harmless. It was first reported by a Bay Area Rapid Transit employee. 

Authorities had no idea how many commuters were delayed as they headed to the East Bay. 

“It was a big headache for everybody,” Junier said. 

Melissa Losasso, 23, was delayed about a half-hour as she headed home to Berkeley. She didn’t know that white powder had caused the closure until BART reopened at 7:45 p.m. 

“I’d rather take the bus home, but I’m here so I’ll risk it again,” she said. “It’s kind of scary, but you just have to live with it.” 

About 325,000 commuters use BART each weekday. 


HP shareholders narrowly approve $20 billion merger

By Brian Bergstein The Associated Press
Wednesday March 20, 2002

CUPERTINO — Hewlett-Packard Co. chief Carly Fiorina claimed victory Tuesday in the nasty proxy fight over the $20 billion purchase of Compaq Computer Corp., saying shareholders narrowly approved what would be the computer industry’s biggest merger. 

Shortly after a two-hour shareholder meeting in which she was booed and dissident director Walter Hewlett got a standing ovation, Fiorina said at a news conference that HP’s proxy solicitor had assured her the company would have enough votes to win. 

“It appears that our shareholders made a choice today, not only to embrace change, but to lead it,” Fiorina said. “We think we have a slim but sufficient margin, and we think it’s important to let people know that.” 

Hewlett, the HP heir who had harshly criticized Fiorina and led a five-month fight against the deal, said the claim of victory was premature. 

“In a proxy contest this close, where stockholders are changing their votes right up until the closing of the polls, it is simply impossible to determine the outcome at this time,” he said. 

HP’s claim came as somewhat of a surprise because, when the day began, nearly one-fourth of HP shares were publicly in Hewlett’s camp and less than 10 percent had come out in favor of the deal. But HP had claimed for a while to have a “silent majority.” 

Still, it will take several weeks to determine the official result of what appeared to be the closest corporate election in years. Independent proxy counters must verify each vote, and each side can challenge whether the proper people signed certain ballots. 

Only after the result is certified can HP and Compaq begin working together. Compaq shareholders are expected to easily approve the deal at a Houston hotel Wednesday. 

“We are very close to making this merger a reality,” said Compaq CEO Michael Capellas, who would be No. 2 at the new HP. 

HP shares fell 45 cents, more than 2 percent, to $18.80 on the New York Stock Exchange, where Compaq jumped 78 cents, 7.5 percent, to $11.14. 

HP and Compaq say the deal is essential for their survival in the consolidating computing industry. They believe that together they can dramatically improve their end-to-end packages for corporate customers, improve their slumping personal-computer divisions and generate $2.5 billion a year in cost savings. 

Hewlett contends HP is overpaying for Compaq, would get bogged down selling low-margin personal computers and services and can’t afford to risk the complex integration of the companies’ huge organizations. 

That disagreement turned into one of the most intriguing episodes in high-tech history, largely because HP is one of Silicon Valley’s marquee institutions and its late founders are still revered as visionary engineers. 

Fiorina, who was hired to lead the giant computer and printer maker in 1999 and ordered to shake the company up, had staked her reputation on the deal and was expected to resign if it failed. 

She had to overcome an initially hostile reaction from Wall Street after the Compaq deal was announced on Sept. 3, and then the opposition of Hewlett and Packard family interests with 18 percent of HP stock. Several large pension funds also opposed the deal. 

“She took a strong position based on what she believed in, and it’s to her credit that she followed through whether she wins or loses,” said Forrester Research analyst Charles Rutstein. “This has been a polarizing battle.” 

With the stakes so high, HP and Walter Hewlett each spent tens of millions of dollars to deluge HP’s 900,000 shareholders with letters, advertisements, telemarketers’ phone calls and multiple ballots. 

“I feel like I stepped out of my life and into an alternative universe, if you will, but it was definitely a cause that needed to be taken up,” Hewlett said after Tuesday’s shareholder meeting. 

Most investors already had mailed in their votes before the meeting, but many began lining up at dawn outside a Cupertino auditorium to cast ballots in person and watch Fiorina field questions. 

Gary Masching, who works for HP spinoff Agilent Technologies Inc., wore a green cape — in honor of Walter Hewlett’s green proxy cards — and tapped out a march on a drum while shareholders lined up. 

He said he decided to oppose the deal when HP derided Hewlett as a “musician and academic” without the business acumen to question the Compaq deal. “I was shocked,” he said. 

Mike Beman, 24, of nearby Los Altos, opposed the deal and came to the meeting to be part of Silicon Valley history. 

“The thing that swayed me was that the Hewlett and Packard foundations are both against it,” he said. “I really respect their opinions over that of the (HP) board.” 

Despite the viciousness of the proxy fight, the shareholder meeting was relatively civil. 

Hewlett spoke briefly from a microphone on the floor of the auditorium, thanking HP’s employees and stockholders for listening to his arguments against the deal. 

“For decades, HP has represented the best of what an American company can be,” Hewlett said, drawing applause from the audience of more than 1,000 shareholders — and Fiorina. No matter how the vote goes, he said, “I think that this has made us a stronger company.” 

When he concluded, he got a standing ovation. Fiorina applauded from her podium on the stage. 

Then shareholders had a chance to question Fiorina. Nearly all the investors who spoke were current or former employees. 

Some complained about how last year’s 7,000 layoffs at the company were handled and the 15,000 more that will come with the Compaq deal. 

When one man asked Fiorina about independent polls that found employees at three HP sites opposed the Compaq acquisition by a 2-to-1 ratio, she responded that internal surveys gave her confidence that most workers company-wide actually support the deal. 

Many in the crowd booed. 

Later, after declaring victory, Fiorina said she hoped to put the rancor of the proxy fight behind the company, and hoped to work with the Hewlett and Packard families in the future. 

When asked what she learned about herself during the contest, she replied: “I learned how much I love this company, and how much I’m willing to fight for what I believe in.” 

——— 

On the Net: 

Pro-merger site: http://www.votethehpway.com 

Opposition site: http://www.votenohpcompaq.com 


Siebel Systems expands its Utah operations

The Associated Press
Wednesday March 20, 2002

SALT LAKE CITY — Software company Siebel Systems will expand its business in Utah by building a data center and hiring about 600 employees by 2005, the company said Tuesday. 

Gov. Mike Leavitt said the move is a step toward achieving his goal of luring more high-tech companies to the state. He has promised to turn the state’s economy into a high-tech powerhouse in the 1,000 days that began last month when the Olympic torch arrived in Utah. 

The data center already being constructed near Salt Lake International Airport will provide Siebel’s customers and employees with 24-hour technical support. 

“This is not a satellite, but part of our core corporate infrastructure,” said Mark Sunday, spokesman for Siebel Systems, which was founded in 1993 in San Mateo, Calif. He said most of the jobs created would be highly paid, technical jobs that require computer science or engineering backgrounds. 

Sunday said some employees would be moved from California, but the majority would be hired in Utah. The company’s software helps keep track of sales and customer information. Corporations such as drug maker Amgen and computer maker IBM use it. 

Siebel already employs 125 support and sales workers at an office in Sandy. 

The 30,000 square-foot data center will open in June. In the case of an emergency, the center will serve as backup for computer systems in California, Sunday said. 

Siebel’s stock closed Tuesday at $34.80, down 4 cents. 

——— 

On the Net: 

Siebel Systems: http://www.siebel.com 


Senators review health department’s nuclear waste regulations

By Jennifer Coleman The Associated Press
Wednesday March 20, 2002

SACRAMENTO — Senators criticized Department of Health Services officials Tuesday for their recent regulation that allows the dumping of radioactive debris in regular landfills. 

The new regulations mirror federal guidelines for decommissioning nuclear sites and pose no threat to the public, said DHS Director Diana Bonta. 

Opponents of the new rules said the DHS didn’t anticipate what would happen to items with residual radioactivity after the nuclear sites were decommissioned and no longer regulated by DHS. 

Debris and buildings from those sites are now free to be deposited in neighborhood landfills, recycled into new consumer goods, or donated to schools or other organizations, said Sen. Gloria Romero, a Los Angeles Democrat and chairwoman of the Senate Select Committee on Urban Landfills. 

Romero has introduced a bill that would ban radioactive debris from regular landfills. 

Nearby residents already oppose attempts to expand landfills, Romero said. The process would be more difficult if “neighbors are saying, ’How can you assure us that you’re not going to dump low-level radioactive waste right next to my elementary school, or my football field, or put it into my child’s braces?”’ 

DHS discussed the state’s adoption of federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission regulations at a public hearing in October 2000. High-level nuclear waste from reactor cores and items that are toxic or highly radioactive are sent to licensed facilities out of state. 

Bonta stressed that the new guidelines tighten cleanup standards for contaminated sites. Previously, the state required sites to eliminate radioactivity. The new standard releases sites if they produce less than 25 millirem of radioactivity per year. 

Still, the new level is like having four additional chest X-rays each year, said Daniel Hirsch, president of the Committee to Bridge the Gap. 

And, he said, while one load of debris could have a very low level of radioactivity, the cumulative effect of repeated loads of debris to a landfill could create a hazard. 

State landfill regulators were also unhappy with the regulations, said former state Sen. David Roberti, now a member of the California Integrated Waste Management Board. Once the site is decommissioned, the debris delivered to landfills isn’t tracked. 

“No matter what the situation is, the individuals who are taking in the waste should know it,” said Roberti. 

Despite DHS’ assurances that the risk from such low levels of radiation is low, Roberti said he was “skeptical, given how long workers at landfills may be exposed.” 

Lawmakers should address “whether low-level radioactive waste belongs in landfills to begin with,” Roberti said. “People in California view municipal landfills as garbage dumps, not toxic dumps.” 

Bonta said her department would work with Romero on her bill, but Bonta predicted this issue would lead to “disputes among good, honest people trying to protect the public.” 

A representative of industries that use nuclear science said he hoped that Romero would hold another hearing and invite representatives from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission before moving forward with her bill. 

The bill would “expand the scope of radioactive materials that must go to a licensed facility, at the same time that we do not have a licensed facility in California,” said Alan Pasternak, technical director of the California Radioactive Materials Management Forum. 

Currently, nuclear sites in California can ship low-level waste to facilities in South Carolina or Utah, but the South Carolina facility is expected to stop accepting low-level nuclear waste in 2008, Pasternak said. That could put medical centers, universities and nuclear power plants in a bind if they can’t ship any of their waste, Pasternak said. 

“In a few years, Utah will have a monopoly on the disposal of radioactive waste,” he said. 

——— 

On the Net: 

Read the bill, SB1623, at www.senate.ca.gov 


A lone voice of dissent speaks at UC Berkeley

By Jia-Rui Chong Daily Planet Staff
Tuesday March 19, 2002

Peace should not be a pie in the sky, but a goal to strive for, said Congresswoman Barbara Lee, D-Oakland, who spoke at UC Berkeley Monday. 

In front of a cheering audience of 300, Lee delivered the first Ronald V. Dellums lecture, a lecture series created by the university to honor the Cal alum who held the 9th Congressional District seat before Lee. 

It was Dellum’s commitment to peace and justice that inspired the university to name a lecture series and a professorship in Peace and Conflict Studies after Dellum in 1999, said Chancellor Robert Berdahl.  

When discussing who should give the inaugural lecture, he and his colleagues had no difficulty choosing.  

“There was no one more suitable than Congresswoman Lee,” he said. 

Indeed, Lee, who is best known for being the only representative to vote against the Congressional resolution to give the president wide anti-terrorism powers, is proud to carry on the mission of her mentor Dellum.  

She is also a proud to support the program at her alma mater.  

“The goal of this program is to bring serious discussion of peace and conflict into the mainstream,” said Lee. 

Policy-makers, professors, citizens, journalists, and movie directors need to know that an military force is not the answer, she said. 

Although the events of Sept. 11 were horrifying, Lee said, Americans need to come away with more than just anger. 

“We need to have a stronger faith in democracy, the Constitution. We need to have a stronger faith in our fellow human beings. We need to look into the basic causes of terrorism, dedicate ourselves to peace and be more aware of the world around us.” 

But many have been critical of Lee’s idealism and dissenting vote on Sept. 14, including two protesters who held signs in front of the auditorium yesterday.  

“She refuses to stand up and help defend our country, though she was elected to serve and protect our country,” said Travis Ratliff, a first-year Cal student. 

Lee, however, defended her action and her patriotism in her lecture. 

“I believe that the lifeblood of democracy is the right to dissent. I believe that casting a no vote was the right vote,” she said. 

Lee acknowledged that pursuing peace might be hard work, but she exhorted progressives to keep fighting. 

“Peace must be a policy option. It must be on the table at all times. It should be, in reality, our only option,” she said. 

Cal students who attended the lecture said that listening to Lee made their respect for her grow. 

“A lot of communities outside Berkeley see the city and Barbara Lee as naive,” said Zach Rosenberg, a junior who majors in political science. 

But he was encouraged by her clear thinking and commitment to progressive ideals. “It proves the kind of strong, resolute conscience that Barbara Lee and Barbara Lee’s district really has,” he said. 

Berkeley resident Shauna Harris was also impressed by Lee’s passion. “I was struck by her conviction and her knowledge that there’s always a way out if you think about it.” 

While Lee’s lecture was an opportunity for the congresswoman to exhort activists to stave off cynicism, it was also an opportunity for the university to ask for donations. 

The university does not yet have enough money to create the Dellums professorship, said Katherine Cook, Development Coordinator for International and Area Studies, which oversees Peace and Conflict Studies.  

The university still needs to raise another $500,000, she said.


All-state thrower has got quite an arm

By Nathan Fox Daily Planet Correspondent
Tuesday March 19, 2002

A track meet is a circus it can be hard to find someone if you happen to be looking. And it doesn’t get any easier when all four teams at the meet (St. Mary’s is hosting Kennedy, Holy Names, and Albany on this particular spring afternoon) conspire to wear the same color. (Crimson, scarlet, cardinal? Right - red.) 

So you don’t look for all-state thrower — Kamaiya Warren — amidst the sea of sprinting, hurdling, and leaping red bodies; you listen. And soon you hear a coach, far across the turf at the discus ring, bellowing at the spotters - who are loitering, tape in hand, waiting to mark the landing of the next toss: 

“You need to back up! Hey! Baaaaaaaaack UUUUUUUUUUP!” 

Yes, that’s it - it’s Kamaiya Warren’s turn to throw. 

So you head across the grass toward the discus ring as the spotters, smart kids, move it back – way back – a good 30 feet past the longest previous toss of the day. They’re safe. 

Warren carefully takes her mark. Slowly she twists back, coiling, storing power; then, accelerating, she uncoils from the ground up: legs leading hips, hips leading shoulders, shoulders leading a trailing right arm – the disc is unleashed. 

The discus sails in a high, right-to-left curving arc. Gasps and a few whispered, awestruck curses from the varsity boys throwers standing nearby. The disc is still 25 feet up in the air as it flies over the heads of the dumfounded spotters out there on the turf, staring skyward, mouths agape - who were never in any danger after all. Not while they were standing so close like that, anyway. 

The tape measure, unwinding rapidly from its reel, jams. 

While the spotters work to untangle the tape, you are introduced to Kamaiya. Warren is 6-foot-1 and powerfully built; pretty, even in the middle of a track meet; and as you talk to her it becomes clear that she is the center of the discus ring - even when she is standing at its outskirts. 

A baseball comes bounding in from the adjacent diamond and it is Kamaiya Warren who hollers at the baseball players, “Hey! Can we get a warning, puh-LEASE?!” Cross-country runners keep making the dangerous mistake of running in front of the discus ring, instead of taking the wiser route, behind it, and it is Warren who redirects traffic. “If they would get hit with a discus I would feel dreadful,” she says. “I think they would feel worse,” she laughs, “physically. But I’d feel worse emotionally.” 

Finally, the discus measurement comes in: 131 feet, six inches. Nearly 50 feet better than the next-longest throw at the day’s meet – and nearly 30 feet less than her personal record of 158’2’’, set last year at the Meet of Champions in Sacramento. Why? 

“Oh - there are different ways to throw,” Warren says. “I only did a half-turn today, instead of a spin. I don’t have room here – I didn’t want to hurt myself.” 

Right. The Herculean toss you have witnessed is the best Warren can muster – with a half-turn, a half-effort - under confining circumstances. The discus ring at St. Mary’s, damaged last year during some nearby construction, is scheduled to be rebuilt sometime this month. 

Warren, a favorite to win the California girls discus at the state meet, failed last year to even qualify for that event: she fouled on all three of her attempts at her league meet, which by all accounts she should have won handily. So she didn’t throw at sections, and didn’t throw at state. You hate to do it, but you have to ask: What did that feel like? 

“If feels like you’ve been left in the middle of the desert by yourself and you have nowhere to go,” Warren says. “It hurt so bad. I was like ‘okay, my life is over, I can’t throw discus.’” 

Of course, it wasn’t really as bad as all that. Warren did qualify for the state meet in her second-best event, shot-put – and placed third. And this year, she’ll have another shot at both events. 

The 131’6’’ is more than enough to wrap up first place in today’s discus event, and the throwers head over to the shot-put area. Here, a different coach is running the show, with help from a different spotter, but as he calls Warren’s name from his clipboard he mimes, and mouths, the same message you heard yelled before: 

“Back,” he waves to the spotter, almost wearily. “Back. You just really need to move back…” 

And Warren once again establishes her dominance – heaving 44’1’’ on her first attempt. (The second-closest of all the day’s throws will come in at something slightly less than 30 feet.) Warren is overjoyed by her performance. 

“I never throw over 42 here,” Warren exclaims. “Oh – I’m going home and drinking non-alcoholic beverages all night!” 

There isn’t even a hint of pretension in her manner as she says this. Between throws, she is playing hop-scotch on the stepping-stones leading to the shot-put pit – and later, she is practicing her balance-beam on the railroad ties that encircle it. She is a delight, a nice girl who happens to live in a commanding body - a body that might someday take her to the Olympics. 

“I want to go at least once,” Warren says. “But a lot of [my competitors] are strong – they lift heavy – bench press, and squats. I don’t know - I’m just naturally big - and powerful.” 

2002 is the final year of throwing at St. Mary’s for Warren – and her final shot at the state title. She is currently weighing offers from UCLA and Arizona (both have offered a near-full ride), and is waiting for offers from Cal and Arizona State. (It is hard not to notice that she is wearing a golden UCLA sweatshirt between throws, but she says she owns sweatshirts from several different colleges.) 

“The only thing I’m not looking forward to is not throwing under my dad,” she says. Larry Warren has coached the St. Mary’s throwers during Kamaiya’s years there – just as he did a decade ago during her brother Ihsan’s career. (Kamaiya and Ihsan now hold all four St. Mary’s records for the shot-put and discus.) “Well – I’ll miss my dad, and I’ll miss all my friends.” 

Kamaiya is hugged by no less than five teammates and spectators during the short time you observe her. You get the feeling that everyone at the meet on this day will miss Kamaiya Warren as she moves forward – except, perhaps, for the spotters, who might be tired of moving back.


For pits sake

Megan Alexander Sacramento Area Animal Coalition
Tuesday March 19, 2002

Editor: 

 

Thank you for taking the time and effort to expose the issue of homeless pets in such a good light.  

Your story on Kristine Crawford's Search and 

Rescue Dogs was a wonderful ending for dogs that didn't have the best start in life, to say the least. Not only are they great examples of heroes, but they were almost overlooked as “throw aways” of our society.  

They now are giving back to the same society that shunned them. This story has so many different levels of humanity and healing.  

Thank you for bringing this story to light. 

 

Megan Alexander 

Sacramento Area Animal Coalition 


compiled by Guy Poole
Tuesday March 19, 2002


Tuesday, March 19

 

 

Berkeley Garden Club  

1 p.m. 

The Berkeley Garden Club will hold its Benefit Spring Tea and Professional Floral Design Demonstration. Sakae Sakaki will create both Ikebana and Western style arrangements. $7.50, 526-1083, bgardenclub@aol.com. 

 

Self Help Strategies and  

Techniques from Feldenkrais  

and Pilates 

noon - 2 p.m. 

Alta Bates, Auditorium - Herrick Campus 

2001 Dwight Way 

Arthritis Foundation Northern California Chapter fibromyalgia support group. 644-3273.  

 

The Destruction of Land and People: The Industry of  

Genocide 

6 - 8 p.m. 

UC Berkeley 

Tilden Room, 5th Floor of  

Martin Luther King Jr. Student Union Building  

Second symposium of the annual Breaking the Cycle, Mending the Circle Conference: Contemporary Issues of Genocide. This particular symposium is entitled The Destruction of Land and People: The Industry of Genocide. 642-4270.  

 


Wednesday, Mar. 20

 

 

City Commons Club, 

Great Decisions Program 

10 a.m. - noon 

Berkeley City Club 

2315 Durant Ave. 

Nunu Kidane, Epidemiologist, UC San Francisco; “AIDS in Africa.” $5. 848-3533. 

 

Prose Writers’ Workshop 

7 - 9 p.m. 

Berkeley/Richmond Jewish  

Community Center Library 

1414 Walnut St. 

From Op-ed to fiction, memoir to the feature article. Workshop format. Free. 524-3034. 

 

African Philosophy 

7 p.m. 

The Fellowship of Humanity 

390 27th St., Oakland 

We will interpret Nkrumah as a philosopher. Brief presentations followed by open discussion. 451-5818, HumanistHall@yahoo.com. 

 

Cealo is Coming 

7 - 9 p.m. 

St. John’s Presbyterian Church 

Fireside Room 

2727 College Ave. 

Gayuna Cealo is a Burmese monk who’s mission is to lead people to their true selves. $10 donation. 525-6472. 

 

Community Prayer Breakfast 

7:30 a.m. 

H’s Lordships Restaurant 

Berkeley Marina, 199 Seawall Dr. 

The 62nd year of the interfaith prayer breakfast celebrating spirituality in the community. $18. 549-4524, vicki@baymca.org. 

 


Thursday, March 21

 

 

Still the Source of Grace?  

Reading the Bible as a Gay Christian 

5 p.m.  

Pacific School of Religion chapel  

1798 Scenic Ave. 

With L. William Countryman, professor in biblical studies at Church Divinity School of the Pacific, and co-author with M.R. Ritley of 

“Gifted by Otherness: Gay and Lesbian Christians in the Church.” Free and open to the public. 849-8206. 

 

Simplicity Forum 

7 - 8:30 p.m. 

Claremont Branch Library 

2940 Benvenue Ave. 

People telling stories about the ways they have changed their lives by finding ways to work less, consume less, rush less, and have more time to build community with friends and family, as well as live more lightly upon the planet. 549-3509, www.simpleliving.net. 

 


Friday, March 22

 

 

City Commons Club 

12:30 p.m. 

Berkeley City Club 

2315 Durant Ave. 

Robert Kruger, first vice-president, and Larry Miller, certified financial planner and senior vice-president, Solomon Smith Barney; “Investing in the Market Post 9-11.” $1. 848-3533. 

 

Berkeley Women in Black 

noon - 1 p.m. 

Bancroft and Telegraph Ave. 

Standing in solidarity with Israeli and Palestinian women to urge an end to the occupation and push the peace process forward. 548-6310, wibberkeley.org. 

 

The Nature of Work: Joanna Macy and Matthew Fox in Dialogue 

7 - 9 p.m. 

University of Creation Spirituality 

2141 Broadway, Oakland 

Matthew Fox, Ph.D., founder and president of the University of Creation Spirituality, will engage in dialogue on the nature of work with Joanna Macy, Ph.D., an eco-philosopher and scholar of Buddhism, general systems theory, and deep ecology. $10-$15 donation. 835-4827 x29, www.creationspirituality.org. 

 

International Women’s Day Celebration 

7 p.m. 

Revolution Books 

2425 Channing Way 

Cultural and video presentations, speakers, discussion and refreshments. Donation requested. 848-1196. 

 

Berkeley Design Advocates 

Design Awards 

5:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Art Center 

1275 Walnut St. 

Design Awards for building projects in Berkeley will be presented by Berkeley Design Advocates (BDA). Projects completed over the past two years were selected based on their quality of design, how well they fit into their surroundings, their innovative qualities and how well they contribute to urban life. 528-2778. 

 


Saturday, March 23

 

 

5th Annual Summit – Last  

Chance for Smart Growth? 

10 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. 

Laney College Forum 

900 Fallon St., Oakland 

Regional public agencies will soon hold workshops to select from among three alternative visions for regional growth and finalize one Bay Area vision. Summit participants will learn about these alternatives and provide input that will affect future government policy. 740-3103, robert@transcoalition.org. 

 

Jazz Clinic 

2 p.m. 

Longfellow School for the Arts 

1500 Derby St. 

Terry Gibbs and the Mike Vax Jazz Orchestra will be holding a jazz clinic. $5, 420-4560, www.bigbandjazz.net. 

 

Berkeley Dispute  

Resolution Service 

10 a.m. - 2 p.m. 

BDRS Office 

1968 San Pablo Ave.  

The community is invited to learn about mediation and the conflict resolution services and resources available through BDRS. Children’s activities and refreshments provided. 428-1811. 

 

Hunger Hike in Joaquin Miller Park 

9:30 a.m. 

Ranger Station, Sanborn Dr. 

Hike through the East Bay redwoods while raising money to help people in need. Hikers are encouraged to collect pledges. Funds raised will benefit the Food Bank’s hunger relief efforts. $20. 834-3663 x327, ilund@secondharvest.org.  

 

Our School Information Event for  

Prospective Parents 

10 a.m. - noon 

St. John’s Community Center, Room 203 

2727 College Ave. 

An event for prospective parents to learn about Our School’s approach to education. 704-0701, www.ourschoolsite.ws.  

 

March and Rally for Justice  

11 a.m. 

12th & Broadway BART 

Assemble at BART then march to Oakland Federal Building, then 1 p.m. rally in Jack London Square. In support of airport screeners, port workers, and service industry workers and against all racist and anti-immigrant laws and policies. 524-3791, labor4justice@aspenlinx.com. 

 


Sunday, March 24

 

 

Invitational Karatedo Tournament 

11 a.m. 

Oakland YMCA Main Gymnasium 

2350 Broadway 

A tournament promoting Japanese Karatedo. Spectators are welcome and admitted for free. 522-6016, jbtown501@aol.com. 

 

Stagebridge’s 11th Annual 

Family Matinee Theatre and Ice Cream Social 

3 p.m. 

First Congregational Church 

2501 Harrison, Oakland 

Premiere of Linda Spector’s “Chicken Sunday and Other Grandparent Tales,” followed by an old fashioned ice cream social. $8 general, $4 children. 444-4755, www.stagebridge.org.  


Students work to curb the violence at BHS

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet staff
Tuesday March 19, 2002

About 100 Berkeley High School students conducted anti-violence workshops on campus Monday, kicking off a pupil-led effort to stem the violence at BHS. 

The students, mustered by Youth Together, an East Bay leadership development group, spoke in English classes throughout the day and reached more than 90 percent of the student body, according to organizers. 

“We’re trying to have a schoolwide conversation about violence,” said Josh Parr, Youth Together coordinator at BHS. 

Workshop leaders asked their peers to define violence and discuss how stereotypes can feed interracial conflict. They also distributed surveys to gauge students’ perceptions of violence and potential solutions. After compiling survey data, Youth Together plans to stage a forum on student-generated solutions and form committees to implement them. 

The organization is working closely with BHS deans of discipline Meg Matan and Robert McKnight. Matan, whose position was just created this year, said seeking student input is vital in any anti-violence efforts. 

“We need the kids,” she said. “It’s got to be a grassroots thing. The kids have to buy into it and have that voice.” 

But Youth Together and high school staff face serious obstacles. Matan said since she started work as a full-time dean in January, she has been surprised by the sheer volume of incidents that come across her desk, noting that there are at least two to three fights per week at BHS. 

Students in a freshman English class Monday told their own stories of hallway fights, street conflicts and a gang called “Tfflon” with members in Oakland and Berkeley who engage in on-campus violence. 

“Tfflon is (behind) a lot of the violence at this school,” said sophomore Risa Swarn, noting that her own brother, a former BHS student, is in the gang. 

Saima Shah, a Pakistani-American junior, added that many of the Middle Eastern students at the school have suffered from harrassment since Sept. 11. 

Students suggested that reporting a fight is not an option because word gets around, and aggressors threaten to beat accusers. 

Jasmine Stiggers, a BHS sophomore who led a number of workshops on Monday, added that anti-violence activities tend not to reach the most violent kids. 

“The people who are causing the problems aren’t going to class,” she said. 

With the district in serious financial trouble and $6 million in cuts on the horizon, Matan said expensive solutions are probably not an option. But, she said inexpensive new programs and greater promotion of existing, underutilized school services could have a significant impact. 

Matan said a peer mediation program run out of the guidance counselors’ office and counseling services available through the the high school’s health center are two examples of programs that could be better used. 

BHS senior Sarena Chandler, who is the student representative on the school board, agreed that BHS could make better use of existing resources. But ultimately, she said, a systematic approach is necessary. 

“We’re not dealing with the roots of violence,” she said. “When the home is failing to provide support, it’s the schools’ responsibility to raise children, to provide community.”


Poodles are smarter than to register as a Republican

Michael Katz Berkeley
Tuesday March 19, 2002

Editor:  

 

I was dismayed by your report that a Contra Costa County resident had illegally registered his poodle to vote as a Republican ("Man registered dog as Republican, gets jury notice," March 16). 

As a former poodle owner, I know these dogs to be highly intelligent and empathetic. If consulted in the matter, the average poodle would almost certainly prefer to register Democratic. 

 

Michael Katz 

Berkeley


Superintendent Lawrence to recommend City of Franklin closure

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet staff
Tuesday March 19, 2002

Superintendent Michele Lawrence will recommend that the Board of Education close City of Franklin Microsociety Magnet School next year at the board’s Wednesday night meeting. 

Lawrence originally recommended the move, which would save the financially-strapped district an estimated $326,000, in January, but reconsidered in the wake of strong parental opposition. 

In recent weeks, Lawrence suggested that the school might remain open next year during a long-scheduled refurbishing of the Virginia Street building. But, in a memorandum to the school board, included in the standard board packet released several days before each meeting, Lawrence argued that Franklin must close during construction. 

“After considerable analysis and consideration,” Lawrence wrote, “it has been necessary to now put forward the recommendation to close City of Franklin MicroSociety Magnet School.” 

Lawrence, who was out of town on district business Monday, wrote that the future, long-term use of the Franklin building is being studied. She noted that she will provide a recommendation in “late spring.” 

Lawrence and school board members have noted that there are many potential uses for the building, including a new elementary school and district office space. 

Lawrence’s memo recommends that Franklin parents get first choice of schools next year for their children. The memo recommends converting “flex rooms” at schools in the north and central sections of the city into classrooms to accommodate the influx. 

Lawrence also suggests that the system provide displaced Franklin students with bus service to any school in the district’s north and central zones. Busing will not be provided if a student chooses to attend a south zone school. 

Lawrence’s memo includes four reasons for the closure of Franklin: 

low enrollment, making the school expensive to maintain 

few parents have expressed interest in enrolling kindergartners next year, suggesting long-term enrollment problems 

several Franklin teachers may be laid off next year, disrupting the continuity of the specialized program, which is modeled after a small city 

the difficulties of housing students in the building during construction 

School board member Ted Schultz said he is likely to support Lawrence’s proposal at the Wednesday meeting. 

“I think that I’ll be supportive,” said Schultz. “It’s pretty well laid out there. they have very small enrollment.” 

School board president Shirley Issel said she will be interested to hear Franklin parents speak at Wednesday night’s meeting before making a decision, but added that she has not yet received any information that would convince her to abandon her current support for closure. 

School board member John Selawsky said in a Monday interview that he was still unsure how he would vote. He said he had questions about the true savings of the closure, especially given Lawrence’s offer to bus displaced Franklin students to new schools in the district’s central zone. 

Board members Terry Doran and Joaquin Rivera could not be reached Monday, but Rivera has been a vocal proponent of closing the school. 

Parents reached Monday were upset with the proposal. 

“I’m very disappointed that that is her recommendation,” said Karen Ransom, mother of a Franklin third-grader. “It’s going to be extremely disruptive.” 

Ransom said that, when Lawrence announced her reconsideration of the Franklin closure, parents thought they would have a substantial voice in determining the eventual fate of the school. 

“My impression was that we would have some say,” Ransom said. 

Franklin PTA president Carla Campbell, parent of third- and sixth-graders at the school, said the district has handled the whole situation poorly. She said, in the future, the district should inform parents of school closures earlier in the year so they are in a better position to make preparations for the subsequent fall. 

Campbell said she will present the findings of a parental survey on what to do about Franklin at the Wednesday meeting. 


Oakland should not name street after terrorist

Mark Johnson Berkeley
Tuesday March 19, 2002

Editor: 

 

As if Oakland didn't have enough of an image problem (can you say Ebonics?), now it is naming streets after terrorists like the IRA's Gerry Adams (Daily Planet, Mar 16-17). 

Perhaps the city council thinks it will be a tourist attraction and will continue the theme by naming nearby streets after other terrorists. Maybe there's a four-way intersection where Gerry Adams Way could meet Mohammed Atta Avenue, Timothy McVeigh Street, and Ahmed Ressam Road. 

 

Mark Johnson 

Berkeley 

 

 

 


School, city officials meet with Justice dept.

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet staff
Tuesday March 19, 2002

Carol Russo, conciliation specialist for the U.S. Department of Justice, has held a series of meetings with city and school officials in recent weeks focused on violence at Berkeley High School, according to a spokesperson in Mayor Shirley Dean’s office.  

Russo, based in the department’s Western Regional Field Office in San Francisco, has not returned repeated calls from the Planet. Superintendent Michele Lawrence has referred queries to Dean’s office. 

“The meetings focused certainly on increasing safety at the high school through better communication between the city and the school district,” said Jennifer Drapeau, Dean’s chief of staff. 

Drapeau said city and school officials focused, in particular, on improving coordination between the police department and the school’s security staff. 

Drapeau said Russo held meetings with city and school officials, including Dean and Lawrence, on Feb. 11 and Feb. 25. She said Russo met with Dean alone, during a round of information-gathering meetings, several weeks prior to the Feb. 11 meeting.


Library Gardens not insync with neighborhood

Josephine Arasteh Berkeley
Tuesday March 19, 2002

Editor:  

 

When the Berkeley Central Library reopens on April 6th, Library patrons will most certainly welcome all the improvements that have been made (A few months ago when I toured the building with other Foundation contributors, even then, in its unfinished state, the Library was magnificent.) But is anyone ready for other changes on Kittredge? Coming soon right next to the Library (on the site of the current Hinks parking garage) will be a mega-development, Library Gardens, the biggest non-University housing project ever built in Berkeley and more than twice the size of the Gaia Building. How big? Five buildings, four stories of apartments in each, all built over three levels of parking. It will have 176 units with 320 bedrooms in an area of just 1.5 acres. The parking structure will be much larger than Hink’s.  

This project did not get much public comment, perhaps because it is downtown, has few residential neighbors and thus is not a NIMBY issue. Yet it will have two prominent public-supported "institutional" neighbors, the Central Library next door and Berkeley High School on Milvia. (The property lines of BHS and Library Gardens are just 140 feet apart.) 

In late February the City Council dismissed without discussion an appeal of Library Gardens. The appeal showed quite plainly that essential environmental review for the project vis-à-vis both the Central Library and BHS had not been done. In the case of the Library, the environmental study did not assess the impact of the project on the functioning of the Library.  

However, the larger issue concerns BHS. The environmental review ignored entirely the new BHS buildings going up along Milvia just west of the project. Two buildings, a PE Building and an Administration/Commons Building, will extend in an unbroken line from Bancroft to Allston Way with a pedestrian gate between them at the foot of Kittredge. This gate will be a primary entrance to the BHS campus. In practical terms, large number of students will exit through the gate, cross Milvia, and walk up the street past the project to the Central Library and downtown. The combination of project traffic and vehicle drop-off and pick-up of students at the Kittredge-Milvia intersection will produce congestion hazardous to both pedestrians and drivers. Further, the Kittredge entrance to the new parking structure will be moved west toward the intersection.  

 

Aware of the inadequate environmental review of Library Gardens on BHS, I was appalled by John DeClercq’s recent open letter to the BUSD Superintendent urging her not to compromise BHS school safety in the current budget crisis, and even to increase funding to ensure student safety. Yet, as the major spokesperson for Library Gardens, Mr. DeClercq obviously gave no thought to the safety of 3000 BHS students when presenting the project’s environmental review.  

On April 6th when Library visitors look out the impressive bank of windows westward over Hink’s Garage toward the High School, they may not know that a massive apartment complex and a stretch of new high school buildings will soon obliterate their vista. They will be standing in a public building that was generously renovated by a voters’ bond measure and looking out toward new construction on the BHS campus, also funded by a voter bond measure. But in between will be a privately built residential complex out of sync with the neighbors. Library patrons, as well as BHS students and parents, may want to ask their City Council members what they had in mind when they dismissed the appeal without discussion or any attempt to get broad public comment. 

 

Josephine Arasteh 

Berkeley 


Today in History

Staff
Tuesday March 19, 2002

March 19 is the 78th day of 2002. There are 287 days left in the year. This is the date the swallows traditionally return to the San Juan Capistrano Mission in California. 

 

Highlight in History: 

On March 19, 1920, the U.S. Senate rejected, for a second time, the Treaty of Versailles by a vote of 49 in favor, 35 against, falling short of the two-thirds majority needed for approval. 

 

On this date: 

In 1859, the opera “Faust” by Charles Gounod premiered in Paris. 

In 1917, the Supreme Court upheld the eight-hour work day for railroads. 

In 1918, Congress approved Daylight-Saving Time. 

In 1931, Nevada legalized gambling. 

In 1941, Jimmy Dorsey and Orchestra recorded “Green Eyes” and “Maria Elena” for Decca Records. 

In 1945, about 800 people were killed as Kamikaze planes attacked the U.S. carrier Franklin off Japan; the ship, however, was saved. 

In 1945, Adolf Hitler issued his so-called “Nero Decree,” ordering the destruction of German facilities that could fall into Allied hands. 

In 1951, Herman Wouk’s war novel “The Caine Mutiny” was first published. 

In 1976, Buckingham Palace announced the separation of Princess Margaret and her husband, the Earl of Snowdon, after 16 years of marriage. 

In 1979, the U.S. House of Representatives began televising its day-to-day business. 

Ten years ago: Democrat Paul Tsongas pulled out of the presidential race, leaving Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton the clear favorite to capture their party’s nomination. 

Five years ago: Following the withdrawal of Anthony Lake, President Clinton nominated acting CIA Director George Tenet to head the nation’s spy agency. President Clinton departed Washington for his summit in Helsinki, Finland, with Russian President Boris Yeltsin. Artist Willem de Kooning, considered one of the 20th century’s greatest painters, died in East Hampton, N.Y., at age 92. 

One year ago: California officials declared a power alert, ordering the first of two days of rolling blackouts. 

 

Today’s Birthdays: Former White House national security adviser Brent Scowcroft is 77. Actor-director Patrick McGoohan is 74. Theologian Hans Kung is 74. Author Philip Roth is 69. Actress Renee Taylor is 69. Actress-singer Phyllis Newman is 67. Actress Ursula Andress is 66. Singer Clarence “Frogman” Henry is 65. Rock musician Paul Atkinson (The Zombies) is 56. Singer Ruth Pointer (The Pointer Sisters) is 56. Actress Glenn Close is 55. Actor Bruce Willis is 47. Rock musician Gert Bettens (K’s Choice) is 32. Actor Craig Lamar Traylor (“Malcolm in the Middle”) is 13.


Car-free downtown could be a reality for Berkeley

By Jia-Rui Chong Daily Planet staff
Tuesday March 19, 2002

Berkeley could soon join cities like San Francisco that regularly set aside a car-free area, if a project presented last week to the city’s Transportation Commission is given the green light. 

At Thursday night’s meeting, Transportation Commissioner Dean Metzger proposed that, as part of the national Try Transit Week, a rectangle of downtown Berkeley could be reserved for buses, bicycles and pedestrians on Sept. 7 and 8 at the end of that special week. 

The car-free area would be bordered by University Avenue, Oxford Street, Bancroft Way and Milvia Street. 

Though many people have complained – loudly – about the city’s transit situation, Metzger said he has seen very little leadership in the matter. The city usually does nothing for Try Transit Week, so Metzger thought he would put forth a concrete proposal. 

He also named the groups that would need to be involved: the city, UC Berkeley, AC Transit and several citizens’ groups. 

“It’s an attempt to see if there’s support for a car-free downtown,” he said. 

If the weekend is successful, Metzger said, Berkeley could hold an event like this once a month or once every three months. 

Dave Campbell, president of the Bicycle Friendly Berkeley Coalition said he liked the idea of a car-free day and pointed to the success of car-free Sundays in Golden Gate Park in San Francisco. 

“We’re taught that the roadway is for vehicles and for vehicles only, that it is not part of the community,” said Campbell.  

“This would return the streets to the community.” 

But businesses like the Santa Fe Bistro, whose patrons are very likely to drive in to downtown, are concerned that a car-free downtown could affect business.  

“If they provide parking spaces for people, it could be a good thing. But considering the shortage of parking spaces at present, it could be a problem,” said the bistro’s manager, Mohsen Kamrani. 

Kamrani’s concerns were echoed by the merchant’s group, Downtown Berkeley Association. 

“The car-free weekend would have to be well-publicized in advance,” said Deborah Bahdia, the association’s executive director. 

“Some customers might now know in advance, get angry, turn around and decide never to come back to downtown. That’s how some people make decisions,” she said. 

Bahdia said she only became aware of the idea on Sunday, but hopes that if the project goes through, the DBA will be involved. 

Councilmember Dona Spring, whose district includes the downtown area in Metzger’s proposal, said that while she was fond of the idea, the city would have to make sure to involve the businesses. 

“Saturday is a big day for businesses in downtown Berkeley,” she said. “A lot of people go shopping on Saturday so they have to try to be sensitive to businesses that need to clear a profit each day,” said Spring. 

Peter Hillier, assistant city manager for transportation, cautioned that the proposal was still in the early stages. 

Although the commission deemed Metzger’s plan interesting enough to think about, it has not yet begun to hammer out the devilish details. 

“What is critical is the extensive planning,” said Hillier. “It is key that stakeholders are part of the planning process.” 

“But the likelihood that it is done this year is really slim,” he said.  

Hillier said that his office is so busy with other transit projects in the works – including talks with AC Transit about shortening bus routes to keep them on schedule and expanding the Eco Pass program for free AC Transit rides – that the car-free weekend is not a high priority. 

Metzger said that a subcommittee meeting on Thursday can move the process along, but he was not optimistic that anything could be decided before the next Transportation Committee meeting in late April.


A letter from Japan: Berkeley inspires peace movement

By Steve Freedkin Special to the Daily Planet
Tuesday March 19, 2002

OSAKA, Japan — Berkeley activists have no idea. Sure, we realize our efforts at building a more just, barrier-free, environmentally sound community have made a difference in the lives of people living in our town. We may even realize that some other U.S. communities have adopted a few of our better ideas. 

But here in Japan, halfway around the world in a country whose culture pre-dates ours by thousands of years, peace and justice activists have elevated our fair city to a virtual Valhallah, and have dedicated themselves to emulating our way of life. 

I am in Japan at the invitation and expense of Linking Peace and Life (LPL), a grassroots group that brings together activists focused on a range of progressive causes. I will be meeting with activists and public officials in Osaka, Sakai, Tokyo, Hiroshima, Kyoto, Kobe, and Hirakata through March 25. 

 

Afghanistan Resolution Attracts Attention 

Berkeley first came to LPL’s attention in late September, when our City Council passed (just barely) a resolution condemning the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11 and calling for an end to the bombing of Afghanistan as soon as possible. Since that time, LPL has sent a succession of delegations to Berkeley to express their thanks and to study our approaches to environmental protection, disability rights, homelessness, and ethnic harmony. (They love the multi-ethnic theme of our city logo.) Most particularly, they are fascinated by Berkeley’s extensive system of citizen advisory commissions. 

Their awe of our community can be discerned in the title of the peace conference at which I spoke Sunday: “Advance with Berkeley To Create Peaceful Communities.” Though our town may seem far from perfect to us, in the eyes of these Japanese justice advocates we are a powerful inspiration. Seeing the meeting rooms adorned with the Berkeley logo, hearing the speeches peppered with frequent references to “Buh-kuh-lee,” meeting public officials and community leaders who look to us for inspiration and guidance, one is overwhelmed by the impact our local efforts are having on this side of the international dateline. 

 

Young People Especially Inspired 

Among the activists I've met in my first two days in Osaka, I've been heartened by the young people who are particularly enamored of Berkeley and seek to learn from us how to organize for social change. 

Tetsu Okada, 18, feels he was born 40 years too late and on the wrong side of the Pacific. Inspired by reading Berkeley in the ‘60s and studying the hippie govement (which, he says, inspired his long hair), the philosophy graduate student hopes someday to live in a commune, but worries that flower-power ideals may have been found to be unrealistic. Speaking fluent English peppered with frequent exclamations of “that’s cool,” he plans to move to London and volunteer with homeless activists in the squatter’s movement. (Osaka has about 6,000 homeless, according to an LPL official.) He is seeking contacts with Berkeley co-housing communities and with Berkeleyans promoting alternative energy. 

Miha Kawashima, a personal aide to disabled people in Kyoto, is organizing the Earth Day parade in her city on April 21, and hopes to have an exchange of greetings between that event and Berkeley’s Earth Day festival. She is interested in promoting community self-governance, and in protecting the dugong, the manatee-like sea mammal whose habitat is threatened by U.S. plans for a new military base off the coast of Okinawa at Japan's southern end. 

According to Misao Inoue, the LPL leader who invited me and is coordinating my visit, the influx of young activists into the Japanese peace-and-justice community began after Sept. 11, as cynicism has given way to heightened desire to take action. To make the younger activists welcome, grassroots organizations have adjusted their meeting styles, abandoning the formal, highly structured speech-making format in favor of dialogue interspersed with protest songs, skits, and cultural performances. Public outreach activities have included setting up wireless Internet terminals in public places where passersby can stop and send messages to public officials. LPL has gathered thousands of petition signatures since Sept. 11 and held major demonstrations, including one that numbered in the thousands. 

 

City-Level Strategy Inspired by Berkeley 

Japanese peace activists, whose efforts in the past have been more symbolic and educational, are now working overtime to develop approaches that can change national and international policies. To LPL’s strategists, Berkeley’s actions are a guide. In Japan, citizen input at the national level is quite limited. Policies are set by the political parties, and elected officials rarely stray from them.  

Legislators seldom speak at public events or meet with citizens. Inspired by Berkeley, LPL has devised a strategy of pressuring local governments to take stands on national and global issues as a way to affect Japan’s national leadership. It may prove more effective here than in the U.S. 

The effort is already showing results. Hidetoshi Oguri, an LPL member from Tokyo, said the Tokyo city council adopted his group’s Afghanistan proposal unanimously. Considering the 5-4 vote in Berkeley, perhaps we're observing another instance of the old maxim, “the student soon surpasses the teacher.” 

 

Steve Freedkin, a member of Berkeley's Peace and Justice Commission and publisher of the activist Web site ProgressivePortal.org, is in Japan for 11 days of meetings with grassroots activists and public officials.


Mauling prosecutor calls dogs ‘time bombs’

By Linda Deutsch The Associated Press
Tuesday March 19, 2002

LOS ANGELES — Against a backdrop of bloody autopsy pictures, a prosecutor implored jurors Monday to convict two San Francisco dog owners in the mauling death of a neighbor, calling the animals “time bombs.” 

“There were earlier explosions but this time they killed a woman,” Assistant District Attorney Jim Hammer told the jury, which was expected to hear defense arguments later in the day and begin deliberations on Tuesday. 

Holding up a cast of the gaping teeth of the dog that killed Diane Whipple, the prosecutor pointed to the defendants and said, “Do not let them get away with their lies and don’t let Marjorie Knoller get away with murder.” 

Knoller, an attorney, is charged with second-degree murder, involuntary manslaughter and owning a mischievous dog that killed a person. She could receive 15 years in prison if convicted. Her husband, Robert Noel, also an attorney, is charged with the latter two crimes and faces up to four years if convicted. 

Hammer recounted a television interview in which Knoller was asked if she took responsibility for Whipple’s death. 

“And cold as ice she said, ’No, she should have closed her door. That’s what I would have done,”’ Hammer said. 

Hammer ridiculed Knoller’s testimony in which she painted herself as a hero who tried to save the life of Whipple, 33, who was mauled as she brought groceries to her San Francisco apartment on Jan. 26, 2001. 

Knoller claimed she threw her body on top of Whipple’s to protect her from the raging dog, Bane, one of two massive presa canario dogs the couple kept. 

But it was too late by then, Hammer argued, asserting that Knoller and Noel should have already been aware that their dogs could become killers at any moment. 

He showed ajurors charts recounting the testimony of more than 30 witnesses who said that Bane and the other dog, Hera, lunged at them, barked and growled, in one case bit a man, and terrorized people in their building and outside. 

“By Jan. 26 it was not a question of whether someone was going to be mauled,” Hammer said. ”... The only question was when and who and where. That is the issue in this case: What did they know before Jan. 26? They knew they couldn’t control the dogs and they knew what the dogs could do.” 

Hammer pointed to a letter in which Knoller said that if Bane were to get away from her she could not stop him, and comments by Noel that his wife alone could not control the dogs. 

Nevertheless, he said, Noel left their apartment that morning, leaving his wife alone to take care of Bane and Hera. 

“That was reckless and flagrant disregard because they didn’t give a damn about people,” the prosecutor said. 

Holding up the mold of Bane’s teeth, he said, “With the size of these teeth and what these teeth have already done ... that is 100 percent notice of the danger of these dogs and it didn’t mean a damn thing to them.” 

The prosecutor showed a picture of Noel’s nearly severed finger, taken after he was bitten by Bane while trying to break up a dog fight. He also showed photos of Knoller’s cut hands after Whipple’s death. The defendant claimed the injuries were the result of trying to save Whipple. 

“My mother gets worse wounds gardening,” the prosecutor said. “Compare those to what happened to Diane Whipple.” 

With that he projected on a huge screen the gruesome, bloody photos of Whipple’s mangled neck, bitten arms and legs and crushed larynx. 

Hammer also said it did not matter that Noel was not present during the fatal attack because he set events in motion by his earlier actions. 

He said the entire tragedy began when Knoller and Noel became involved with two Pelican Bay State Prison inmates who had a plan to raise guard dogs for the benefit of the Aryan Brotherhood, a violent prison gang. 

“These prisoners didn’t choose poodles,” he said. “They didn’t chose lap dogs. They wanted tough dogs. Presa canarios were meaner than pit bulls.” 

Knowing all of that, he said, Knoller and Noel agreed to raise the dogs. 


Mother, two sons die in apartment blaze

The Associated Press
Tuesday March 19, 2002

DALY CITY — A woman and her two young sons died Monday when they were overcome by thick smoke while trying to escape an apartment fire, officials said. 

The 34-year-old woman and the boys, ages 3 and 6, were found in a second-floor hallway. Four other residents were taken to hospitals for treatment, according to Daly City Fire Marshal David Dewey. 

The three succumbed to smoke inhalation in a stairwell after smoke from the fire poured through an open fire door on the second floor, Dewey said. 

“It was really needless. People made a tragic decision and went from and area that was safe into an area that was not safe,” Dewey said. The woman’s mother, who stayed in the apartment and went to the balcony, survived. 

The victims’ names were being withheld pending notification of family members, Dewey said. 

About 50 firefighters battled the four-alarm blaze, which began around 2:30 a.m. It was contained about 4 a.m. 

No firefighters were injured in the fire, which apparently broke out on the second floor of the building and burned up into the third floor, Dewey said. 

Investigators suspect the origin may have been a malfunction in a lamp in a second-floor unit, though the damage in the apartment was so bad that was little evidence left, according to Dewey. 

Thirty people were displaced by the flames. They were taken by bus to the nearby Serramonte Shopping Center to be fed and interviewed by investigators. 


eBau expands its auction market to China

By May Wong The Associated Press
Tuesday March 19, 2002

SAN JOSE — Hoping to gain a foothold in one of the world’s fastest-growing Internet markets, online auctioneer eBay Inc. has bought a 33 percent stake in Chinese auction site EachNet. 

Ebay said Sunday it will invest $30 million in EachNet, the leading online trading community in China with 3.5 million registered users. 

San Jose-based eBay, which has more than 42 million registered users around the world, has been eagerly eyeing more Asian expansion. 

“Over the next three to four years, China’s e-commerce revenue is projected to grow nearly twelvefold to more than $16 billion,” said Meg Whitman, eBay’s president and chief executive. “Together with EachNet, eBay will be well positioned to help develop this emerging market and benefit from its growth long term.” 

The EachNet deal is eBay’s second move in Asia in less than a month. 

In February, eBay said it would acquire Taiwanese auction site NeoCom Technology Co. Ltd., paying $9.5 million in cash and a yet-to-be determined amount of working capital. NeoCom claims to be the leading Internet auction company in Taiwan as measured by the total value of goods bought and sold on the site. 

And a year ago, eBay acquired a majority stake in South Korea’s largest online auction business, Internet Auction Co. Ltd., for about $120 million. 

Ebay entered the Japanese market in 2000 but will close that site on March 31 in a rare sign of defeat. Even without charging user fees there, eBay ranked a distant fourth in the market and never got close to Yahoo! Japan Corp., which is that country’s No. 1 player in online auctions. 

Today, China has more than 27 million consumers online, making it the world’s fifth-largest Internet population behind the United States, Japan, Germany and the United Kingdom. 

Citing market research from the International Data Corp., eBay said China is the fourth largest e-commerce market in Asia, and its online commerce is expected to nearly double every year for the next four years. 

“Ebay is preparing for the growth there though it’s still a question of when the market will really take off,” said Jeetil Patel, analyst with Deutsche Banc Alex. Brown. “But it’s better for eBay to be early than late.” 

Patel said eBay could even hasten the growth in the China e-commerce market by bringing its online expertise. 

EachNet was founded in Shanghai in August 1999 by two U.S.-educated Chinese entrepreneurs, Bo Shao and Haiyin Tan. 

Under the deal with EachNet, eBay will have the right to further expand ownership. Whitman and Matt Bannick, senior vice president of eBay’s international business, will join EachNet’s board of directors. 

EBay said the investment is not expected to have a material impact on net revenue or operating expenses this year. 

——— 

On the Net: 

http://www.ebay.com 


BofA offers apologies, little explanation for weekend ATM outage

The Associated Press
Tuesday March 19, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Bank of America offered more apologies than explanations Monday for a computer failure that temporarily blocked electronic deposits to customers in California, Nevada and Arizona during the weekend. 

A data processing problem prevented the Charlotte, N.C.-based company from registering direct deposits that were supposed to transfer Friday night to thousands of customer accounts. The glitch alarmed customers who checked their balances Saturday only to discover the money wasn’t in their accounts. 

By switching to a backup system, BofA credited the deposits to affected accounts by early Sunday morning, spokesman Harvey Radin said. The bank wouldn’t say how many customers were affected by the outage. The Los Angeles Times reported about 1.1 million BofA customers didn’t get their money on time. 

BofA plans to reimburse customers for any fees they may be charged because of the late deposits. 

The weekend lapse is unlikely to cause mass customer defections from BofA, predicted industry analyst Joseph Morford. 

“It’s just part of the price people pay to have an account at a big bank,” he said. “The service can be disappointing at times.” 

The breakdown shouldn’t raise concerns about the reliability of BofA’s direct deposit system, Radin said. 

“Hopefully, this won’t shake anyone’s confidence in direct deposit. It’s a great service,” he said. 

——— 

On The Net: 

http://www.bankofamerica.com 


HP, Hewlett make last-minute bids for support on Compaq vote

By Brian Bergstein The Associated Press
Tuesday March 19, 2002

CUPERTINO — The five-month fight over the computer industry’s biggest merger neared its conclusion Monday with Hewlett-Packard Co., Compaq Computer Corp. and dissident HP director Walter Hewlett making last-minute bids for investor support. 

HP’s shareholder vote last Tuesday shaped up as one of the closest corporate elections in history. HP and Hewlett both claimed to have momentum, but would not publicly predict victory. 

Like political candidates on election eve, Hewlett, HP chief Carly Fiorina and Compaq CEO Michael Capellas hit the phones to lobby big shareholders who might not have made up their minds. 

“This company has a lot of investors, and every one of them is going to count,” said Hewlett spokesman Todd Glass. 

HP believes buying Compaq, in a stock deal now worth $21 billion, would give it more complete technology packages for corporate customers, improve the economics of its struggling personal-computer division and squeeze out $2.5 billion in annual cost savings. 

Hewlett, son of one of HP’s late co-founders, says HP is overpaying for Compaq, would get bogged down selling low-margin PCs and services, and can’t afford to risk the complex integration of the companies’ massive organizations. 

The company and Hewlett have swamped HP’s 900,000 shareholders with letters, advertisements, telemarketers’ phone calls and multiple ballots, since investors can change their votes as many times as they want, with only the last one counting. 

Most investors have mailed their proxies, but at least 1,000 shareholders are expected to come to an auditorium in Cupertino to cast their votes in person today. 

Many Hewlett supporters have told his advisers they will wear green T-shirts in honor of the green proxy card they will cast against the deal. The company’s proxy cards are white. 

Fiorina will begin the meeting by declaring the polls open and making a presentation. Hewlett will get to speak next — though HP noted that it didn’t legally have to give Hewlett any time at all. Fiorina will take questions from the audience. The event could last a few hours. 

Afterward, HP or Hewlett will claim victory or say the race is too close to call. In either case, the results will not be official for weeks, because independent proxy counters painstakingly will have to verify each vote. Each side also can challenge whether the proper person signed a particular proxy form. 

While the shareholder meeting will provide some insight into what some individual owners of the company think of Fiorina’s and Hewlett’s ideas, the event’s significance is limited, said Charles Rutstein, an analyst at Forrester Research. 

“I think it’s symbolic, but nothing more,” he said. “The decisions are being made outside that room, not inside that room.” 

Indeed, many investors already have made their decisions — and an unusual amount of them have disclosed their positions. 

Including the Hewlett and Packard families and foundations, about 22 percent of HP stock has already come out against the acquisition. About 9 percent has said it is in favor. 

HP executives believe a “silent majority” of investors will approve the deal, but Hewlett’s camp also is encouraged by the number of no votes found in the proxies already mailed in. 

Rarely do proxy fights turn into such cliffhangers, said Charles Elson, director of the Center for Corporate Governance at the University of Delaware. 

“Usually you get a pretty good sense of how it’s going to go one or two days out. The fact that neither side is claiming victory shows that this ranks up there as one of the closer ones,” Elson said. “It’s going to go down to the wire.” 

No such mystery surrounds Compaq’s stockholder vote Wednesday in Houston. The deal is expected to be overwhelmingly approved there, largely because of the premium HP is paying for Compaq shares. 

Befitting the bruising nature of the proxy fight, the final day before the HP vote featured a squabble over each side’s public statements. 

Hewlett said HP insulted its individual shareholders when an undisclosed member of the company’s camp told a newspaper that HP was winning support from “elephants” — big investors — but was “getting eaten alive by the fleas.” Hewlett demanded an apology. HP denied the statement was made by anyone at the company. 

HP shares rose 20 cents, about 1 percent, to $19.25 Monday on the New York Stock Exchange, where Compaq gained 3 cents to $10.36. 

That widened the gap between Compaq’s price and what HP would pay for its shares — indicating an increase in Wall Street’s belief the deal will be rejected. 

——— 

On the Net: 

Pro-merger site: http://www.votethehpway.com 

Opposition site: http://www.votenohpcompaq.com 


Local jews stand against occupation

By Vince Briggeman, Special to the Berkeley Daily Planet
Monday March 18, 2002

Dr. Amichai Kronfeld called the publishing of a quarter-page advertisement in the New York Times condemning the Israeli occupation a modest contribution to an ongoing struggle.  

Kronfeld, one of four Bay Area residents spearheading the Jewish Voices Against Israel’s Occupation (JVAO) group, saw a nine-month project reach one of its goals Sunday in the publishing of the ad that summarized its position on the conflict in Israel, and ended with three simple statements: The Settlements must go. The Occupation must end. There can be no peace without Justice. 

A recent letter to the Berkeley Daily planet and other responses the JVAO’s position has received from the Jewish community indicate an enormous diversity of opinion within the community.  

The letter, which would represent the extreme in some of this dialogue spoke of “ the covert and overt tide of the Bay Area anti-Semitism,” and referred to militant “ pro-Palestinians” as “self-hating Jews” and “Uncle Isaacs.”  

But Kronfeld says in response to that no one Jew has the right to dictate how all Jews respond or behave. 

“I’ve earned the right to criticize Israel,” he said. “ It’s not a matter of self-hating. It’s a brutal occupation that is going on. It’s clear who is being occupied and who has all of the power.”  

Dr. Bluma Goldstein, a former Berkeley professor of German Literature and Philosophy, and the chair of the Jewish Studies program there from 1995-2000, echoed Kronfeld’s opinion of the diversity of opinions within the Jewish community about Israeli occupation. 

“I think there are a lot of Jews in the area who have a lot of different opinions,” Goldstein said. “It’s difficult to say. The problem arises when someone believes he can speak for all Jews, and that anyone who disagrees needs to be eliminated or cast out. I find that very problematic.”  

According to Kronfeld, it was Goldstein, a long-time political activist, who hatched the idea for the Times advertisement. The two of them, along with Dr. David Glick and Annette Herskovits, not only had to reach a group consensus on the issues at hand, but also needed to raise a sizable amount of capital. 

A full-page ad in the Sunday Times Op-Ed section runs for $114,000. But with the backing of more than 600 supporters — all reporting to be Jewish — as well as a plug for the group in the most recent issue of The Nation, the funding came through. 

“We decided on the Times because it has the broadest base,” said Goldstein. “We started with the idea of a full-page ad, but decided in the end that we needed to cut it down. Fortunately, we got a lot of help from a lot of people.”  

“I’m so happy we were able to pull it together,” said Kronfeld. When we began, we thought, ‘How expensive could this really be?’ We were kind of naive when we started out.”  

Kronfeld is Israeli and fought in both the Six Days’ War of 1967 and the October War in 1973.  

The group’s mission began last June. The unforeseen events of Sept. 11th only intensified the urgency of their message. Since then, increased violence and the perception that the conflict is moving further from resolution has given the JVAO’s message even more relevance, according to Kronfeld. 

“If anything, September 11th proved to us that a resolution in the Middle East was not only a moral imperative, but also essential to the security of the United States,” Kronfeld said. 

The JVAO advocates the establishment of an international peacekeeping force in the region as well as an end to further Israeli occupation in the West Bank, Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem.  

But the group “ as Jews and U.S. tax-payers” also calls upon the American government to suspend military aid and reduce financial aid until an evacuation of the occupied areas is completed. The funds should then be redirected toward aiding the “devastated infrastructure of Palestine.”  

Meanwhile, the Palestinian Authority should “make every effort to curtail acts of violence against Israeli civilians. 

Both Kronfeld and Goldstein say that a move back to the pre-1967 borders is the most integral step in the progress of peace, followed by the eventual development of a two-state agreement. In order for this to happen, the United States must play a larger, more active role. 

Kronfeld feels any problems concerning the legitimacy of the American Jewish perspective on issues so geographically removed, don’t apply in his case. 

“It’s not just the Palestinians who deserve better. The Israelis are not living in paradise.”  

As for potential opposition to the JVAO ideology in the Berkeley area, Goldstein told of a past lecture at the Berkeley International House by Palestinian activist Hanan Aschwari, who has made an appearance on the McNeil-Lehrer Report in support of the Palestinian cause.  

“There were a few students definitely there to disrupt things,” Goldstein said. “There’s no question that there is a group of students heavily supported by the Jewish Federation.  

“But that sort of thing, again, is just a section of the population.”


The Nature of Jewish Alienation

Gabe Kurtz
Monday March 18, 2002

Editor: 

We are the grand children of death camp survivors transplanted to the United States. Our homes were in Russia, the Middle East, Spain, and Germany. We are the wandering jews and along the horizon there is a beacon... Israel. A place ripe for transplantation.  

Our fellow jews emigrated there in huge numbers, back to the welcoming bossom of our true mother country. Recently though, our mother has been villanized for fending for her children.  

Jews from all over the United States are chatising their mother, chanting “accept us but, do not defend us.”  

These are jews who want their culture dilluted with the blood of their country men, jews that hang Chanukah lights from their window in December. Something must be done, our culture has never taken to destroying itself from within. We must instill pride in our fellow jews for their culture and their mother country.  

It is time to accept invitation of our mother country and defend her like we would our own.  

 

Gabe Kurtz  

student, uc berkeley 

 


Out & About Calendar

Compiled by Guy Poole
Monday March 18, 2002


Monday, March 18

 

Conscientious Objection to  

War 

7 - 9 p.m. 

Friends’ Meetinghouse 

2151 Vine St. 

The Berkeley Society of Friends will discuss the 1965 United States Supreme Court’s reversal of the conviction of Daniel A. Seeger. Also a reading and discussion of Seeger’s pamphlet, The Seed and the Tree.  

 

Berkeley Gray Panthers Home 

Owners Committee 

1:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Gray Panthers Office 

1403 Addison St. 

Finding good repair people, good tenants, locating resources for low and middle income home owners. 548-9696, graypanthers@hotmail.com. 

 

Thwarting the Next Energy  

Crisis 

7 - 8:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Adult School Room 7 

1222 University Ave. 

Learn to install your own basic home weatherization measures. Class will 

cover selection of materials and the proper installation of door weather 

stripping, attic insulation, duct tape, caulking and more. Lecture includes 

hands-on demonstrations. 981-5435, Energy@ci.berkeley.ca.us. 

 


Tuesday, March 19

 

Berkeley Garden Club  

1 p.m. 

The Berkeley Garden Club will hold its Benefit Spring Tea and Professional Floral Design Demonstration. Sakae Sakaki will create both Ikebana and Western style arrangements. $7.50, 526-1083, bgardenclub@aol.com. 

 

Self Help Strategies and  

Techniques from Feldenkrais  

and Pilates 

noon - 2 p.m. 

Alta Bates, Auditorium - Herrick Campus 

2001 Dwight Way 

Arthritis Foundation Northern California Chapter fibromyalgia support group. 644-3273.  

 

The Destruction of Land and  

People: The Industry of  

Genocide 

6 - 8 p.m. 

UC Berkeley 

Tilden Room, 5th Floor of  

Martin Luther King Jr. Student 

Union Building  

Second symposium of the annual Breaking the Cycle, Mending the Circle Conference: Contemporary Issues of Genocide. This particular symposium is entitled The Destruction of Land and People: The Industry of Genocide. 642-4270.  

 


Wednesday, Mar. 20

 

City Commons Club, 

Great Decisions Program 

10 a.m. - noon 

Berkeley City Club 

2315 Durant Ave. 

Nunu Kidane, Epidemiologist, UC San Francisco; “AIDS in Africa.” $5. 848-3533. 

 

Compiled by Guy Poole 


Berkeley bats explode vs. O’Dowd

By Jared Green, Daily Planet Staff
Monday March 18, 2002

After scoring just six runs in their last three games, the Berkeley Yellowjackets finally found their offense on Saturday against Bishop O’Dowd, raking 11 hits on the way to an 11-5 win in Oakland. 

Clinton Calhoun led the ’Jackets with three hits and four RBIs, and Cole Stipovich and Sean Souders combined to hold the Dragons to five runs despite some shaky defensive support early in the game. 

Saturday’s win was a result of Berkeley’s depth, with eight starters getting at least one hit. With young players like Kory Hong and Jonathon Smith making contributions at the bottom of the order, the ’Jackets have the luxury of solid hitters at every spot. 

“This is exactly what I expected from this team,” Berkeley head coach Tim Moellering said. “We are so deep, we even have solid bats on the bench.” 

Especially pleasing to Moellering was the output of Calhoun, the No. 3 batter in the order who had been struggling to start the season. With RBI singles in the first and fifth innings already under his belt, Calhoun went deep in the seventh, smacking a ball off the top of the fence in right field, the deepest part of the O’Dowd field. 

“We’ve been doing a lot of situation hitting in practice, and I’m more comfortable going to the opposite field now,” said Calhoun, who also laid down a perfect suicide squeeze bunt in the fourth inning. 

Leadoff hitter Lee Franklin also provided a charge, starting the game with a ringing double off of O’Dowd starter Tony Amato and scoring on a Calhoun single. Franklin also doubled during the five-run fourth inning and made a circus catch on a flare down the rightfield line from his second base position. 

The Berkeley defense made things tough on Stipovich to start the game. The ’Jackets’ two-run lead in the first was quickly in jeopardy when third baseman DeAndre Miller muffed a grounder by O’Dowd leadoff hitter Dominic Ruma. Berkeley rightfielder Jeremy LeBeau then lost a pop-fly in the sun after heading out without sunglasses, and the bases were loaded with just one out. A wild pitch brought Ruma home, and Nick Meyers hit a double to the gap in right to plate two more runs for a 3-2 lead. 

Hong and Smith hit singles in the second and scored on a Franklin groundout and a Miller single, respectively, but the Dragons again took advantage of Berkeley errors to tie the game in the bottom half. Miller overthrew first base on a Ruma grounder, and Ruma all the way around to score on a Steve Singleton sacrifice bunt that Miller threw into right field. LeBeau backed up the play, but his throw to third was wild as well. Stipovich managed to get out of the inning with no further damage, but his high pitch count through three innings caused Moellering to pull him in favor of Souders, who allowed just one run in his four innings of work. 

The ’Jackets, meanwhile, drove Amato from the game in the fourth, batting around on the strength of five hits and Calhoun’s squeeze. Reliever Sean Hunter wasn’t much more successful, giving up three runs in just 1 2/3 innings of work. 

Saturday also marked the long-awaited return of Berkeley’s Jeremy Riesenfeld to behind the plate. A senior, Riesenfeld was slated to be the starter at catcher last season but suffered a shoulder injury early in the year. Two surgeries later, he finally returned to a pinch-hitting role to start this season, but his throwing shoulder is still only at about 80 percent. A gifted receiver, Riesenfeld will get spot duty behind the plate while he works his arm strength back. 

“It feels good to get back behind the plate, but I’m a little timid with my arm,” Riesenfeld said after catching the final inning. “Hopefully I’ll get some more time back there next week.” 


Study shows many may fail education standards

Daily Planet Staff Report
Monday March 18, 2002

On Friday, amid warning that thousands of California children may fail to meet tough new education standards, Assembly Majority Whip Wilma Chan called for major changes in early education and health services for children. 

Chan, D-Oakland and Chair of the Assembly Select Committee on California Children'’s School Readiness and Health partnered with Stuart Richardson, Healthy Start coordinator at Fruitvale Elementary School in Oakland and Nancy Waltz, president of the San Juan Teachers Association at the Friday press conference. 

The three described challenges teachers face in the classroom when children come to school without proper preparation and health care they need to succeed. They also detailed collateral problems to inadequate health care such as repeat tardiness and absence. 

The Preparing Our Children to Learn report and legislative recommendations grew out of hearings held last fall and early this winter in Sacramento, Oakland, Los Angeles and Salinas - the first hearings ever convened to look at how a child's health status affects their ability to do well in school.  

Many of the recommendations have since been translated into proposed legislation. 

• Requiring that HMOs cover the cost of expectant mothers' visit to a pediatrician before the baby is born so that they can help the baby in his/her first months.  

• Requiring HMOs to cover the cost of dental sealants to reduce dental decay. 

• Expanding mandatory vision screening for children entering school to include all vision impairments and requiring dental exams when children enter pre-school. 

• Expanding dental insurance to low income working families whom may have general health insurance from work, but lack dental coverage. 

• Requiring that counties, Children and Families Commissions and mental health providers work collaboratively to increase mental health services and maximize utilization of existing (but not spent) funds for mental health services to young children. 

• Increasing training for teachers and child care providers so they can better help young children transition from home, to pre-school, to kindergarten.  

•Increasing training to help teachers and child care providers recognize and refer children who are in need of physical, nutritional or mental health services. 

• Reducing malnutrition and obesity by requiring schools to offer nutrition classes. 

• Developing 'one stop' family resource centers at school and health sites to provide family-friendly, coordinated health, education and social services assistance to families. 

• Bringing together state children's services, currently scattered between numerous agencies, programs and departments into a single Department of Children's Services, modeled after the Department of Aging and Long Term Care, to provide for better services. 

The report cites testimony such as nearly half of kindergarten teachers report that half or more of their students come to school with social or emotional problems. In addition, more than half of children ages 6-8 suffer from untreated dental disease.  

Education continues to be the most politicized issue in California today. Last year, a public opinion poll by the Public Policy Institute of California indicated that education ranked equally with the economy and electricity as the top three issues facing California.  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Whose turf are they protecting?

Felix Richardson
Monday March 18, 2002

Editor: 

 

By increasing density who is denying Ms. Benson or any other homeowner of their yard space and fruit trees? (Homeowners Should Protect Their Land, March 15, 2002).  

Homeowners want to protect their land? Build a fence. 

Too many homeowners are under mistaken impression that not only do they have the right to determine what takes place on their own property but that they have the right to determine what can take place on their neighbors' property as well!  

If they don't like it, they feel, well then it should not be allowed to be built. Sorry folks, in this country we don't have a system where one property owner or even a group of property owners (e.g., a neighborhood association) gets to determine what goes on in the surrounding neighborhood. Shock of shocks! You mean the homeowners (or even renters) are not sovereign?  

Remember, we live in a representative democracy. Homeowners and the rest of us delegate our authority to our elected representatives to make decisions as to what can be undertaken or built elsewhere in the neighborhood. We, as individual or organized homeowners don't have the right to determine what can and cannot be built next door, short of a citizen's initiative. So, don't like what you're seeing? Recall your elected representatives. 

Circulate a ballot imitative. Short of that? Build a fence.  

 

Felix Richardson 

Berkeley  

 


Ice-cold Bears ousted by Pitt

The Associated Press
Monday March 18, 2002

Cal held scoreless for 9 1/2 minutes in second half of NCAA loss 

 

 

PITTSBURGH – There’s no ’D’ in Pittsburgh, but try telling that to Cal’s can’t-score Golden Bears. 

Pitt held Cal without a point for 9 1/2 minutes during a decisive 16-0 run, and the defense-driven Panthers moved into the South Regional semifinals with a 63-50 victory Sunday. 

Julius Page scored seven of his 17 points during that spurt, which began with Cal leading 32-28 with 16:40 remaining and ended with Pitt up 44-32 with 7:08 left. The Golden Bears went more than 11 minutes without scoring a basket, and 15-plus minutes with only one basket. 

Pitt third-team All-American Brandin Knight was an all-over-the-floor force with 11 points and seven assists, but he wasn’t really a factor offensively – not that he needed to be with Pitt’s defense so dominating, so controlling. 

The Steelers had the Steel Curtain during the 1970s, and now Pitt has the Steal Curtain – a suffocating, Knight-led defense that is the school’s best in 50 years, and one that held Cal to only six baskets in the final 16:40 of play. 

By winning twice within a mile of its campus, third-seeded Pitt (29-5) advances to the regional semifinals for only the second time in school history, and the first time since losing to David Thompson’s sky-walking North Carolina State Wolfpack in the 1974 regional finals. Until now, that was the only Pitt team to win two games in an NCAA tournament. 

Now the Panthers will play 10th-seeded Kent State on Thursday in Lexington, Ky. 

Good college basketball teams aren’t supposed to win when shooting 43 percent or making only 12-of-26 free throws or getting so little offense from their star, as Pitt did. 

Of course, skilled teams such as sixth-seeded Cal (23-9) – which beat UCLA twice – are supposed to make more than three of their first 20 shots in a half. The Bears, growing increasingly frustrated the longer they failed to score, were only 9-of-31 (29 percent) in the second half and 18-of-58 (31 percent) overall. 

Only Shantay Legans (13 points) and Joe Shipp (11 points) scored in double figures for the Bears, who were only 4-of-24 from 3-point range. 

Chevy Troutman, a freshman making only his second career start, added 11 points for Pitt, and Ontario Lett outmuscled Cal’s bigger front line for 10 points in Pitt’s biggest victory in more than a quarter-century. The Panthers won for the 11th time in 12 games and 14th time in 16 games. 

Pitt, playing Cal for the first time in 51 years, made a surprise adjustment to the Bears’ size advantage by benching 6-foot-10 center Toree Morris and opening with a lineup in which no starter was taller than 6-8. 

That didn’t keep Cal from opening an 8-5 lead, but Pitt answered with a 7-0 run to go up 12-8. 

In a game in which two of the nation’s top defenses were as dominant as the offenses in UCLA’s 105-101 upset of Cincinnati on the same floor earlier Sunday, neither team led by more than four points in the first half. Pitt led 26-25 at the break. 

It clearly was a pro-Pitt crowd in a sold-out Mellon Arena – any Panthers’ run brought resounding waves of noise, but it wasn’t nearly as loud as if the game had been played on their home court a mile away. 

Cal coach Ben Braun tried to downplay Pitt’s hometown advantage, no doubt trying to convince the Bears that the atmosphere was less hostile than some of the Pac-10 courts where they play.


Members of the Filipino community sound off on Sept.11th

Staff
Monday March 18, 2002

By Molly Bentley 

Special to the Planet 

 

George Nervez, the editor of the Filipino Guardian, leaned back in his chair in his home-office and recalled a friend’s advice after September 11. “ ‘Shave your beard,’ the friend said. He’d look less like a terrorist.  

The beard stayed put. But like many other Filipinos, Nervez, who has lived in the United States for 16 years, said the post-September climate has affected him and the 378,000 Filipinos, the majority of them Catholic. 

He now avoids airports, he said. He doesn’t fly, and he “doesn’t want to” because he’s heard too many stories of ethnic profiling.  

People are stopped for extensive questioning if they are Filipino, Arab, Mexican, or just darker-than-Caucasian, he said. Friends who have returned from the Philippines have told him they’ve had a hard time getting back into the country. They all have green cards.  

“Even if the stories aren’t true,” Nervez said. “They feed into an insecurity.” And, he added, “People won’t go home because they might have a hard time coming back.”  

Unlike, Arab-Americans, Filipinos in California generally are not targets of violence, said Nervez, but six months after the attacks in New York and Washington, Bay Area Filipinos say a sense of mistrust endures. Filipinos, along with other non-Caucasians endure a profiling, by “the color of their skin,” that makes them suspect to some Americans.  

He points to the defeat of Proposition C, in last week’s election, as an example of an anti-immigrant mentality. Proposition C would have allowed non-citizen San Francisco residents to serve on local boards and commissions. Nervez says the defeat of the bill is “pitiful” because many non-citizen immigrants are qualified and enthusiastic about serving on local boards. 

Nervez said, however, that the more immediate impact is economic. Although the recession has hurt everyone in the Bay Area, when the pink slips came in Silicon Valley or after September 11, some Filipinos had to leave. Without a sponsoring company, non- U.S. residents were forced to return to the Philippines, he said 

In addition, a new federal law that requires all airport screener to be U.S. citizens has directly affected the Filipino community. Activists predict that 4,500 workers will lose their job in the Bay Area; eighty percent of them Filipino, according Kawal Ulanday, a spokesperson for Filipinos for Affirmative Action. Of those, 90 percent of are non-citizens.  

Nervez says the new law “didn’t target Filipinos directly,” but has affected them disproportionately. His daughter, Gwen Flores, who works at the Filipino Guardian, is less charitable. She says that the passage of the Transportation Security Act, is a deliberate strike against immigrants.  

“It’s a major injustice,” she said. “It shows you how paranoid people can be. Immigrants are used as scapegoats and they are the first to go.” The Department of Transportation spokesperson Jim Mitchell said that the law is not designed to target immigrants but to create a professional security force. 

The law nationalizes airport security entirely by November 19th. Non-citizen screeners, even if legal immigrants could start receiving pink slips anytime, according to Ulanday. 

Not everyone in the Filipino community has had a bad experience.  

A Filipino man in his fifties, who didn’t want to be identified because his immigration status is pending, said he flew to California from the Philippines six months ago. He was on route to New York where a job awaited. Having taken “the last plane from the Philippines to SFO” that day, he and his wife landed at San Francisco International airport the evening of September 10th. They stayed the night in Daly City. 

“We woke up to the news of the attacks in our hotel,” he said. All U.S. flights were grounded for the next few days. The man said he couldn’t fly to New York or back to the Philippines. He and his wife discussed a future in the new America.  

“Do we want to live here with this situation?” he said they asked each other, as the news of the attacks consumed the nation. They decided to stay.  

“If this can happen in the U.S., it can happen anywhere,” he said. The United States, he figured, was as safe a place as any.  

In the week they waited for flights to resume, his wife fell in love with California. They cancelled their East Coast plans. The Bay Area Filipino community grew by two.  

 


Inside the axis of evil

BY ANDREW LAM, PACIFIC NEWS SERVICE
Monday March 18, 2002

KISH, Iran--President Bush may list Iran as part of an "axis of evil," but writers and intellectuals on this dry and weedy coral island 25 miles south of the mainland say democracy may yet thrive in their country. 

In a project designed by President Mohammad Khatami, the reformist leader re-elected in 2001 in Iran, some 30 writers gathered to meet foreign authors and thinkers recently in a program titled, "Dialogue Among Civilizations." Though censorship remains strong in Iran, especially in matters of politics and religion, most Iranians here agreed that recent years have delivered a strong and steady push toward social liberalization. 

In fact, these days Iranians are quick to compare life "before the election" and "after the election." The elections were seen as a mandate 

for Khatami's reformist policies. Soon after, the ban on satellite dishes was lifted, for instance. Use of the Internet, albeit small, is growing quickly. Western music is coming back. And bookstores are full of titles that had previously been censored. Books by Sama Behrangi, a pre-revolutionary leftist writer of children's stories, and works by the leftist poet Khorsro Golsorkhi are prominently displayed. Translations of Western authors such as Isabel Allende, Danielle Steele and Michael Crichton sell briskly. 

"We still can't write, 'The man and the woman lie down on the bed and make love,'" said Asadollah Amaraee, a 47-year-old translator of Western novels. "We have to write, 'The man and the woman lie on the bed and take turns counting the number of light bulbs above their bed.' But everyone understands what we mean." 

Iranian writers, Amaraee said, are pushing these limits vigorously. But that doesn't come without risk. 

When a Swedish scholar voiced surprise to a thirty-something Iranian writer that the Tehran government deemed fiction serious enough to hold a seminar on the topic, the author answered emotionally, "Yes, seriously enough to have a few (authors) disappeared and a few assassinated as well." 

Like many other women here, the writer wore makeup and jewelry as well as a traditional head scarf, and asked not to be named. Only a few years ago, a handful of Iranian poets and writers were disappeared and others murdered for their writings. 

But she was quick to add, "I hope you are going to say something nice about Iran. We are not evil. We are nice and we are full of hope since the last election." 

The Ayatollah Khomenei's death in 1989 and the subsequent battle between conservatives and reformists put Iran into gridlock. The economy suffered with 30 percent inflation, and unemployment still hovers at 17 percent. 

But in the 2001 elections, the reformists triumphed, overturning the conservative domination of the country's parliament. The parliament had previously blocked reform efforts by Khatami, who became Iran's fifth president in 1997. 

Now, says Mohammed Sharifi, the author of 16 novels, things are slowly changing for the better. Tiny aspects of social life, nuances that many foreigners wouldn't notice, are, in fact, indicators of important changes, Sharifi said. "Before the election, you couldn't applaud after someone read their work on stage. Now, people applaud like mad."


Sports shorts

Staff
Monday March 18, 2002

Bears end regular season with a fourth-place finish 

 

Cal (5-9, 1-5) capped off the regular season schedule with a fourth place finish (191.975) in a home quad meet Saturday evening at Haas Pavilion. Sacramento State won the meet with a team total of 194.350. Boise State finished second at 194.275 and San Jose State finished third with a score of 193.775.  

Freshman My-Lan Dodd placed first on the uneven bar with a mark of 9.900. The Seattle native also finished high in the all-around, finishing second with a 39.100 tally. The score also tied her second highest all-around mark of the season.  

The Bears’ Lauren Shipp scored a career-high 9.800 on the beam to place fourth overall in the event. Junior Lisa Arnold also placed fourth on an event, earning a 9.775 on the vault.  

Cal travels to the Pac-10 Championships Saturday, Mar. 23. at 6 p.m., at Maples Pavilion on the Stanford campus.  

 

Cal track & field finishes third in L.A. 

LOS ANGELES - The Cal men’s and women’s track and field team turned in some strong performances but finished third at the UCLA Triangular Saturday at Drake Stadium. On the women’s side, UCLA came in first with 148 points, followed by Washington State with 136 and the Golden Bears with 112. The Bruins also took top honors in the men’s competition with 160.5 points, followed by WSU with 148.5 and Cal with 89.  

Three seniors won three different events for the Cal women. All-American Jennifer Joyce won the hammer throw for the Bears with a mark of 202-11, and junior Sheni Russell came in third in the hammer with a personal best of 166-9. Joyce had already qualified for the NCAA outdoor meet. Marielle Schlueter broke her own Cal record in the 3000m steeplechase by over a second by winning the event in 10:43.49. Erin Belger (2:10.71) and Lache Bailey (PR: 2:12.41) finished one-two in the 800m.  

Other personal bests for Cal came from sophomore Jenna Johnson in the shot put (3rd, 48-10.75, NCAA provisional), junior DeCola Groce in the 100m (3rd, 12.12) and sophomore Stephanie Cowling in the 400mH (3rd, 1:02.68).  

Senior Jerriod Mack (triple jump, 49-5.75) and junior Mike Pestorich (800m, 1:54.36) turned in the only first-place performances for the Bear men.  

Personal best performances from the Cal men included junior Zech Whittington in the hammer (4th, 173-9), freshman Randy Fair in the 400m (4th, 48.64), junior Mark Blanco (fifth, 48.77) and junior Nick Mazur in the 100m (5th, 10.68).


Santa Fe Right of Way is wrong for housing, critics say

By Devona Walker, Daily Planet Staff
Monday March 18, 2002

Tomorrow the public will be given an opportunity to weigh in on Councilmember Linda Maio’s proposal to build affordable housing on the Santa Fe Right of Way. 

The proposal is adamantly opposed by the Berkeley Partners for Parks who have called it “illegal housing.” 

The proposal called for an amendment to the General Plan Open Space Policy OS-6 on March 12 — the decision to add that amendment was a 5-to-4 vote in favor of the progressives. The proposal would add to the city’s supply of affordable housing, but has many who live around the Santa Fe Right of Way concerned. 

The SFRW is a former railroad right-of-way and critics of Maio’s plan say it is ideally suited for open space, community garden and bicycle/pedestrian greenway uses. 

“This proposal allow dense public housing on the SFRW, a precious green corridor better used for a pedestrian/bicycle greenway and public open space uses,” wrote Berkeley Partners for Parks in a prepared statement. “Councilmember Maio has a vision of an asphalt pathway skirting between housing, but given that the SFRW is only 30'-40' wide where a pathway is proposed, this seems highly improbable, and even if realizable, will be more like a public sidewalk adjacent to a 40' wall then a greenway.” 

Council will discuss the SFRW tomorrow night at a public hearing.


HISTORY

Staff
Monday March 18, 2002

Highlight in History: 

On March 18, 1959, President Eisenhower signed the Hawaii statehood bill. 

On this date: 

In 1766, Britain repealed the Stamp Act. 

In 1837, the 22nd and 24th president of the United States, Grover Cleveland, was born in Caldwell, N.J. 

In 1922, Mohandas K. Gandhi was sentenced in India to six years’ imprisonment for civil disobedience. (He was released after serving two years.) 

In 1931, Schick Inc. marketed the first electric razor. 

In 1937, more than 400 people, mostly children, were killed in a gas explosion at a school in New London, Texas. 

In 1940, Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini met at the Brenner Pass, where the Italian dictator agreed to join Germany’s war against France and Britain. 

In 1962, France and Algerian rebels agreed to a truce. 

In 1965, the first spacewalk took place as Soviet cosmonaut Aleksei Leonov left his Voskhod 2 capsule, secured by a tether. 

In 1974, most of the Arab oil-producing nations ended their embargo against the United States. 

In 1979, Iranian authorities detained American feminist Kate Millett, a day before deporting her and a companion for what were termed “provocations.” 

Ten years ago:  

South African President F.W. de Klerk claimed victory for his reforms a day after a whites-only referendum on whether to end apartheid. National Football League owners voted to drop the use of videotape replays to settle disputed calls during games (however, instant replay was brought back in 1999). 

Five years ago:  

Bulldozers began clearing away rocks and earth for a Jewish housing project in disputed east Jerusalem, triggering Palestinian protests. Labor Secretary-designate Alexis Herman got a generally favorable reception from Democrats and Republicans alike at her Senate confirmation hearing. 

One year ago:  

The Socialists conquered Paris in municipal elections, ending a century of nearly unbroken rule by the right. John Phillips, who co-founded the Mamas and the Papas and wrote its biggest hits, including “California Dreamin”’ and “Monday,” died in Los Angeles at age 65. 

Birthdays:  

Actor Peter Graves is 76. Author George Plimpton is 75. Composer John Kander is 75. Author John Updike is 70. Nobel peace laureate and former South African president F.W. de Klerk is 66. Country singer Charley Pride is 64. Singer Wilson Pickett is 61. Actor Kevin Dobson is 59. Actor Brad Dourif is 52. Singer Irene Cara is 43. Actor Thomas Ian Griffith is 40. Singer James McMurtry is 40. Singer-actress Vanessa L. Williams is 39. Olympic gold medal speedskater Bonnie Blair is 38. Country musician Scott Saunders (Sons of the Desert) is 38. Rock musician Jerry Cantrell (Alice in Chains) is 36. Rock singer-musician Miki Berenyi is 35. Rapper-actress-talk show host Queen Latifah is 32. Rock musician Stuart Zender is 28. Singer Devin Lima (LFO) is 25. 


Increase in HIV infection reported in border towns

The Associated Press
Monday March 18, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — New field surveys of Hispanic men in Tijuana and San Diego show an increase in HIV infection rates in gay and bisexual men who move across the border. 

The rates of infection are as much as four times as high as those in other California cities, said George F. Lemp, director of the University of California’s AIDS Research Program. 

Infection rates in San Diego are particularly high, with more than 35 percent of gay and bisexual Hispanic men infected with HIV. In Tijuana, almost 19 percent were infected. 

“Those numbers are alarming and shocking, and they come as a real surprise,” Lemp told the San Francisco Chronicle. “While the AIDS epidemic exists so far only in pockets in Mexico, there’s a danger that it will explode, so we need to look closely at the behaviors and the centers of infection in both border regions.” 

In comparable populations, previous studies have found infection rates of up to 9 percent, in cities such as San Francisco, Sacramento and Long Beach. Los Angeles County has a rate of about 16 percent. 

The study, done by the Bi-National AIDS Advocacy Project, looked at 400 volunteers. It found that in Tijuana, only about 56 percent of the men had received information on preventing the spread of HIV and 46 percent had been tested for the virus. In San Diego, 77 percent received information and 63 percent had been tested. 

Researchers plan to look at two cities in Mexico known for sending a lot of men to work in California and two California counties with large populations of Mexican migrant workers. 


Migrant farmworkers experience higher rates of leukemia, brain, prostate and skin cancer

Staff
Monday March 18, 2002

FRESNO — Armando Sanchez was diagnosed with leukemia in October. Now enduring chemotherapy, Sanchez said he wishes farmers had warned him of the dangers of pesticides. 

“The cancer is because of the pesticides,” said 66-year-old farmworker, who spent 40 years spraying chemicals on grape and citrus fields in the Imperial Valley. Hispanic farmworkers have higher rates of brain, leukemia, skin and stomach cancers compared with other Hispanics in California, according to a study by the Cancer Registry of California, a state agency that has collected data on cancer cases statewide since 1998. But the registry’s study doesn’t specifically link pesticide use to the higher rates of cancer. Female Hispanic farmworkers also had higher cases of uterine cancer than the rest of the state’s Latinas, according to the study, “Cancer Incidence in the United Farm Workers of America, 1987-1997” published in the American Journal of Industrial Medicine’s November 2001 issue. 

“The union’s position is that it’s directly related to pesticide usage,” said Doug Blaylock, the union’s medical plan administrator. 


Cannery at Fisherman’s Wharf catches fire

The Associated Press
Monday March 18, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — A fire raged for hours at the Haslett Warehouse, a historic landmark on Fisherman’s Wharf, destroying the fourth floor and roof. 

The fire was contained Sunday, but firefighters continued to watch for flare-ups. 

The fourth floor and roof of the 198,000 square-foot building were completely destroyed, although the brick facade still stands, Fire Capt. Pete Howes said. 

Firefighters were keeping people away from the building in case of collapse. The building was built around 1907 and was undergoing renovations. 

The Kimpton Hotel and Restaurant Group had signed a 57-year lease with the National Park Service, which owns the Haslett Warehouse, to transform it into the Argonaut Hotel. 

“It’s a disappointing circumstance,” said Tom LaTour, chairman and chief executive officer of the Kimpton Group. He said the hotel’s opening day had been scheduled for the end of this year and will likely be pushed back to mid-2003. 

LaTour said he has no idea how much the damage will cost. 

The warehouse is adjacent to The Cannery shopping center, which remained closed Sunday. Some of the 30 shops and restaurants had smoke and fire damage and would remained closed until cleanup was finished, said Kris Kremers, marketing director for the shopping center. 

There were no reports of injuries. Most businesses on the wharf were closed when the fire broke shortly before midnight Saturday, city fire Lt. Eric Richardson said. 

Flames had caused burn damage to adjacent buildings. 

Fire investigators did not immediately determine a cause. 


On eve of merger vote, a contest too close to call

By Brian Bergstein, The Associated Press
Monday March 18, 2002

Hewlett-Packard’s plan to buy Compaq is valued at $22 billion, but stockholders could vote to stop the deal 

 

PALO ALTO – Hewlett-Packard Co. chief Carly Fiorina told her 88,000 employees in a November e-mail that talk of a feud between her and sons of the company’s founders was merely “lazy reporting” by journalists trying to sell newspapers. 

“It is far easier to dream up a feud that doesn’t exist than to research complex, far-reaching, industry-changing business concepts,” she wrote. 

Perhaps Fiorina was right — there was no feud. Because “feud” would be a huge understatement for the all-out war that has raged the last five months over HP’s plans to buy Compaq Computer Corp. in a stock deal now valued at about $22 billion. 

The bickering should end Tuesday, the deadline for HP’s 900,000 stockholders to send in cards indicating how they stand. Hundreds of shareholders also are expected to come to a Silicon Valley auditorium to vote their stakes and speak their minds. 

The contest appears too close to call. While Compaq shareholders are expected to approve the deal Wednesday, HP results might not be known for weeks because independent proxy counters will painstakingly verify each vote. Both sides say early tallies of proxies already mailed in show the vote going their way. 

Whatever happens, this deal will forever change HP, a proud institution two engineers launched in a Palo Alto garage 64 years ago. 

Even longtime business observers have been stunned by the tenor of the proxy fight, which has matched Fiorina and her management team against dissident director Walter Hewlett and his advisers, who are intent on blocking what would be one of the world’s biggest high-tech mergers. The deal is also opposed by David Woodley Packard and other heirs of the late founders. 

Each side has spent tens of millions of dollars on newspaper and Internet ads, road trips for meetings with investors, legal fees and public relations blitzes. 

“Carly is a warrior,” said HP board member Patricia Dunn, chief of Barclays Global Investors. “She’s been very resilient.” 

Not everyone sees that as a plus. 

“If she was as enthusiastic and paid as much attention to running the business as opposed to doing the deal, Hewlett-Packard shareholders would be in a lot better shape,” said David Katz, president of Matrix Asset Advisors, which will vote its HP and Compaq stock against the acquisition. 

HP and Hewlett sometimes talked past each other, failing to address specific issues. Each accused the other of violating tenets of corporate governance: Hewlett blasted HP for allegedly hiding lucrative pay packages waiting for Fiorina and Compaq’s chief, Michael Capellas; HP slammed Hewlett for missing three key board meetings. 

“In my personal opinion, HP’s image has been tarnished by this proxy fight,” said Paul McGuckin, a Gartner Inc. research director who supports the merger. 

“HP used to have an image of taking the high road, of not engaging in dirty tactics, of wanting to be a trusted adviser. After slinging mud with Walter Hewlett the last two months, HP doesn’t look like a company that takes the high road.” 

There are more tangible concerns as well. 

For one, if the deal is rejected, HP’s and Compaq’s leaders have to skulk back to their stand-alone companies — which they have spent six months describing as desperately in need of overhauls the mega-merger could provide. Fiorina would likely leave HP; Capellas would probably stay with Compaq. 

But the picture could get even muddier if the deal does pass. 

HP, a $45 billion seller of printers, computers, servers, digital cameras and high-tech services, believes that with Houston-based Compaq and its business-computing expertise on board, it will be able to dramatically improve the end-to-end packages it offers. 

Still, many customers have told independent surveys they worry they’ll be neglected while HP and Compaq figure out how to work together. 

On the other hand, some big Compaq and HP clients have offered high praise for the deal. And the companies contend customers have nothing to fear because the merger is being planned better than any in memory. 

Perhaps a bigger worry is that HP’s employees — the people who would turn Fiorina’s home-run strategy into reality — still need convincing. 

Though HP says internal surveys show that about two-thirds of its work force supports the merger, independent polls of employees at three company sites by the well-regarded Field Research Corp. found the opposite results. 

Fiorina, brought in to shake up HP in 1999, tends to provoke strong opinions. 

Many employees say she has reinvigorated a staid, decentralized Gray Lady of Silicon Valley. But others say she is imperious, too flashy for HP’s engineering culture, too cold about last year’s 7,000 layoffs and the 15,000 more that would be needed if the deal goes through. 

Even so, it’s unclear how much whatever employee hostility to the deal might exist would hamper HP as it tries the complex integration of Compaq. 

For example, a 22-year HP veteran who hates the deal says that even if only 35 percent of employees agree with him — as the most optimistic surveys suggest — “it’s the end of HP” because “you need everybody on board.” 

But in the next breath, the same engineer, who spoke on condition of anonymity, says he expects that even the deal’s biggest opponents would work hard at making it successful if it does go through. 

“A lot of people say, ‘Well, we’ll do our best — that’s the HP way.”’


Historic S.F. Cannery catches fire

The Associated Press
Monday March 18, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO – A fire raged for hours at the Haslett Warehouse, a historic landmark on Fisherman’s Wharf, destroying the fourth floor and roof. 

The fire was contained Sunday, but firefighters continued to fight it. 

“We’re not calling it under control because we still have a lot of heat in the heavy timbers,” said Capt. Pete Howes. 

The fourth floor and roof of the building were completely destroyed, although the brick facade still stands, Howes said. Firefighters were keeping people away from the building in case of collapse. The building was built around 1907 and was undergoing renovations. 

The Kimpton Hotel and Restaurant Group had signed a 57-year lease with the National Park Service, which owns the Haslett Warehouse, to transform it into the Argonaut Hotel. 

The warehouse is adjacent to The Cannery shopping center, which remained closed Sunday. Some of the 30 shops and restaurants had smoke and fire damage and would remained closed until cleanup was finished, said Kris Kremers, marketing director for the center. 

There were no reports of injuries. Most businesses on the wharf were closed when the fire broke shortly before midnight Saturday, city fire Lt. Eric Richardson said. 

Flames had caused burn damage to adjacent buildings. 

Fire investigators did not immediately determine a cause.


Online subscriptions herald the end of Web freedom

By Michael Liedtke, The Associated Press
Monday March 18, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO – Surfing the Web these days requires two hands – one to click the mouse, the other to dig into your pocket to pay fees demanded by sites that used to be free. 

Every day, it seems, another desperate dot-com concludes it’s better to charge a smaller congregation of visitors than to lose money on a mass audience looking to get something for nothing. 

“The presumption has always been you would have free access to almost everything for one basic price of admission. That’s probably not going to be the case any longer,” said Lee Rainie, director of the Pew Internet & American Life Project, which studies online trends. 

Free online content hasn’t disappeared. Most fee-based Web sites still give away some of their wares. 

But the freebies are becoming the online equivalent of a supermarket’s food samples – tantalizing morsels designed to coax sales of more satisfying amounts. 

“The stuff that really has some value is going to have to be paid for,” said Charlie Fink, president of AmericanGreetings.com, which began charging at the end of last year. 

With online advertising in a funk and venture capitalists no longer willing to subsidize losses, Web sites of all shapes and sizes are asking users to ante up. 

They range from online powerhouses like Yahoo!, which now has 25 different subscription services, to one-man operations like Thepaperboy.com, an Australian news portal that hoped to attract 50 subscribers a month when its owner Ian Duckworth introduced a $2.95 monthly fee in September. 

Although he wouldn’t provide specifics, Duckworth said the subscriber response has exceeded expectations. 

“Things should get easier as users start to come to terms with the ’user pays’ principle,” Duckworth said in an e-mail interview. 

It took American Greetings just three months to build the Web’s largest paid subscription base. The Cleveland-based company has signed up nearly 1 million subscribers since December, when it began charging $11.95 to visit its most popular card sites – AmericanGreetings.com, BlueMountain.com and eGreetings.com. 

American Greetings still offers free cards at two other company-controlled sites, BeatGreets.com and PassItAround.com, neither of which offer the same quality. 

American Greetings is one of six online networks boasting at least 500,000 subscribers – something only two Web sites, ConsumerReports.org and the Wall Street Journal’s online edition, claimed a year ago. 

Since unveiling its fees, traffic at American Greetings’ sites is down by about 30 percent, as surfers turn to free cards offered by Yahoo and Hallmark.com, Fink said. 

The company “has no regrets,” Fink said. “This is the way the industry and the audience is moving. We decided to take the plunge, knowing if we succeed others will follow.” By year’s end, American Greetings expects to have at least 3 million subscribers. 

Kathy Harris of Chicago swears she won’t be among them, although she once sent cards from BlueMountain.com and eGreetings.com. She is among the legion of Web surfers who avoid fees at almost any cost. 

“I figure there is so much on the Internet that you can always find something similar for free,” said Harris, 24. 

Other Web surfers are more sanguine about the shift. 

“A lot of people on the Internet want to pay because they figure the site might be around longer and the service might get better,” said San Francisco’s Evan Williams, whose site, www.theendoffree.com, tracks online subscriptions. “It’s tough to complain about something if you don’t pay for it.” 

The trick to getting people to pay for online content and services is to offer something unique, said Larry Gerbrandt, an analyst with Kagen World Media. 

After building one of the Web’s biggest audiences with mostly free features, Yahoo is banking on a fee bonanza. By 2004, the Sunnyvale, Calif.-based company hopes subscriptions account for half its revenue. Yahoo’s revenue totaled $717 million last year. 

For inspiration, Yahoo can look to ConsumerReports.org, which counts more than 800,000 subscribers, most of whom pay $24 a year to view the online edition of the consumer watchdog magazine. 

RealNetworks, too, is selling a burgeoning number of $9.95-a-month subscriptions to its online video service. Outside providers – including CNN – are using the company’s RealOne SuperPass to sell content. 

Media companies “are thrilled to see signs of life in the online subscription model,” said Larry Jacobson, RealNetworks’ president and chief operating officer. 

Two other Web sites – MyFamily.com and Netflix.com – also claim at least 500,000 subscribers. 

For some cash-strapped sites, even a few paying subscribers go a long way. 

During the first year it charged a fee, online magazine Salon.com signed up 33,000 subscribers who pay $30 annually or $6 monthly. 

This year, subscriptions will bring in more than $1 million, estimated Salon vice president Patrick Hurley. 

Homestead.com CEO Justin Kitch likens his site’s free-to-fee transition to a child’s passage into puberty. 

“It can be a painful thing,” he said, “but at least you can see this thing has a chance of growing up to be an adult.”


Irish leader visits Oakland, street name unveiled

By David Scharfenberg, Daily Planet staff
Saturday March 16, 2002

Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams said he has no quarrel with the Bush Administration’s level of involvement in the Irish peace process during an East Bay appearance Friday afternoon. 

“I have no complaint about the attention the White House is giving,” Adams said at an Oakland press conference, brushing off critics’ complaints that President Bush is not as engaged as his predecessor, Bill Clinton. 

“The times are different,” Adams said, noting that Clinton came into office before the historic Good Friday peace accord of 1998 that paved the way for a joint Catholic-Protestant power-sharing government in Northern Ireland. 

Adams, on the last legs of a U.S. tour that included a Wednesday meeting with President George W. Bush, was in the East Bay for the dedication of Gerry Adams Way, a small street, which intersects with Martin Luther King, Jr. Way in downtown Oakland. 

Adams said he was honored by the connection with Martin Luther King, Jr., who “inspired a whole generation of young people” in Ireland in the 1960s. 

“It’s a mark of the way people connect across a huge ocean and a whole continent,” said Adams. 

Developer Ciaran Scally, a native of Northern Ireland who is putting the finishing touches on an 18-unit residential development on Gerry Adams Way, asked the Oakland City Council to approve the street name in 1999. 

The council agreed to name the heretofore unnamed stretch of concrete Gerry Adams Way despite the objections of a handful of Irish Protestants who flew to the Bay Area to protest the move. 

Adams’ political party, Sinn Fein, is the political wing of the Irish Republican Army, and opponents argued that the street naming glorified terrorism. 

But speakers at the Friday event praised Adams for his work to bring peace to Northern Ireland. 

“We will follow the example of Mr. Adams to lay down our arms and solve our problems with words,” said City Councilmember Nancy Nadel, who sponsored the 1999 resolution to name Gerry Adams Way. 

“There is no other place in the United States that has recognized the importance of Gerry Adams in bringing peace to Northern Ireland,” added Oakland mayor Jerry Brown. “Hopefully the English are listening so we can get on with negotiations and real peace.” 

Adams said there is a growing sense of stability in Northern Ireland. But, he touched on a series of current conflicts between Catholics and Protestants, including an ongoing debate over how to best diversify a traditionally Protestant police force. 

U.S. envoy to Northern Ireland Richard N. Haass has criticized Sinn Fein for moving slowly to cooperate, but the party has responded that proposed police reforms do not go deep enough. 

“While we want to be part of the police service, it has to be one that is genuinely de-politicized,” Adams said Friday.


Jose Domingo Peralta was Berkeley’s first immigrant

By Susan Cerny, Special to the Daily Planet
Saturday March 16, 2002

The first non-native people to settle in California were the Spanish who began building missions in the late 1700s. In the early 1800s the King of Spain divided up the land into huge ranchos and in 1820 granted Don Luis Maria Peralta the area that today is approximately all of Alameda County. In 1842 Don Luis divided his rancho among his four sons and Jose Domingo Peralta was given the area that would become Berkeley.  

Jose Domingo and his wife Maria built their first home of adobe bricks on the south bank of Codornices Creek and in 1851 built a larger, more substantial two-story frame house. While no traces of these buildings remain, there is a brass plaque marking the location of the adobe at 1304 Albina St.  

By 1852 Jose Domingo had sold all his land except for a 300-acre parcel around his home. But when he died in 1865 he no longer owned the 300-acre parcel, and his family could not afford a headstone for his grave. In 1872 his widow and 10 children were evicted from their home.  

Peralta’s home site was subsequently subdivided in 1878 by Casper Hopkins and he named it Peralta Park. The subdivision was planned in a naturalistic style and trees and shrubs were planted along the roads and lot lines. The then isolated area remained undeveloped until 1889, when the tract was sold to Maurice B. Curtis who arranged to have a horsecar line laid along Sacramento Street from University Avenue to Hopkins Street. As the centerpiece for his residential subdivision, Curtis also built a fabulous turreted Victorian hotel, named the Peralta Park Hotel, with 60 bedrooms and 20 baths. The hotel opened in 1891 and thirteen impressive homes were built.  

But only a year later Maurice Curtis was forced to sell the subdivision and the hotel. The hotel building was used as a school from 1901 until it was demolished in 1959, and the site is now the campus of St. Mary’s High School. 

Of the 13 Victorians built in Peralta Park, only five remain. These are: Edward Leuders House, 1330 Albina Street, Ira A. Boynton, architect, (1889), Adock/McQueston House, 1675 Hopkins Street (1889), 1307 Acton Street (1890s), 1466 Hopkins Street (1880s) and 1492 Hopkins Street (1880s). The original large lots were re-subdivided in the 1920s and seven Victorians were replaced by apartment houses or gas stations. 

 

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


All commuters are not equal

Rick Young
Saturday March 16, 2002

Editor: 

 

In his March 6, 2002 letters to the Daily Planet, UC Berkeley Director of Transportation Nadesan Permaul outlines his reasons for not supporting a bus pass program for UC Berkeley employees.  

Mr. Permaul argues asserts that the program would be ineffective and inequitable, providing a disproportionate subsidy for one transit user group on the campus while only meeting the needs of a limited number faculty and staff. It would seem that Mr. Permaul would support only programs that treat every commuter equally. 

But not every commuter should be treated the same by the University. What Mr. Permaul fails to consider is the inequitable impact that those who drive to campus have on the environment and local community. Each additional driver decreases air quality and adds to the impact of global warming. Moreover, every additional car on the road is an added threat to those who walk and bike. Furthermore, driving adds to the traffic congestion, slowing those who wisely choose to take the bus.  

Of all the commuter choices, driving has the most disproportionate impact. It is only fair that drivers compensate for their costs by supporting programs that reduce driving.  

As the so-called flagship institution of the UC system, UC Berkeley has the potential to set a shining example of ecological concern and efficiency. Rather than dismissing programs such as a bus pass, Mr. Permaul should support innovative solutions that reduce the impacts of driving.  

Instead, Mr. Permaul furthers auto dependency by supporting projects such as the three-story Underhill Parking Structure, which will hold approximately 1400 cars when completed. Such regressive thinking is not surprising coming from Mr. Permaul. Unlike the City of Berkeley, which utilizes energy efficient three-wheeled vehicles for parking enforcement, UC Berkeley’s Transportation Department’s vehicles of choice are none other than SUVs. 

Nad Permaul is nothing more than cheerleader for cars. UC Berkeley can do better.  

 

Rick Young 

Berkeley resident and  

UC Berkeley alum 


Joan of Arc is knocking at Aurora’s door

By John Angell Grant, Special to the Daily Planet
Saturday March 16, 2002

The children’s joke “knock knock” invites the response, “Who’s there?” The answer can be “uncle Milty’s underwear” or “boo” or any number of responses. 

In cartoonist Jules Feiffer’s 1976 existential sitcom “Knock Knock,” the answer is “Joan of Arc.”  

On Thursday, the Aurora Theater Company opened a production of Feiffer’s dark, comedic ode to cynicism in downtown Berkeley. 

In tone and character, “Knock Knock” is a lot like Feiffer’s famous Village Voice cartoons of the 1960s, ‘70s and ‘80s that feature neurotic, intellectualizing, self-absorbed characters who comically try to think their ways out of despairing and narcissistic feelings.  

As the play opens, it finds two such crusty old geezers sharing a log cabin in the woods and bickering about the meaning of life. 

Cohn (Will Marchetti) is an unemployed musician who hasn’t left the house in 20 years. His philosophy of life is, “I believe in me. After that, there’s room for doubt.” 

His roommate, Abe (Dan Hiatt), is a retired stockbroker , who is also unable to find anything in meaningful life.  

Their verbal gymnastics skip across the topics of reality and illusion, beauty and ugliness, parallel worlds, religion, change and the probability of things turning out one way or another. It’s the same pseudo-intellectual guff of Feiffer’s cartoons.  

It’s as though Felix and Oscar from Neil Simon’s “The Odd Couple” have somehow merged with Vladimir and Estragon from Samuel Beckett’s “Waiting for Godot.” 

When, by the magic of whimsical divine intervention, Cohn is granted three wishes, Joan of Arc (Rachel Brown) knocks at the cabin door along with a zany sidekick named Wiseman (Sara Moore). The story then becomes one of a cynic getting his wishes granted, and finding he’s not able to deal with that very well. 

But the play’s absurdly twisting and turning storyline is not consistently funny. At its best, under Michael Butler’s direction, “Knock Knock” achieves moments of entertaining dialogue a little like the Abbott and Costello who’s on first routine. 

Other highlights include a funny scene where Cohn tries to stuff Wiseman into a trunk and the limbs keep popping out. Elsewhere, there is a hilarious poker game between Abe and Wiseman. 

But ultimately it’s hard to care much about these two humorless, dogmatic, self-centered men who take their self-absorption so seriously. 

Further, there is a definite New York Jewish humor component to the two men’s dialogue that goes mostly unrealized in this production. Where the lines in “Knock Knock” often aren’t funny per se, their phrasing and rhythms invite the performers to make them funny with attitudes and inflections. 

In many ways, the two women in this production do better with the humor than the two men. Sara Moore is a zany, frenetic, motor-mouthed Wiseman, outstanding in the poker-playing scene, and bizarre as a UPS delivery boy with a vacant Valley Boy accent. 

Brown turns in a distinctive performance as goofy, blissed out Joan, someone who appears not to be playing with a full deck.  

Oddly, “Knock Knock” is the second play this year at the Aurora in which Joan of Arc figures as a major character. The first was January’s “St. Joan." This appears to be some kind of Aurora in-joke. 

Feiffer began his famous Village Voice comic strip in the mid-1950s, and won a editorial cartooning Pulitzer for it in 1986. Abe and Cohn of "Knock Knock" are cousins to the characters in the comics. 

But in elaborating their stories beyond a few quickly read newspaper panels, Feiffer hasn’t given them enough complexity to carry the weight of a full evening in the theater. 

 

 

 

Planet theater reviewer John Angell Grant has written for "American Theatre," "Backstage West," "Callboard," and many other publications. E-mail him at jagplays@yahoo.com or fax him at 1-419-781-2516. 


Arts & Entertainment Calendar

Staff
Saturday March 16, 2002

 

924 Gilman Mar. 22: Tsunami Bomb, No Motiv; Mar. 29: Limpwrist, All You Can Eat, The Subtonics, The Bananas, Sharp Knife; Mar. 30: 9 Shocks Terror, What Happens Next?, Phantom Limbs, The Curse, Onion Flavored Rings; All shows begin a 8 p.m. 924 Gillman St., 525-9926 

 

ACME Observatory Contemporary Performance Series Mar. 17: 8 p.m., Vorticella; the laptop duo of Kristen Miltner and Kendra Juul; $0 to $20, TUVA Space, 3192 Adeline. 649-8744, http://sfsound.org/ acme.html. 

 

The Albatross Mar. 17: Bobby Nickels, Kyle Thyer, Cherlie, 8:30 p.m.; Mar. 18: Paul Schneider; Mar. 19: Carla Kaufman & Larry Scala; Mar. 20: Whiskey Brothers; Mar. 21: Keni “El Lebrijano”; All shows begin at 9 p.m. unless noted. 822 San Pablo Ave., 843-2473, albatrosspub@ mindspring.com. 

 

CONT’D NEXT PAGE 

Anna’s Bistro Mar. 15: Sallie/Dave/Doug Jazz Trio; 10 p.m., Hideo Date; Mar. 16: Bob Crawford Jazz Trio; 10 p.m., Ducksan Distones Jazz Sextet; Mar. 17: Aleph Null; Mar. 18: Renegade Sidemen; Mar. 19: Tangria; Mar. 20: Bob Schon Jazz Quintet; Mar. 21: Terence Brewer Jazz Trio; Mar. 22: Anna & Ellen Hoffman Jazz Tunes; 10 p.m., Hideo Date; Mar. 23: Robin Gregory; 10 p.m., Ducksan Distones Jazz Sextet; Mar. 24: Christy Dana Jazz Group; Mar. 25: Renegade Sidemen; Mar. 26: Jason Martineau and Dave Sayen; Mar. 27: David Widelock Jazz Duo; Mar. 28: Randy Moore Jazz Trio; Mar. 29: Anna & Ellen Hoffman; 10 p.m. Hideo Date; Mar. 30: Robin Gregory; 10 p.m. Ducksan Distones Jazz Sextet; Music starts at 8 p.m. unless noted, 1801 University Ave., 849-2662. 

 

Ashkenaz Music and Dance Community Center Mar. 15: 8 p.m., Peter Rowan and the Bluegrass Intentions, $15; Mar. 17: 7 p.m., Berkeley High Jazz Ensemble and Combos; Mar. 19: 8:30 p.m., Peter Rowan and the Bluegrass Intentions, $15; Mar. 23: A Benefit for Forest Defense with The Funky Nixons, The Gary Gates Band, The Shut-Ins, $8 - $20; Mar. 29: Alpha Yaya Diallo; 1317 San Pablo Ave., 548-0425. 

Blake’s Mar. 15: King Harvest, First Circle, $5; Mar. 16: Omaya, $7; Mar. 17: The Lost Coast Band, The Real, $3; Mar. 18: The Steve Gannon Band & Mz. Dee, $4; Mar. 19: Mind Go Flip, RLT, $3; Mar. 20: Hebro, $3; Mar. 21: Ascension, $5; Mar. 22: Shady Lady, View From Here; $6; Mar. 23: Mystic Roots, LZ & Ezell Funkstaz, $5; Mar. 24: Passenger, The Shreep, $3; Mar. 25: The Steve Gannon Band & Mz. Dee, $4; 2367 Telegraph Ave., 877-488-6533. 

 

Cafe Eclectica Mar. 22: 8 p.m., The Teethe, The Natural Dreamers, Yasi, $3; Mar. 23: 8 p.m., Guest DJs and MCs, $5; 1309 Solano Ave., Albany, 527-2344, Shows are All Ages.  

 

Cal Performances Mar. 16: 8 p.m., Gyuto Monks perform multiphonic chanting in accordance with the spiritual practices of Tantric Tibetan Buddhism. $24 - $36; Mar. 17: 3 p.m., Andras Schiff, classical pianist. $28 - $48; Apr. 7: 3 p.m., Murray Perahia, classical pianist. $28 - $48; Zellerbach Hall, UC Berkeley, 642-9988 

 

Cato’s Ale House Mar. 20: Saul Kaye Quartet; Mar. 24: Lost Coast Jazz Trio; Mar. 27: Vince Wallace Trio; Mar. 31: Phillip Greenlief Trio; 3891 Piedmont Ave., Oakland, 655-3349 

 

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 

 

Fellowship Café Mar. 15: 7:30 p.m., Eliot Kenin at an evening of poetry, music, and spoken word. $5-$10 donation. Fellowship Hall, 1924 Cedar St., 540-0898, pubsol@pacbell.net.  

 

Freight & Salvage Mar. 15: David Maloney performs Irish folk opera “The Great Blight”, $17.50; Mar. 16: The Black Brothers, $18.50; Mar. 17: Tom Russell, $16.50; Mar. 19: The Okros Ensemble, $17.50; Mar. 20: The Hot Club of Cowtown, $17.50; Mar. 21: Tish Hinojosa, $17.50; Mar. 22: Marley’s Ghost, $17.50; Mar. 24: Teresa Trull & Barbara Higbie, $18.50; Mar. 27: Paul Thorn, $16.50; Mar. 28: Old Blind Dogs, $17.50; Mar. 29: Jack Hardy, $16.50; Mar. 30: Faye Carol, $17.50; 1111 Addison St., 548-1761, folk@freightandsalvage.org 

Jazzschool Mar. 24: 4:30 p.m., Alegria, $6-$12; Mar. 30: 4:30 p.m., Dmitri Matheny Orchestra presents “The Emerald Buddha”; 2087 Addison St., 845-5373, www.jazzschool.com. 

 

Rose Street House of Music Mar. 15: 8 p.m., Jamie Anderson and Wishing Chair; Mar. 21: 7:30 p.m., Rose Street on the Road/Indiegrrl Tour kickoff featuring Irina Rivkin, Making Waves, Francine Allen, Amber Jade, and Christene LeDoux, 594-4000 x687. 

 

The Starry Plough Mar. 15: 9:30 p.m., Moore Brothers, $6; Mar. 16: 9:30 p.m., St. Patrick's Celtic Meltdown, Blue on Green, Green Man Gruvin, $5; Mar. 17: 6 p.m., St. Patty's Day Celebration, Chameleon, Irish dancers & bagpiper, $10; 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 

 

 

UC Men's Octet Annual Spring Show Mar. 14 and 15: 8 p.m., all-male a cappella group; $7 students, $12 general, UC Berkeley, Wheeler Auditorium, 301-2367 octoevents@hotmail.com. 

 

“Harmonica Ace and Band” Mar. 15: 8 p.m., 10 p.m., Carlos Zialcita and his band team up with guest vocalist Ella Pennewell for a blues concert. $12. Dotha’s Juke Joint, 126 Broadway, Oakland, 663-7668 

 

“Expressionality” Mar. 13 through Mar. 16: Wed. 10:15 a.m., Thurs. 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m., Sat. to be announced. An opera created and produced by 4th and 5th graders. Wed. and Thurs. shows at Malcolm X Arts & Academics School, 1731 Prince St. Sat. show at Oakland Museum of Art. 644-6313 

 

“The Art of Disability” Mar. 16: 7 p.m., A showcase of performing artists with disabilities. $10 -$50 sliding scale. Alice Arts Center, 1428 Alice St., Oakland, hesternet@jps.net 

 

“Tribute to Oakland’s Gospel Greats” Mar. 16: 7:30 p.m., The Oakland Interfaith Gospel Choir and Youth Choir will present a free tribute concert. First Congregational Church of Oakland, 27th & Harrison St., Oakland, 839-4361  

 

“The Song of Songs” Mar. 16: 8 p.m., Composer Jorge Linderman creates a musical setting for Chana Bloch and Ariel Bloch’s translation of “The Song of Songs”. $32. Wheeler Auditorium, UC Berkeley Campus, 642-9988, www.calperfs.berkeley.edu 

 

“Mbira Concert” Mar. 16: 8 p.m., Forward Kwenda, considered the “Coltrane of Mbira” performs with Erica Azim. $12 - $15. Mahea Uchiyama Center for International Dance, 729 Heinz Ave. 845-2605 

 

Celebration for the Trees Mar. 17: 7 - 10 p.m., Benefit for the Ancient Trees Coalition Education Effort with Making Waves, Green, Marca Cassity, Folk This!, and Hali Hammer. BFUU Fellowship Hall 1606 Bonita. 

 

“Chamber Music Series” Mar. 17: 4 p.m., Joan Jeanrenaud, founding cellist of Kronos Quartet, gives a solo performance of both acoustic and electronic pieces. $10, free children under 18. The Crowden School, 1475 Rose St., 559-6910 x110, jamie@thecrowdenschool.org 

 

“Jazz Concert” Mar. 24: 2 p.m., Terry Gibbs and the Mike Vax Orchestra. $10 - $18. Longfellow School for the Arts, 1500 Derby St. 420-4560, www.bigbandjazz.net 

 

“Recital” Mar. 24: 3 p.m., Cal Performances presents pianist, Richard Goode, and vocalist, Randall Scarlata. $48. Hertz Hall, UC Berkeley campus, 642-9988, www.calperfs.berkeley.edu 

 

“Jewish Music Festival” Through Mar 24: Several performers will perform Jewish music and dance from across the world. Call Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center for Acts, times and dates. 925-866-9559, www.brjcc.org 

 

Dance 

 

“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 

 

“Women’s Voices, Then and Now” Mar. 15 through Mar. 24: Fri. 8 p.m., Sat. 2 p.m., Voices from a 1915 graveyard blend with voices from 1982 to present a vivid depiction of the lives of American women. $10. Unitarian Universalist Church of Berkeley, 1 Lawson Rd., Kensington, 525-0302 

 

“Persimmony Jones” Mar. 16: 12 p.m., Designed for a young audience, this is the story of a young girl trying to find her place in the world. As Persimmony travels through different lands on her search, she is forced to reexamine her own ideas about tolerance and acceptance. Free. Berkeley Repertory Theatre’s Thrust Stage, 2025 Addison St., 647-2978 

 

“Curtain Up” Mar. 22 through Mar. 24: 8 p.m., Musical theater veteran Martin Charnin and Broadway conductor/comoser Keith Levenson join forces to create a semi-staged version of Gershwin and Kaufman’s 1927 musical comedy “Strike Up the Band”. $24 - $46. Zellerbach Hall, UC Berkeley Campus, 642-9988 

 

“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 

 

“Impact Briefs 5: The East Bay Hit” Through Mar. 30: Fri. - Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 7 p.m., A collection of seven plays all about the ups and downs of in the Bay Area. $12, $7 students. La Val’s Subterranean Theatre, 1834 Euclid, 464-4468, tickets@impattheatre.com. 

 

“The Merchant of Venice” Through Mar. 31: Wed. - Thurs. 7 p.m., Fri. - Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m., Women in Time Productions presents Shakespeare’s famous romantic comedy replete with masks and revelry, balcony scenes, and midnight escapes. $25, half-price on Wed. The Berkeley City Club, 2315 Durant Ave. 925-798-1300 

 

“Knock Knock” Through Apr. 14: Wed. - Sat. 8 p.m., Sun 2 p.m., 7 p.m., A comedic farce about two eccentric retirees whose comfortable philosophical arguments are interrupted by a series of strange visitors. $26 - $35. Aurora Theatre, 2081 Addison St., 843-4822, www.auroratheatre.org 

 

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

 

“A Fairy’s Tail” Mar. 16 through Apr. 7: 8 p.m. Fri. and Sat., 5 p.m. Sun., 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. Directed by Patrick Dooley. $10 - $25. Mar. 16 - 31:Thrust Stage at Berkeley Rep, 2025 Addison St.; Apr. 4 - 7: UC Theatre on University Ave.; 704-8210, www.shotgunplayers.org. 

 

 

 

Film 

 

Pacific Film Archive Mar. 11: A Star is Born, 3 p.m.; Flesh, 7 p.m.; Mar. 12: An eye Unruled: An Evening with Stan Brakhage, 7:30 p.m.; Mar. 13: The Bicycle Thief, 3 p.m.; Daughter from Danang, 7:30 p.m.; Mar. 14: The Student I, 7 p.m.; Mar. 16: Shaping Identities Through Community, 7 p.m.; The Wolf, 9:30 p.m.; Mar. 17: For the Love of It: Amateur Filmmaking, 5:30; Mar. 18: Cabaret; 3 p.m.; Carnal Knowledge, 7 p.m.; Mar. 19: Stranger with a Camera, 7:30 p.m.; Mar. 20: Sunset Blvd., 3 p.m.; Chemical Valley, 7:30 p.m.; Mar. 21: Hazel Dickens: It’s Hard to Tell the Singer From the Song, 7:30 p.m.; Mar. 22: A Thousand and One Voices: The Music of Islam, 7:30 p.m.; Mar. 23: In a Lonely Place, 7 p.m.; The Big Heat; 8:55 p.m.; 2527 Bancroft Way, 642-1412 

 

“Asian American Film Fest” Mar. 13: Daughter From Danang; Pacific Film Archive, 2527 Bancroft Way, 642-1412. 

 

Exhibits  

 

“Trace of a Human” 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 

 

“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” 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 

 

“The Works of Alexander Nepote” Through Mar. 29: Nepote was a 20th century artist whose medium is a process of layered painting of torn pieces of watercolor paper, fused together in images that speak of the spirit that underlies and is embodied in the landscape he views. Check museum for times. Bade Museum, Pacific School of Religion, 1798 Scenic Ave., 849-8272 

 

“Trace of a Human” Through Mar. 30: An exhibit of mixed media sculpture by Jim Freeman, and acrylic paintings on canvas by Krystyna Mleczko. Tues. - Sat. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Ardency Gallery, 709 Broadway, Oakland, 836-0831, gallery709@aol.com 

 

“Journey of Self-discovery” Through Mar. 30: Community Works artist Adriana Diaz and Willard Junior High students joined together to explore gender stereotypes, advertising, and other influential elements in society in a project that culminated in two life-size portraits that explore self-identity. Free. La Pena Cultural Center, 3105 Shattuck Ave. 845-3332. 

 

“West Oakland Today” Through Mar. 30: Sergio De La Torre presents “thehousingproject”, an open house/video installation that explores desire surrounding one’s sense of home and place. Marcel Diallo presents “Scrapyard Ghosts”, an installation that presents a glimpse into the process of one man’s conversation with the living past through objects of iron, wood, rock dirt and other debris unearthed at an old scrapyard site in West Oakland’s Lower Bottom neighborhood. Pro Arts, 461 Ninth St., Oakland  

 

"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. 

 

“Portraits of the Afghan People: 1984 - 1992” Through Apr. 6: An exhibit of black and white photographs by Bay Area photographer Patricia Monaco. Free. Mon. - Fri. 8:30 a.m. - 6:30 p.m., Sat. 9 a.m. - 3 p.m. Photolab Gallery, 2235 Fifth St., 644-1400 

 

“The Zoom of the Souls” Mar. 23 through Apr. 13: An exhibit of oil paintings by Mark P. Fisher. Sat. 1 p.m. - 6 p.m. Bay Area Music Foundation, 462 Elwood Ave. #9, Oakland, 836-5223 

 

“Sibila Savage & Sylvia Sussman” Through Apr. 13: Photographer, Sibila Savage presents photographs documenting the lives of her immigrant grandparents, and Painter, Sylvia Sussman displays her abstract landscapes on unstretched canvas. Free. Wed. - Sun. 12 p.m. - 5 p.m. Berkeley Art Center, 1275 Walnut St. 64-6893, www.berkeleyartcenter.org 

 

“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.  

 

“Art is Education” Mar. 18 through Apr. 19th: A group exhibition of over 50 individual artworks created by Oakland Unified School District students, Kindergarten through 12th grade. Mon. - Fri. 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Craft and Cultural Arts Gallery, State of California Office Building Atrium, 1515 Clay St., Oakland, 238-6952, www.oaklandculturalarts.org 

 

“Expressions of Time and Space” Mar. 18 through April 17: Calligraphy by Ronald Y. Nakasone. Julien Designs 1798 Shattuck Ave., 540-7634, RyNakasone@aol.com.  

 

“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. 

 

“Quilted Paintings” Mar. 3 through May 4: Contemporary wall quilts by Roberta Renee Baker, landscapes, abstracts, altars and story quilts. Free. The Coffee Mill, 3363 Grand Ave., Oakland 465-4224 

 

“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 

 

“Masterworks of Chinese Painting” Mar. 13 through May 26: An exhibition of distinguished works representing virtually every period and phase of Chinese painting over the last 900 years, including figure paintings and a selection of botanical and animal subjects. Prices vary. Wed. - Sun. 11 a.m. - 7 p.m. The University of California, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, 2626 Bancroft Way, 642-4889, www.bampfa.berkeley.edu 

 

“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” 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 

 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center Mar. 17: 3 p.m., Suzan Hagstrom reads from her book “Sara’s Children: The Destruction of Chielnik,” chronicling the survival of one brother and four sisters in Nazi death camps. Free. 1414 Walnut St. 848-0237 x127 

 

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. 

 

Cody’s on Fourth St. 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. 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.  

 

Easy Going Travel Shop & Bookstore Mar. 7: Carl Parkes, author of “Moon Handbook: Southeast Asia”, presents a slide show exploring his travels in the region; Mar. 12: William Fienne describes his personal journey from Texas to North Dakota as he follows the northern migration of snow geese; Mar. 14: Gary Crabbe and Karen Misuraca present slides and read from their book, “The California Coast”; Mar. 19: Barbara and Robert Decker present a slide show focusing on the volcanoes of California and the Cascade Mountain Range; Mar. 21: Stefano DeZerega discusses opportunities for study, travel, and work in Latin America, Africa, Asia, the Middle East, or Eastern Europe; All readings are free and start at 7:30 p.m., 1385 Shattuck Ave. at Rose, 843-3533. 

 

GAIA Building Mar. 14: 7 - 9 p.m., Lecture with Patricia Evans speaking from her book, “Controlling People: How to recognize, Understand and Deal with People Who Are Trying to Control You.”; Mar. 19: Reading and slide show with Carol Wagner, “Survival of the Spirit: Lives of Cambodian Buddhists.”; March 21: 6 - 9 p.m., 1st Berkeley Edgework Books Salon; Mar. 22: 6:30 - 9:30 p.m., Book Reading and Jazz Concert with David Rothenberg; All events are held in the Rooftop Gardens Solarium, 7th Floor, GAIA Building, 2116 Allston Way, 848-4242. 

 

Gathering Tribes Mar. 15: 6:30 p.m., Susan Lobo and Victoria Bomberry will be conducting readings from “American Indians And The Urban Experience.”; 1573 Solano Ave., 528-9038, www.gatheringtribes.com.  

 

UC Berkeley Lunch Poems Reading Series Mar. 7: Marilyn Hacker reads from her most recent book, “Squares and Courtyards”. Free. Morrison Library in Doe Library, UC Berkeley campus, 642-0137, www.berkeley.edu/calendar/events/poems. 

 

University of Creation Spirituality Mar. 21: 7 - 9 p.m., Turning to One Another: Simple Conversations to Restore Hope to the Future, An Evening with Author Margaret J. Wheatley, $10-$15 donation; 2141 Broadway, Oakland, 835-4827 x29, darla@berkana.org. 

 

 

Poetry 

 

Poetry Flash @ Cody’s Mar. 3: Myung Mi Kim, Harryette Mullen & Geoffrey O’Brien; Mar. 6: Bill Berkson, Albert Flynn DeSilver; Mar. 10: Leslie Scalapino, Dan Farrell; Mar. 13: Lucille Lang Day, Risa Kaparo; Mar. 20: Edward Smallfield, Truong Tran; Mar. 24: Susan Griffin, Honor Moore; All events begin at 7:30 p.m., $2 donation. 2454 Telegraph Ave., 845-7852, www.codysbooks.com.  

 

Poetry Reading @ South Branch Berkeley Public Library Mar. 2: Bay Area Poets Coalition is holding an open reading. 3 p.m. - 5 p.m. Free. 1901 Russell St. 

 

Word Beat Mar. 9: Sonia Greenfield and Megan Breiseth; Mar. 16, Q. R. Hand and Lu Pettus; Mar. 23: Lee Gerstmann and Sam Pierstorffs; Mar. 30: Eleanor Watson-Gove and Jim Watson-Gove; All shows 7 - 9 p.m., Coffee With A Beat, 458 Perkins, Oakland. 526-5985, www.angelfire.com/poetry/wordbeat. 

 

Fellowship Café Mar. 15: 7:30 p.m., Eliot Kenin, poetry, storytellers, singers and musicians. $5-$10. Fellowship Hall, 1924 Cedar St., 540-0898. 

 

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. 

 

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. 

 

Lawrence Hall of Science Mar. 16: 1 - 4 p.m., Moviemaking for children 8 years old and up; Mar. 20: Spring Equinox; “Jurassic Park: Dinosaur Auditions Live Science Demonstrations” A directed activity in which children “audtion” to be a dinosaur in an upcoming movie. They’ll learn about the variety of dinosaurs in the Jurassic Park exhibit as well as dress up, act, and roar like a dinosaur. Through May 12: Mon. - Fri. 10:30 a.m., 11:30 a.m., 12:30 p.m.; Sat. - Sun. 12 p.m., 1 p.m., 2 p.m. 3 p.m. $8 adults, $6 children. Centenial Dr. just above the UC campus and just below Grizzly Peak Blvd. 642-5132 

 

UC Berkeley Phoebe Hearst Museum of Anthropology will close its exhibition galleries for renovation. It will reopen in early 2002.  

 

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
Saturday March 16, 2002


Saturday, March 16

 

 

76th Annual Poets’ Dinner 

11:30 a.m. 

Holiday Inn, Emeryville 

1800 Powell 

David Alpaugh will speak about “The Professionalization of Poetry,” followed by the reading of winning poems and prizes. 841-1217. 

 

Copwatch 

11 a.m. - 2 p.m. 

Copwatch 

2022 Blake St. 

Know your rights workshop. 548-0425. 

 

4th Annual Gay & Lesbian  

Family Night at the YMCA 

6 - 9 p.m. 

YMCA 

2001 Allston Way 

Open to all LGBT families and their friends. Pizza party, swimming, juggling demo and instruction, clowning, face painting, soccer, floor hockey, music, karate demo, and more for toddlers through teens. Free, donation requested. 665-3238, www.ourfamily.org.  

 

“Hooked” 

1:15 p.m. 

Alta Bates Hospital, Auditorium 

2450 Ashby Ave. 

A talk and slide show from the author of “Hooked: Five Addicts Challenge Our Misguided Drug Rehab System.” 763-0779, www.unhooked.com. 

 

Tax-Aid: Bay Area Free Tax Service for Low-income Taxpayers 

10 a.m. - 3 p.m. 

Lincoln Recreation Center 

250 10th St., Oakland 

Tax-Aid offers free tax return preparation to Bay Area families with incomes of less than $32,000. Eligible families simply bring their W-2s, other proofs of income and tax forms. Spanish, Chinese and Russian translators are available.  

 

St. Patrick’s Day Community 

and Family Contra Dance 

7:45 p.m. 

Grace North Church 

2138 Cedar 

7 p.m., Contra dance music teaching session. All levels welcome, easy dances for all ages. $10 adults, $5 kids. 482-9479. 

 

Special Education Workshop 

10 a.m. - 3 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

Navigating the System: Understanding Legal Responsibilities. Get a working sense of relevant special education law, Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, and the Americans with Disabilities Act. Learn to advocate for your child in assessments and IEP meetings. 558-8933, sandstep@earthlink.net. 

 

The Effect of Sept. 11 

on Working People 

noon 

Albany Library 

1247 Marin Ave. 

LaborParty—East Bay with speakers: Ethel Long-Scott, Mario Santos and Warren Mar. 273-9219. 

 

 


Sunday, March 17

 

 

Art of Enlightenment:  

Symbolism, Visualization and  

Mandalas 

6 p.m. 

Tibetan Nyingma Institute 

1815 Highland Place 

Rosalyn White, art director for Dharma Publishing, will discuss Tibetan paintings and how they are used in meditation. 843-6812. 

 

Women’s Day 

9:30 a.m. 

St. Paul AME Church 

2024 Ashby Ave. 

Women Excelling in the Grace of Giving; Speaker: Dr. Sarah F. Davis, Pastor 

Bethel AMEC, San Antonio, TX. 

 

Sara’s Children: The  

Destruction of Chmielinik 

3 p.m. 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish  

Community Center  

1414 Walnut St. 

Suzan Hagstrom will talk about her book, Sara’s Children, and host a discussion. 848-0237 x127. 

 

Stagebridge’s 11th Annual 

Family Matinee Theatre and 

Ice Cream Social 

3 p.m. 

First Congregational Church 

2501 Harrison, Oakland 

Premiere of Linda Spector’s “Chicken Sunday and Other Grandparent Tales,” followed by an old fashioned ice cream social. $8 general, $4 children. 444-4755, www.stagebridge.org.  

 

Fundraiser 

7:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Art Center 

1275 Walnut St. 

A fundraiser benefiting Bay Area Classical Harmonies and the Berkeley Art Center. $20. 219-5400, sarahfinley@hotmail.com.  

 


Monday, March 18

 

 

Conscientious Objection to War 

7 - 9 p.m. 

Friends’ Meetinghouse 

2151 Vine St. 

The Berkeley Society of Friends will discuss the 1965 U.S. Supreme Court’s reversal of the conviction of Daniel A. Seeger. Also a reading and discussion of Seeger’s pamphlet, The Seed and the Tree.  

 

Berkeley Gray Panthers Home 

Owners Committee 

1:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Gray Panthers Office 

1403 Addison St. 

Finding good repair people, good tenants, locating resources for low and middle income home owners. 548-9696, graypanthers@hotmail.com. 

 

Thwarting the Next Energy Crisis 

7 - 8:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Adult School Room 7 

1222 University Ave. 

Learn to install your own basic home weatherization measures. Class will cover selection of materials and the proper installation of door weather stripping, attic insulation, duct tape, caulking and more. Lecture includes hands-on demonstrations. 981-5435, Energy@ci.berkeley.ca.us. 

 

 


Tuesday, March 19

 

 

Berkeley Garden Club  

1 p.m. 

The Berkeley Garden Club will hold its Benefit Spring Tea and Professional Floral Design Demonstration. Sakae Sakaki will create both Ikebana and Western style arrangements. $7.50, 526-1083, bgardenclub@aol.com. 

 

Self Help Strategies and Techniques from Feldenkrais and Pilates 

noon - 2 p.m. 

Alta Bates, Auditorium — Herrick Campus 

2001 Dwight Way 

Arthritis Foundation Northern California Chapter fibromyalgia support group. 644-3273.  

 

The Destruction of Land and People: The Industry of Genocide 

6 - 8 p.m. 

UC Berkeley 

Tilden Room, 5th Floor of  

Martin Luther King Jr. Student 

Union Building  

Second symposium of the annual Breaking the Cycle, Mending the Circle Conference: Contemporary Issues of Genocide. This particular symposium is entitled The Destruction of Land and People: The Industry of Genocide. 642-4270.  

 


Wednesday, March 20

 

 

City Commons Club, 

Great Decisions Program 

10 a.m. - noon 

Berkeley City Club 

2315 Durant Ave. 

Nunu Kidane, Epidemiologist, UC San Francisco; “AIDS in Africa.” $5. 848-3533. 

 

Prose Writers’ Workshop 

7 - 9 p.m. 

Berkeley/Richmond Jewish  

Community Center Library 

1414 Walnut St. 

From Op-ed to fiction, memoir to the feature article. Workshop format. Free. 524-3034. 

 

African Philosophy 

7 p.m. 

The Fellowship of Humanity 

390 27th St., Oakland 

We will interpret Nkrumah as a philosopher. Brief presentations followed by open discussion. 451-5818, HumanistHall@yahoo.com. 

 

Cealo is Coming 

7 - 9 p.m. 

St. John’s Presbyterian Church 

Fireside Room 

2727 College Ave. 

Gayuna Cealo is a Burmese monk who’s mission is to lead people to their true selves. $10 donation. 525-6472. 

 

Community Prayer Breakfast 

7:30 a.m. 

H’s Lordships Restaurant 

Berkeley Marina, 199 Seawall Dr. 

The 62nd year of the interfaith prayer breakfast celebrating spirituality in the community. $18. 549-4524, vicki@baymca.org. n 

 

 


Thursday, March 21

 

 

Still the Source of Grace?  

Reading the Bible as a Gay Christian 

5 p.m.  

Pacific School of Religion chapel  

1798 Scenic Ave. 

With L. William Countryman, professor in biblical studies at 

Church Divinity School of the Pacific, and co-author with M.R. Ritley of “Gifted by Otherness: Gay and Lesbian Christians in the Church.” Free and open to the public. 849-8206. 

 

Simplicity Forum 

7 - 8:30 p.m. 

Claremont Branch Library 

2940 Benvenue Ave. 

People telling stories about the ways they have changed their lives by finding ways to work less, consume less, rush less, and have more time to build community with friends and family, as well as live more lightly upon the planet. 549-3509, www.simpleliving.net. 

 

– compiled by Guy Poole 

 

 


Panthers survive error-fest

By Jared Green, Daily Planet Staff
Saturday March 16, 2002

Two-run seventh inning gives  

St. Mary’s a win to start BSAL 

 

The St. Mary’s High baseball team kicked off its league season with a sloppy, last-gasp 10-9 win over St. Joseph on Friday. First baseman Pete McGuiness drove home the game-winning run with a drive to the fence in right field, scoring Joe Storno from second base. 

The game was a slow affair, with 11 total errors leading to seven unearned runs between the two teams. 

“We knew this was probably going to be a crazy game,” St. Mary’s head coach Andy Shimabukuro said. “We’ve been wiped out by injuries.” 

Those injuries include Shimabukuro’s two top pitchers, both out with shoulder injuries and with uncertain return dates. Friday’s starter, Joe Storno, has become St. Mary’s ace-by-default, and he struggled through six-plus innings against St. Joseph with a 9-6 lead. But Storno loaded the bases in the top of the seventh without getting an out, and Shimabukuro was forced to pull him. 

“I knew it was going to be a fight in that last inning, but I was trying to get (Storno) through for a complete game,” Shimabukuro said. “Our bullpen is pretty much non-existent right now.” 

The Panthers turned to shortstop Manny Mejia. Mejia closed Wednesday’s game against Castlemont, but that was the first time he had pitched in a game. He did a passable job against the Pilots in a tough situation on Friday, but the visitors managed to push across four runs on his watch for a 10-9 lead. 

“I didn’t even think I was going to pitch today,” Mejia said. “But I felt I could do it, and I know (Shimabukuro) has confidence in me to get the job done.” 

But the Panthers had the heart of their order coming up. Chris Morocco led off with a groundout, but second baseman Chris Alfert made up for two errors in the second inning with a blast to center that cleared the fence to tie the game.  

“Alfert’s our main guy.” Shimabukuro said. “If anyone’s going to step up, it’ll be him. Our 3-4-5 hitters are going to have to carry us, because we’re scrappy through the rest of the lineup.” 

Storno followed with a single, and Chase Moore lined another single to left. With the winning run on second, the St. Joseph outfield was forced to play shallow, and McGuiness ended the game by launching a shot over the centerfielder’s head. 

The early part of the game was ugly for the defenses. Alfert’s two second-inning miscues led to four runs for the Pilots, but three St. Joseph errors in the third handed the Panthers three runs. St. Mary’s followed that with a six-hit, four-run fourth inning that put them ahead 9-4 before the Pilots chipped away at the lead.


UC may pull its Israel study abroad program

By David Scharfenberg, Daily Planet staff
Saturday March 16, 2002

The University of California may suspend its study abroad program in Israel because of escalating Middle East violence, according to a university spokesman. 

“We don’t want to send any signal that we are abandoning the state of Israel,” said Michael Reese, UC’s assistant vice president of strategic communications. “But student safety comes first.” 

Reese said the university will decide in the coming weeks whether to recall UC students currently in Israel, and whether to cancel next year’s program. He emphasized that any suspension of the program would be temporary. 

“Regardless of what we do, we will keep our infrastructure in place,” he said, referring to partnerships with Israeli universities in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tel Aviv, and a series of UC employees at each site who provide academic and day-to-day support for students. 

Fifty-five students from campuses throughout the UC system started the year in Israel, mostly in Jerusalem. Many have decided voluntarily to return home, and today, only 27 students remain. 

Reese said the university is not leaning one way or the other in deciding whether to recall students. 

“There are powerful arguments on either side, not the least of which are made by the students themselves, who want to stay,” he said. 

Reese said the university is in constant communication with UC officials in Israel and the U.S. State Department. He said a State Department advisory to recall students could render any debate on the issue moot. Reese said he has no knowledge that an advisory is forthcoming.


Don’t compromise school safety

John H. DeClercq
Saturday March 16, 2002

Dear Ms. Lawrence: 

 

We understand that you are doing your best to balance the school district budget. However: 

The safety of the students must be insured and assured before any education in the classroom can take place. There should be no diminution of the safety staff and safety plan at the Berkeley High School. The safety budget needs to be increased, not decreased. Staff and tools must be increased to increase student safety. 

Several years before you arrived, it took us years to reconstruct the high school safety plan that had been dismantled by the prior school board. Do not undo what we worked so hard to re-create.  

Safety and stability on campus must be assured, so that students arrive in the classroom calm and ready to learn. 

 

Hold the line.  

No cuts in school safety. 

 

 

John H. DeClercq 

Berkeley


Long after its heydey, Yiddish radio returns to the airwaves

By Katherine Roth, The Associated Press
Saturday March 16, 2002

NEW YORK — Ask Seymour Rexite to sing your favorite song and the 91-year-old will gladly oblige, in Yiddish. 

“Yiddish radio was very big,” Rexite says, and so was he for 40 years on the air. “Name just about any song and we’d sing it in Yiddish.” 

Then he breaks into a heartfelt Yiddish rendition of Cole Porter’s “Night and Day,” followed by a bilingual plug for the shaving cream “Bar-ba-soooool!” 

After a half-century on the shelf, recordings of Rexite in his prime and other gems of Yiddish radio history are returning to the airwaves — this time on National Public Radio, in a 10-part series starting Tuesday. 

The longest series ever to air on NPR, “The Yiddish Radio Project” is the product of 17 years of digging through archives for the fragile aluminum discs recorded during Yiddish radio’s heydey, from the 1930s to the 1950s. 

Ranging from funny to heartbreaking, the broadcasts bring listeners into the everyday lives of an immigrant community at its peak, before its members — Jews from Central and Eastern Europe — assimilated more fully into mainstream American culture. More than 100 stations nationwide had Yiddish programming, and nearly 5,000 records were produced for the nation’s 2 million Yiddish speakers. 

“This is really the story of every ethnic group in America that has ever tried to retain its cultural identity,” said Henry Sapoznik, who produced the series with David Isay and Yair Reiser. 

“It doesn’t matter that this is Yiddish or that it took place in the Lower East Side of New York. This is the story of Spanish-speaking communities, of Greek-speaking communities, of every community that’s had to find a way to reconcile the seemingly irreconcilable. There’s a history waiting to be uncovered of these tiny, low-powered stations attempting to reach their own communities in their own language.” 

Rexite performed with his wife, the late Miriam Kressyn. His silken voice and delicious translations earned him the title “the Yiddish Perry Como,” and won him four Goldies, the Oscars of the Yiddish theater. 

The short bespectacled statuettes still line the mantle in his Greenwich Village apartment. On the walls hang pictures of Frank Sinatra, Fiorello LaGuardia and Albert Einstein — all fans, he says, of Yiddish performance. 

Unlike mainstream American radio of the time, “there was no Yiddish Lone Ranger, there was no Yiddish Flash Gordon,” Sapoznik said.  

The NPR series, to run on Tuesday afternoons, explores Yiddish dramas, news programs, advice and game shows, and includes some early man-on-the-street interviews. 

By the end of the 1950s, the golden age of Yiddish radio came to a close. Television overtook radio. Yiddish culture in Europe nearly vanished because of the Holocaust. In America, “The melting pot was bubbling and no one wanted to encourage people to stay within their culture,” Sapoznik said. 

“These people who did the Yiddish radio shows were swimming against the current.” 

——— 

On the Net: 

www.YiddishRadioProject.org 


Bears down Penn in 1st round; No. 3 Pittsburgh up next

The Associated Press
Saturday March 16, 2002

PITTSBURGH – The NCAA tournament committee didn’t do California any favors, forcing the Pac-10 school to travel across the country for its first-round game. 

And now that they’re here, the Golden Bears figure they might as well spend the weekend. 

“Why not?” guard Brian Wethers said. 

Joe Shipp scored 20 points as Cal played a solid all-around game and advanced to the second round with an 82-75 victory over Pennsylvania in the South Regional on Friday. 

The sixth-seeded Golden Bears (23-8) will play Pittsburgh in the second round Sunday. The third-seeded Panthers, playing a short walk from their campus, beat Central Connecticut State 71-54. 

Wethers hit several key jumpers and added 19 points for Cal, which avoided being beaten in the first round for the second straight year by holding off the 11th-seeded Quakers (25-7). 

Last March, Cal was eliminated in the opening round by Fresno State, resulting in a plane ride back from Memphis that still hurts 12 months later. 

The Bears were determined not to let it happen again. 

“We’re a lot more focused, a lot more prepared and a lot more hungry,” Wethers said. “Last year, we were excited to be in. But this year, we really wanted to get a win in this tournament and make a run.” 

They’re off. 

Ugonna Onyekwe, the Ivy League’s player of the year, and Koko Archibong led Penn with 16 points apiece. Jeff Schiffner added 12 before fouling out. 

Much of the talk leading up to tipoff had focused on the Ivy’s Quakers, who had won 10 straight games and 15 of 17 to get into the tournament. 

Unlike Princeton, which staged NCAA tourney upsets in 1996 and ’98, Penn is a much more athletic team. And based on their regular-season wins over Georgia Tech and Temple, the Quakers became a trendy office-pool pick to knock off Cal. 

“That bothered us a little bit,” Wethers admitted. “We tried to look at it as if we were the underdogs.” 

But it was Cal which looked like the Ivy League squad, making backdoor cuts and playing hard-nosed defense. 

Cal, which held Pac-10 teams to 66.4 points per game this season, came up with nine steals and held the Quakers to 42 percent shooting. 

“We wanted to make them work for everything,” Shipp said. “In the second half, we really stepped it up after we gave them too many easy looks in the first half.” 

Cal’s man-to-man pressure made it tough on Penn for the entire 40 minutes, and even when they led by double digits late, the Bears didn’t back down. 

“I thought we had some good looks, but we just didn’t shoot well enough,” Penn coach Fran Dunphy said. “Give Cal credit. They made big shots at big times.” 

This wasn’t the same Cal team that got drubbed by 46 points by Arizona on March 2, but more like the one which started the season 9-1 and won seven of eight in conference play before the meltdown against the Wildcats. 

“Yeah, we’ve taken our bumps and bruises in the past,” Wethers said. “But we’ve learned from our losses. I think this was more like the team we really are.” 

Leading by four points with 15:41 left, Cal’s Ryan Forehan-Kelly hit a 3-pointer, and Shipp had a thunderous dunk over Archibong to cap a 9-0 run that put the Bears ahead by 13 with 12:26 remaining. 

“That was huge,” Cal coach Ben Braun said of Shipp’s dunk, which he punctuated by walking over the legs of Archibong, who was sprawled on the floor. Shipp “doesn’t need to see that again. I’m probably going to turn off the TV when that play comes on.” 

But with Wethers the only Cal player looking to shoot, Penn crawled back with three 3-pointers and pulled within 65-59 on Archibong’s two free throws with 4:16 left. 

That’s when Shipp brought Cal out of its offensive funk by draining an NBA-range 3-pointer on a designed play to make it 68-59 with 3 minutes to go. 

“That was the play,” said Shipp, who scored 11 points on free throws. “I got a great look, took my time and just stroked it. It was a good shot and we needed a score.” 


‘Waving Man’of Berkeley dies at 91

By Michelle Locke, The Associated Press
Saturday March 16, 2002

Joseph W. Charles, a gentle spirit who brightened the commute of millions of motorists, has died at age 91. 

For 30 years, Charles spent weekday mornings standing on a busy Berkeley street corner to wave a cheerful hello to passing cars — a practice that earned him the name “Waving Man.” He died Thursday of heart failure at an Oakland hospital. 

By the time he retired in 1992, for health reasons, Charles had been featured in newspaper and television reports worldwide. For a city better known for making political waves, the charming and unassuming Charles was a beacon of goodwill. 

“He was the heart of Berkeley,” said Julie Conger, an Alameda County Superior Court judge and longtime friend. “He was just a wonderful, wonderful man.” 

Charles began his routine in 1962, a custom that started informally with a casual wave to a neighbor. 

At first, he said he got some stares and his wife wanted to know “if I was crazy.” But, gradually, his cheerful waves and benediction “You keep smiling” became a staple of the morning drive. 

In 1971, Charles retired from his regular job at the Oakland Naval Supply Center, but he still rose each day at 6:30 a.m. to take up his post on Martin Luther King Jr. Way. Back then he would “go to bed thinking about my waving and wake up thinking about my waving,” he said in a 1992 interview with The Associated Press. 

Over the next three decades, the traffic got thicker and the commute more tense, but still Charles waved. 

“People not just in Berkeley but from all over would drive miles out of their way just so they could drive by the waving man,” said Martin Snapp, a columnist for the Berkeley Voice and a friend of Charles. 

“My daughter turned to me when she was about 12 or 13 and she said, ’You know, Mom, every time you drive by Mr. Charles, it’s like getting a blessing,”’ Conger recalled. “And that’s exactly what he was to so many people. It was like starting your day with a blessing.” 

After a fan presented Charles with a pair of bright yellow gloves, his waves got even easier to spot. Those gloves are now in the Berkeley Historical Society Museum. 

“He’s a legend,” said Berkeley Mayor Shirley Dean. “He always had this wonderful kind of sparkle about him.” 

Although he became a Berkeley landmark, Charles wasn’t a native Californian. He was born in Lake Charles, La., and moved to the San Francisco Bay area in the 1940s, part of the migration of southern blacks in search of work in the booming shipyards of World War II. 

As a young man, Charles played baseball in the Negro Leagues and often talked of once facing the great Satchel Paige. 

“He struck out but he got a foul tip,” Snapp said. “He was very proud of that foul tip.” 

Charles’ wife died several years ago, and his two children also are dead. He is survived by a grandson, Robert Charles, of Oakland. 

Charles’ legacy, said his friends, will be his smile, his wave and his often-repeated exhortation to “Have a GOOD day!” 

“He loved people,” said Snapp, “and that was his way of doing it.” 


Jews can be critical of Israel without betraying their people

E. Arnon
Saturday March 16, 2002

Editor: 

 

I, Israeli and Jew, am appalled by Gabe Kurtz’s March 15 letter. I am one of those “Uncle Isaacs” he so viciously castigates. A Pro-Palestinian media to picture Israel badly is unnecessary: Ariel Sharon and his military machine are doing a great job. 

Specifically, the photograph of which he writes is from a surreptitiously shot video showing Israeli soldiers in the best traditions of a Latin American death squad.  

Mr. Kurtz may not have seen the shots of the crowd dispersed by automatic gunfire and the victim stripped to his briefs prior to being shot. In a professional disciplined army, there is no excuse (how does Mr. Kurtz know the shooter had family killed in a terrorist act?) for soldiers to act-out personal agendas.  

In the IDF in which I served thirty years ago, these soldiers would have been immediately arrested, tried and sentenced for murder. 

They shame all Israelis, in and out of uniform. 

The Israeli press recounted this past week that Israeli soldiers are “tattooing” Palestinians with numbers on their forearms.  

This practice was devised and practiced only by the Nazis for inmates of the concentration camps.  

Reading of it, I was stunned into silence, then rage at this crime of “injuring the public sensibility,” an offense which includes any public display of Nazi symbols, means and methods, particularly those used in their campaign to exterminate the Jewish people.  

And an Israeli military officer publicly stated that in the fight against the Palestinians Israel must learn the lessons from any source, including the Nazi’s methods in the Warsaw Ghetto, which included curfews, deliberate starvation of the population, public humiliations, unprovoked summary executions, deportations. 

No, Mr. Kurtz, Israelis and Jews demanding an end to the occupation of Palestinian lands, an immediate end to Sharon-and-CO.’s state terrorism, an immediate end to confiscating Palestinian land, destruction of crops, humiliating and life-threatening check-points, extra-judicial use of lethal force against suspected terrorists, and immediate end to the politically excused emulation of Nazi techniques against an occupied population violating the Fourth Geneva Conventions, are not “Uncle Isaacs” but rather modern day Jeremiahs decrying evil performed in our name.  

We proudly denounce these acts.  

 

NOT OUR NAME! 

 

E. Arnon 


Rosie O’Donnell says being gay was ‘never a big deal for me’

By David Bauder, The Associated Press
Saturday March 16, 2002

NEW YORK — Rosie O’Donnell, in her first extensive public discussion about being gay, says in a television interview to air Thursday that she didn’t come out sooner partly because she didn’t consider it a big deal. 

O’Donnell said she didn’t want the adjective “gay” permanently attached to her name. 

“It was never a big deal for me,” she said. “It remains not a big deal for me. It is not the way that I describe myself. But nor is it a way that I distance myself from.” 

Diane Sawyer inteviewed O’Donnell during “Primetime Thursday.”  

O’Donnell, who has won four straight Daytime Emmy awards for best talk-show host and was nominated again on Wednesday, is quitting her syndicated show in May. She told Sawyer that played a part in her decision to talk about her sexuality now. 

She also wanted to speak out to oppose a Florida law restricting the adoption of children by gay parents. O’Donnell, who has three adopted children, said she’s willing to be the nation’s image of a gay parent. 

“I don’t think America knows what a gay parent looks like,” she said. “I am the gay parent. America has watched me parent my children on TV for six years. They know what kind of parent I am.” 

O’Donnell’s coming-out is a big moment for gay and lesbian Americans, said Joan Garry, executive director of the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation. 

“Now no one will be able to say that they don’t know someone who is gay,” Garry said, “because everyone knows Rosie.” 

Some gay activists were unhappy that O’Donnell hasn’t spoken out publicly before, but Garry said GLAAD doesn’t fault her because it’s a difficult personal decision. 

The announcement isn’t likely to affect her show, according to an expert in television syndication. Ratings have slid for “The Rosie O’Donnell Show,” as they have for most talk shows, because there’s more competition in daytime TV, said Bill Carroll of the Katz Television Group. 

“The audience has accepted her and I think they will be accepting of any choice she makes,” he said. 

O’Donnell has a similar faith in her television audience. 

“I think if they felt as though it was a lie, if they felt like I was pretending to be who I am on the show, they would turn away,” she said. “But I haven’t lied to them yet. This is another element that I haven’t shown them. But it was never a lie.” 

O’Donnell said she realized she was gay when she was 18. Two years later, she first fell in love with a woman, but she said she also has had male lovers. O’Donnell is in a four-year relationship with a woman, former TV executive Kelli Carpenter, with whom she has adopted a child. 

O’Donnell’s childhood — with a mother who died when she was young and an emotionally distant father — caused her more difficulties than being gay, she said. She said she had never felt discriminated against because of her sexuality. 

“I have lived my life very openly and very truthfully,” she said. “When I was with a man, everyone knew who my partner was. And when I was with a woman, everyone knew who my partner was. There was never any secret or any hiding.” 

Her much-publicized “crush” on actor Tom Cruise wasn’t an attempt to deceive. “I never once said I want him naked in a bed doing the nasty,” she said. “I want him to mow my lawn and get me a lemonade.” 

She said she hoped her children would not be homosexual because “life is easier if you’re straight.” 

People don’t need to approve of her lifestyle to support making laws easier for gays and lesbians to adopt, she said. 

“I’m not asking that people accept homosexuality,” she said. “I’m not asking that they believe like I do, that it’s inborn. I’m not asking that. All I’m saying is, don’t let these children suffer without a family because of your bias.” 

Sawyer noted that President Bush has said he believes children ought to be adopted in families with a woman and a man who are married. 

“President Bush is wrong about that,” O’Donnell said. “He’s really wrong. And, you know, if he’d like, he and his wife are invited to come spend a weekend at my house with my children. And I’m sure his mind will change.”


A’s owners extend Beane’s contract

The Associated Press
Saturday March 16, 2002

PHOENIX – Billy Beane’s contract as general manager of the Oakland Athletics was extended by three years Friday through the 2008 season. 

“This has been a tremendous opportunity for me,” said Beane, who became general manager following the 1997 season. “I’m proud of what we’ve been able to accomplishment up to this point, but I feel like it’s unfinished business.” 

Beane, who also had his current contract restructured, has overseen a franchise that went from a 65-97 record to 102-60 last year. Oakland has made consecutive postseason appearances, losing twice in the first round to the New York Yankees. 

“Billy and I both knew he wanted to stay, and we’ve talked about this for four or five months,” A’s co-owner Steve Schott said. “All we had to do was put the pieces together. I hope this dispels any rumors about Billy going to Boston.” 

Beane, 39, joined the A’s front office in 1990 as an advance scout. 

He played six years in the majors with the New York Mets, Minnesota Twins, Detroit Tigers and A’s. He was a reserve on the 1989 World Series champion A’s team, his final season as a player. 

“This is a signal to the stability that exists here,” Beane said. “This also represents my own faith in the stability of the franchise.” 

The A’s are on a year-to-year lease with the Oakland Coliseum through 2004, and are discussing construction of a baseball-only facility in Oakland.


Today in History

Staff
Saturday March 16, 2002

This is Saturday, March 16, the 75th day of 2002. There are 290 days left in the year. 

 

Highlight in History: 

Two hundred years ago, on March 16, 1802, Congress authorized the establishment of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, N.Y. 

 

On this date: 

In 1751, James Madison, fourth president of the United States, was born in Port Conway, Va. 

In 1836, the Republic of Texas approved a constitution. 

In 1850, “The Scarlet Letter,” Nathaniel Hawthorne’s novel about adultery, revenge and redemption in Puritan Massachusetts, was first published. 

In 1915, the Federal Trade Commission was organized. 

In 1935, Adolf Hitler scrapped the Treaty of Versailles. 

In 1945, during World War II, Iwo Jima was declared secured by the Allies. 

In 1968, during the Vietnam War, the My Lai Massacre was carried out by U.S. troops under the command of Lt. William L. Calley Jr. 

In 1978, Italian politician Aldo Moro was kidnapped by left-wing urban guerrillas, who later murdered him. 

In 1982, Claus Von Bulow was found guilty in Newport, R.I., of trying to kill his now-comatose wife, Martha, with insulin (Von Bulow was acquitted in a retrial). 

In 1985, Terry Anderson, chief Middle East correspondent for The Associated Press, was abducted in Beirut; he was released in December 1991. 

Ten years ago: Robert J. Eaton, head of General Motors’ profitable European operations, joined Chrysler Corp. as Chairman Lee Iacocca’s future successor. 

Five years ago: At the request of a hobbled President Clinton, Russia’s Boris Yeltsin agreed to delay their upcoming summit by one day to give Clinton an extra day to recuperate from knee surgery. Jordan’s King Hussein knelt in mourning with the families of seven Israeli schoolgirls gunned down by a Jordanian soldier. 

One year ago: Rap impresario Sean “Puffy” Combs was acquitted in New York of taking an illegal handgun into a crowded Manhattan hip-hop club where three people were later wounded; he was also cleared of trying to bribe his way out of trouble. Combs’ bodyguard, Anthony “Wolf” Jones, was acquitted of the same charges. Saudi commandos freed surviving hostages and ended the hijacking of a Russian plane by armed Chechens that resulted in the deaths of a flight attendant, a hijacker and a passenger. 

 

 

 

Birthdays: Actor Leo McKern is 82. Comedian-director Jerry Lewis is 76. Former Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, D-N.Y., is 75. Movie director Bernardo Bertolucci is 61. Game show host Chuck Woolery is 61. Singer-songwriter Jerry Jeff Walker is 60. Country singer Robin Williams is 55. Actor Erik Estrada is 53. Actor Victor Garber is 53. Actress Kate Nelligan is 51. Country singer Ray Benson (Asleep at the Wheel) is 51. Rock singer-musician Nancy Wilson (Heart) is 48. Golfer Hollis Stacy is 48. Actress Isabelle Huppert is 47. Rapper Flavor Flav (Public Enemy) is 43. Actress Lauren Graham is 35. 


Man registered dog as Republican, gets jury notice

The Associated Press
Saturday March 16, 2002

LAFAYETTE — Barnabas R. Miller, registered Republican, has been called for jury duty in Contra Costa County this month. 

There are two problems — Barnabas is only 9 years old, and he’s a poodle. 

His owner, Donald Miller, wanted to point out holes in the voter registration system. 

“If I can register my dog, then anybody can register,” Miller told the Contra Costa Times. “You’re supposed to be a citizen. He doesn’t even have a driver’s license.” 

But Barnabas received a jury summons, and now Miller, a 78-year-old retired iron worker, has some explaining to do. 

“He should not make his point in this manner,” said Candy Lopez, the county’s assistant registrar. 

Shad Balch of the Secretary of State’s office said the voter registration form is signed to testify the information is correct — under penalty of perjury. 

Balch said a perjury conviction could get Miller four years in jail. 

Prosecutors aren’t sure if they’ll press charges. 

“I have never heard of it happening before,” said Brian Baker, a senior deputy district attorney. 

California’s voter registration laws changed in the 1970s to let people register by mail, rather than just in person. 

“We try to make it a very simple process,” Balch said, calling California’s voter registration an honor system. 

Miller still has a few days to return the affidavit answering Barnabas’ jury summons.


Click and Clack Talk Cars

Staff
Saturday March 16, 2002

Don’t mess with tire pressure  

 

Dear Tom and Ray: 

 

During a safety meeting at my workplace, we were discussing tires and driving in the snow. Several folks suggested that you could get better traction in the snow by letting some of the air out of your tires. I disagreed, since it seems like this would only increase the likelihood of skidding. I told my crew I'd research this and get back to them. Can you help? — Danny 

 

RAY: Well, our official position is that you should not mess with tire pressure at all, Danny. And if you won't take our word for it, ask anyone who has rolled over a Ford Explorer. 

TOM: Even in theory, it's a tough question to answer, and it depends on what kind of snow you're in. Generally speaking, thinner tires are recommended for most snow conditions. Thinner tires are better able to bite down through the snow and reach the pavement for traction. That would argue for higher tire pressure, which creates a thinner tread patch. 

RAY: But if you had snow that was so deep you couldn't cut through it, you might want the widest possible tread footprint, to mimic a snowshoe. That would argue for lower tire pressure.  

TOM: Of course, there's no way you'd float a 3,000-pound automobile on top of the snow, but we're just talking theory here. 

RAY: But that theory does apply on sand. When you drive on sand, manufacturers suggest that you lower the tire pressure. You'll never cut through the sand, so you want the largest, softest footprint you can get to try to maintain traction on top of the sand. 

TOM: So what's the answer, Danny? Leave it alone. We're opposed to playing around with your tire pressure for two reasons: One is that it will hardly make a difference, in terms of snow traction. The tread pattern, the rubber compound and the condition of your tires will play much bigger roles than a few pounds of pressure either way. 

RAY: And more importantly, once you get through that situation, you'll then be driving on improperly inflated tires, and that's dangerous.  

TOM: So make sure your tire pressure is set at the level recommended by the manufacturer. And put a set of snowshoes in the trunk in case you have to walk to a phone booth and call a tow truck.  

 

Traditional jumper cables work best 

 

 

Dear Tom and Ray: 

 

I continue to see ads for battery chargers and battery jumpers that operate through cars' cigarette lighters instead of the battery terminals. I have never tried one because I'm concerned that too many amps would be flowing through the lighter, which would be a hazard. Am I right to avoid these things? — Ann 

RAY: Yes, but for the opposite reason. Not enough electricity passes through them. 

TOM: If too many amps passed through the lighter, it would blow a fuse. So these things have to trickle electricity from car to car so slowly that you could build your own replacement battery out of potatoes and twigs by the time your battery is charged back up. 

RAY: So stick with traditional jumper cables, or, if that makes you uncomfortable, there are two other good options. One is a new kind of safer jumper-cable system that is supposedly idiot-proof (although, to be honest, I have yet to test it on my brother).  

TOM: It's called Jump Star. The cables run through a computerized box that won't let any electricity flow until you have each of the connections hooked up correctly. They're quite pricey (about $100) and are available through Beverly Hills Motoring Accessories at (800) 367-2462. 

RAY: Of course, the other safe option is a good, old-fashioned emergency-roadside-service membership, Ann. Good luck.  

 

Rear seat headrests increase safety 

 

Dear Tom and Ray: 

 

I have a four-door, 1996 Jeep Cherokee, and I'm worried that the low rear seat, which doesn't have headrests, might be dangerous in an accident. I noticed this when my son recently went from being in a child seat (which extended up past his head) to being in the back seat without a child seat. Now his neck is just above the low seat back. Although I really like the Jeep (despite its barbaric interior), I'm concerned. I see newer SUVs, and they have two or three headrests in the back. They must be there for a reason. So, is this car safe for rear-seat occupants? Frankly, if it's not, I'll sell it tomorrow and get something else, because my family's safety comes first. But if I'm just being a paranoid lunatic, I'll keep it. — Alan 

RAY: Well, you can always do what my brother did. He left his son in a child seat until the kid was old enough to drive himself.  

TOM: You're absolutely right to be concerned, Alan. The reason vehicles have headrests is to keep passengers' necks from snapping in a collision.  

RAY: Since 1969, the federal government has required headrests on the front seats of all cars. In 1991, NHTSA (the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration) extended the rule to include previously exempt light trucks -- which is the category that includes the Jeep Cherokee. 

TOM: But manufacturers have never been required to put headrests in the back. Lots of manufacturers do, because it's been proven to decrease neck injuries. But they don't have to. 

RAY: So when you buy a cheap, barbaric vehicle like the Cherokee, you don't get all of the amenities you'd get if you bought something better. Jeep simply skimped on the rear headrests in this vehicle. And no, it's not safe. If you were rear-ended, your son could suffer a serious neck injury. 

TOM: Normally, you'd have three options, Alan. One would be to go to a junkyard and buy a rear seat from a Cherokee that does have the optional rear headrests. But you can't do that because, as far as we know, they were never even offered as an option on the Cherokee. 

RAY: So your second option is to find an interior customizer. Look in the yellow pages under "Van Converters." They would have the seats, the experience and the insurance liability coverage to replace your rear seat with one with a higher back. 

TOM: But your best bet might simply be to a get another vehicle. The Cherokee got a "Marginal" rating in overall crashworthiness from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety. And if safety is really your primary concern, you can do a lot better, Alan.  

***


Protesters decry screeners’ citizenship status as Mineta speaks

By Collen Valles, The Associated Press
Saturday March 16, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Transportation Secretary Norman Mineta touted the administration’s advances in aviation and transportation security Friday, while outside, airport workers and their supporters lambasted the federal government’s requirement that airport baggage screeners be U.S. citizens. 

“Citizenship has nothing to do with the job,” said Erlinda Valencia, a legal immigrant who has been in the United States for 14 years and is in the process of getting her citizenship. “What we need are experienced screeners who know the job.” 

Mineta said he could do nothing to change the law. 

“What we have done is to develop a program with the (Immigration and Naturalization Service) to inform people how to expedite their applications for citizenship,” he said, speaking at a Commonwealth Club of California luncheon. 

San Francisco city supervisor Gerardo Sandoval spoke to the small group of protesters gathered in front of the hotel where Mineta gave his speech, pledging to do all he could to help the screeners. 

“What we have here is not a war on terrorism anymore, it’s a war on immigrants,” Sandoval said. 

Up to 1,000 airport workers at the San Francisco Bay area’s three main airports — the San Francisco International Airport, the Oakland International Airport and the Norman Y. Mineta San Jose International Airport — could be affected by the new rule, said Daz Lamparas, a representative of the Service Employees International Union, local chapter 790. 

The union had a petition with more than 3,000 signatures on it asking Mineta to waive the citizenship requirement. Mineta did not meet with the protesters. 

Rep. Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif., has proposed a bill that would have the same requirements for airport security screeners as for U.S. military recruits, who currently are not required to be U.S. citizens. 

Mineta also spoke about the advances made in security in aviation and other modes of transportation, pointing out that more sky marshals have been hired and that new federal employees have been sworn in to oversee security at seven airports. Mineta said he would select a federal security director for San Francisco International Airport in the next two weeks. 

Mineta also said that industry leaders from across the country, including the service sector and high tech, were helping the government try to figure out ways to keep travelers moving while doing better checks of passengers 

“I can assure you, we are building a transportation security system that will defeat efforts of people who seek to use our system against us,” he said. 


Willie Brown upsets Miami mayor with remark

By Margie Mason, The Associated Press
Saturday March 16, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Once again, Mayor Willie Brown has caused an uproar by letting his tongue run loosely while away from home. 

In Paris this week on a trip to promote tourism, Brown responded to concerns about safety in San Francisco saying, “I think you’ve got us confused with Miami. There are probably no safer streets, comfortable streets in the world today than those that are in San Francisco.” 

“If only he’d left his mouth in San Francisco,” wrote the San Francisco Chronicle, whose columnist Rob Morse joked that the streets are not only comfortable, they’re “warm with fresh urine.” 

“Brown’s mind is Versailles-like in its isolation from reality,” Morse wrote. 

A mayoral spokesman said Brown’s comments were “tongue-in-cheek” and blown out of proportion by the media. “The mayor didn’t mean any harm by it,” spokesman Ron Vinson said Friday. 

But Miami Mayor Manny Diaz isn’t laughing. He wrote Brown saying he’s “very dismayed,” and claimed crime has decreased significantly in Miami, a major destination for French tourists. 

“In the future, I hope you will refrain from making comments that unnecessarily impugn the character of another city and its residents,” Diaz wrote. 

Brown was still in Europe on Friday and was unavailable for comment, Vinson said. He was unsure whether the mayor would later contact Diaz. 

Brown’s comments in Paris were prompted by questions about San Francisco’s rampant homeless problem. Tourists on many downtown streets encounter bodies sprawled on sidewalks, accompanied by the stench of urine and feces.  

Drugs and related crimes are endemic. 

It wasn’t the first time Brown’s mouth got him in trouble in Paris. During a 1996 visit after a 49ers loss to the Dallas Cowboys, Brown also made an infamous crack about San Francisco’s backup quarterback, Elvis Grbac, calling him “an embarrassment to humankind.” 

Such remarks gained so much attention that Brown made a 1999 campaign promise to keep his mouth shut. 

“There’s a tendency for the mayor to shoot from his hip, and when you do that, there’s a chance that maybe it will ricochet,” said Board of Supervisors President Tom Ammiano. “I don’t think he’ll ever escape it.” 

Ammiano should know. Brown once referred to the city’s supervisors as “his mistresses and a bunch of pantywaists.” 

“At the next meeting,” Ammiano said, “we said, ’It’s Mr. Pantywaists to you.”’ 

———— 

On the Net: 

http://www.ci.sf.ca.us/mayor/ 

http://www.ci.miami.fl.us/mayor/


Lindh’s lawyers threaten libel against ‘instant book’ publisher

By Paul Glader, The Associated Press
Saturday March 16, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Lawyers for John Walker Lindh have sought to block publication of an “instant book” about the American Taliban, calling it “grossly and outrageously false and defamatory.” 

“Publication would be at your peril,” Attorney George Harris wrote in a letter faxed to the book’s publisher, San Jose-based University Press. Copies of the legal threat were sent to Amazon.com, Borders Inc. and Barnes & Noble, all of which were still taking orders Friday. 

Lindh, 21, of Marin County, is awaiting trial in Virginia on charges that he conspired to kill Americans abroad by aiding terrorists in Afghanistan. 

A pre-publication copy sent to The Associated Press appears to be a compilation of unattributed quotes and information two authors took from news reports and government case documents, with significant editorializing and speculation, little sourcing and no footnotes. 

“It’s not hard cold facts,” said the publisher, Rhawn Joseph. “It is more like circumstantial evidence.” 

Joseph declined to provide resumes or biographical information for the two authors, whom he claims did some investigative reporting. He would not make them available for an interview. 

Joseph said he had offered Lindh’s lawyers an opportunity to add 50 unedited pages to the manuscript, but that he would publish with or without their input. 

“They might not like it but I don’t think there is anything they can sue us for,” Joseph said. 

The booksellers also weren’t backing down. 

“We go by whatever the courts determine,” said Amazon spokeswoman Patty Smith. “The threat of litigation is no reason to take off a book.” 

She noted pre-orders for the $14.95 book rank it in the top 5,000 books sold on the site. 

Joseph said the threat of a libel suit may be good for sales of the instabook, one of a series his company has produced with a team of freelance writers. 

“It is in the oven right now,” Joseph said. “We have already gone over the proofs and are set to start shipping on Monday.” 


California jobless rate declines

By Simon Avery, The Associated Press
Saturday March 16, 2002

LOS ANGELES — California’s jobless rate declined modestly in February, thanks to gains in construction and trade jobs, officials said Friday. 

But the state bucked the national trend of job growth, showing a net loss of 4,700 payroll jobs since January. 

California’s unemployment rate was 6.1 percent last month, down from a revised 6.4 percent in January, the Employment Development Department said. A year ago, the state’s jobless rate was 4.7 percent. 

Despite the positive uptick in February, key sectors of the economy continued to show weakness. 

The services sector, which includes business services such as advertising and computer programming, posted the largest month-to-month decline, losing 17,600 jobs. Manufacturing also continued to shed positions. 

Earlier this month, figures showed the national economy adding 66,000 new jobs in February, helping push the country’s jobless rate down to 5.5 percent, from 5.6 percent in January, and giving the strongest signal yet that the national recession could be ending. 

In California, however, even as the numbers improve slightly, major sectors of the economy such as technology and manufacturing remain under pressure. 

In Santa Clara County, the heart of Silicon Valley, the jobless rate in February declined to 7.3 percent from 7.7 percent in January.  

In Los Angeles, it fell to 6.4 percent from 6.8 percent. 

In a separate survey of households, the EDD reported that 84,000 more Californians were working in February than in January. A record total of 16,523,000 people held jobs in the state during the month. 


On eve of HP-Compaq merger vote, a contest too close to call

By Brian Bergstein, The Associated Press
Saturday March 16, 2002

PALO ALTO — Hewlett-Packard Co. chief Carly Fiorina told her 88,000 employees in a November e-mail that talk of a feud between her and sons of the company’s founders was merely “lazy reporting” by journalists trying to sell newspapers. 

“It is far easier to dream up a feud that doesn’t exist than to research complex, far-reaching, industry-changing business concepts,” she wrote. 

Perhaps Fiorina was right — there was no feud. Because “feud” would be a huge understatement for the all-out war that has raged the last five months over HP’s plans to buy Compaq Computer Corp. in a stock deal now valued at about $21 billion. 

The bickering should end Tuesday, the deadline for HP’s 900,000 stockholders to send in cards indicating how they stand. Hundreds of shareholders also are expected to come to a Silicon Valley auditorium to vote their stakes and speak their minds. 

The contest appears too close to call. While Compaq shareholders are expected to approve the deal Wednesday, HP results might not be known for weeks because independent proxy counters will painstakingly verify each vote. Both sides say early tallies of proxies already mailed in show the vote going their way. 

Whatever happens, this deal will forever change HP, a proud institution two engineers launched in a Palo Alto garage 64 years ago. 

Even longtime business observers have been stunned by the tenor of the proxy fight, which has matched Fiorina and her management team against dissident director Walter Hewlett and his advisers, who are intent on blocking what would be one of the world’s biggest high-tech mergers. The deal is also opposed by David Woodley Packard and other heirs of the late founders. 

Each side has spent tens of millions of dollars on newspaper and Internet ads, road trips for meetings with investors, legal fees and public relations blitzes. 

“Carly is a warrior,” said HP board member Patricia Dunn, chief of Barclays Global Investors. “She’s been very resilient.” 

Not everyone sees that as a plus. 

“If she was as enthusiastic and paid as much attention to running the business as opposed to doing the deal, Hewlett-Packard shareholders would be in a lot better shape,” said David Katz, president of Matrix Asset Advisors, which will vote its HP and Compaq stock against the acquisition. 

HP and Hewlett sometimes talked past each other, failing to address specific issues. Each accused the other of violating tenets of corporate governance: Hewlett blasted HP for allegedly hiding lucrative pay packages waiting for Fiorina and Compaq’s chief, Michael Capellas; HP slammed Hewlett for missing three key board meetings. 

“In my personal opinion, HP’s image has been tarnished by this proxy fight,” said Paul McGuckin, a Gartner Inc. research director who supports the merger. 

“HP used to have an image of taking the high road, of not engaging in dirty tactics, of wanting to be a trusted adviser. After slinging mud with Walter Hewlett the last two months, HP doesn’t look like a company that takes the high road.” 

There are more tangible concerns as well. 

For one, if the deal is rejected, HP’s and Compaq’s leaders have to skulk back to their stand-alone companies — which they have spent six months describing as desperately in need of overhauls the mega-merger could provide. Fiorina would likely leave HP; Capellas would probably stay with Compaq. 

But the picture could get even muddier if the deal does pass. 

HP, a $45 billion seller of printers, computers, servers, digital cameras and high-tech services, believes that with Houston-based Compaq and its business-computing expertise on board, it will be able to dramatically improve the end-to-end packages it offers. 

Still, many customers have told independent surveys they worry they’ll be neglected while HP and Compaq figure out how to work together. 

On the other hand, some big Compaq and HP clients have offered high praise for the deal. And the companies contend customers have nothing to fear because the merger is being planned better than any in memory. 

Perhaps a bigger worry is that HP’s employees — the people who would turn Fiorina’s home-run strategy into reality — still need convincing. 

Though HP says internal surveys show that about two-thirds of its work force supports the merger, independent polls of employees at three company sites by the well-regarded Field Research Corp. found the opposite results. 

Fiorina, brought in to shake up HP in 1999, tends to provoke strong opinions. 

Many employees say she has reinvigorated a staid, decentralized Gray Lady of Silicon Valley. But others say she is imperious, too flashy for HP’s engineering culture, too cold about last year’s 7,000 layoffs and the 15,000 more that would be needed if the deal goes through. 

Even so, it’s unclear how much whatever employee hostility to the deal might exist would hamper HP as it tries the complex integration of Compaq. 

For example, a 22-year HP veteran who hates the deal says that even if only 35 percent of employees agree with him — as the most optimistic surveys suggest — “it’s the end of HP” because “you need everybody on board.” 

But in the next breath, the same engineer, who spoke on condition of anonymity, says he expects that even the deal’s biggest opponents would work hard at making it successful if it does go through. 

“A lot of people say, ‘Well, we’ll do our best — that’s the HP way.”’


Opinion

Editorials

City may ban cardboard coffee-cup sleeves

The Associated Press
Friday March 22, 2002

BERKELEY — Those outspoken Berkeley residents are at it again. The problem this time? Nasty used coffee-cup sleeves. 

A group of people say it’s a health hazard to reuse a cardboard heat shield that protects hands wrapped around hot coffee cups. 

Some coffee houses in the area have been recycling the sleeves to save paper and trash, meaning people have to use a sleeve that has already been in contact with another human hand. 

The issue was brought to the city council meeting Wednesday night. It was delayed until next month, when city officials will ask health officials to research the matter and consider whether to prohibit reusing the sleeves. 


City may ban cardboard coffee-cup sleeves

The Associated Press
Thursday March 21, 2002

BERKELEY — Those outspoken Berkeley residents are at it again. The problem this time? Nasty used coffee-cup sleeves. 

A group of people say it’s a health hazard to reuse a cardboard heat shield that protects hands wrapped around hot coffee cups. 

Some coffee houses in the area have been recycling the sleeves to save paper and trash, meaning people have to use a sleeve that has already been in contact with another human hand. 

The issue was brought to the city council meeting Wednesday night. It was delayed until next month, when city officials will ask health officials to research the matter and consider whether to prohibit reusing the sleeves. 


Oakland hires guard to bar Caltrans from disputed land

The Associated Press
Wednesday March 20, 2002

OAKLAND — The city and port have hired a private security guard to block Caltrans contractors from the planned staging site for the first section of the long-awaited new span of the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge. 

The legal dispute over who owns 52 acres of waterfront land came to a head Friday when Oakland city and port officials sued state and federal transportation agencies. The twin suits were filed in state and federal courts. 

In federal court documents, Oakland claimed the agencies violated federal base closure, environmental protection and transportation laws, when they invoked a law allowing the Federal Highway Administration to seize property from other federal agencies for critical interstate projects. 

Oakland is seeking an injunction prohibiting Caltrans’ Bay Bridge contractor from using the land and a pier at Burma Road. Plaintiffs also seek an immediate injunction, and backed up the threat with guards. 

Caltrans officials said they were stunned by the Friday’s lawsuit and even more surprised by Saturday’s arrival of a guard. 

“No one wanted this to happen. We needed to resolve this,” said Port Commission President Phil Tagami after he initially denied the guard had been assigned to stop Caltrans. 

Major Jerry Brown would like to develop a four-star hotel and American Indian-run casino at the former Oakland Army base, which closed in 1999 and was to be transferred to the city and port later this year. The city also would like to build an industrial park on the site. 

The port has been using Burma Road for its maritime operations to unload odd-sized cargo. 

It’s just the latest hitch in a project to replace the eastern span of the Bay Bridge, which partially collapsed during the 7.1-magnitude quake in 1989. The work began in January after taking 12 years to get off the ground and seeing a budget zoom from $200 million to the current worst-case estimate of $3.2 billion. 

Caltrans says using the former Army property will save about $30 million because it’s the closest and best possible staging area to the bridge. 


News of the Weird

Staff
Tuesday March 19, 2002

One hot dog, but I won’t hold anything 

 

BALTIMORE — Betrice Gonzalez may sell you a hot dog, but don’t expect her to hold your stun gun. 

The vendor, fed up with requests to hold items not allowed inside the Clarence Mitchell Jr. Courthouse, posted a sign on her stand recently telling people not to bother inquiring. 

“Absolutely no holding: weapons, bags, radios, drugs, etc. while in the courthouse!!,” the sign reads. 

“I’ve had people offer me money to hold their bags,” she said Friday while serving steaming hot dogs to customers. “People get rude when I say ’no.”’ 

During the seven years Gonzalez has worked at the stand, a few yards from the courthouse entrance, people have asked her to hold everything from clothes to knives. 

“One person even asked me to hold their stun gun,” she said, laughing. “They offered me $20, but I still said ’no.”’ 

Most are not jurors or courthouse employees, but visitors who have forgotten the items are not allowed inside the courthouse. 

“I was stunned when I saw the sign,” said frequent customer Stacy Madden, 28, who works at the bank across the street. “I didn’t know people actually did that. I could believe it, though.” 

 

 

Betting on cow dung 

 

CONNELLSVILLE, Pa. — The prom committee at Connellsville Area High School is hoping to raise $20,000 with one smelly pie. 

Players can participate in “Cow Patty Bingo” for $10, claiming one of 3,025 squares marked off on the front lawn of the high school in Fayette County. A lottery will determine who owns which numbered square. 

At noon on April 6, a cow will be led onto the lawn to graze, moo and, hopefully, do her business within two hours. The square with the most pie will win $10,000. If the pie lands evenly on two squares, both will be awarded $5,000 each. 

“It’s a unique idea,” principal Robert McLuckey said last week. “It’s innovative, and I thought it would be a lot of fun.” 

Tickets went on sale in November and committee members have sold 1,700 tickets, generating $17,000. 

The committee is trying to raise as much money as it can to offset the $32,000 cost of the May 18 prom on the Gateway Clipper riverboat in Pittsburgh, about 36 miles northwest. 

 

Waitresses get a big tip 

 

 

MARKLEVILLE, Ind. — A farmer who became a regular at restaurants in the lonely years after his wife died has left posthumous tips to some of his favorite waitresses. 

Paul Chadwick, who died at age 88 on Dec. 25, 2000, named in his will 10 waitresses, each of whom he bequeathed $2,500. 

Among them was Lana Evans, who, as a teen-age waitress at what was then Pugsley’s Diner in Middletown back in 1982, recalled that Chadwick stopped by the restaurant about every day for lunch. 

“I met him right after his wife passed away, and he seemed so sad,” Evans said last week. “I would sit and talk to him as he ate.” 

Nine other waitresses from area restaurants were named in Chadwick’s will, which also bequeathed amounts to numerous friends, family members and community organizations. 

“Mr. Chadwick was a very nice man; I would even say courtly,” said G. Douglass Owens, the attorney who was executor of Chadwick’s will. 

After the 88-year-old farmer died, Owens was charged with locating those named in Chadwick’s will. He found nine of the waitresses. He believes the other is deceased. 

“It goes to show, you never know what a little kindness might mean to someone,” said Melinda Padgett, township trustee.


Asian-American scientists end two-year lab boycott

(AP)
Monday March 18, 2002

LIVERMORE, Calif. — After two years of urging Asian-American scientists to pass up jobs at nuclear weapons labs, the Berkeley professor who organized the boycott says he’s proven his point. 

“I am committed not only to ending this boycott, but also to becoming actively involved in recruiting Asian-Americans to these labs,” Ling-chi Wang said. 

Officials at Lawrence Livermore and Los Alamos national laboratories agree a negotiated deal is near. 

Wang, a longtime activist, is still waiting for a written plan that would address issues of promotion, disparity in pay and a workplace culture that sometimes leaves Asian-American employees feeling left out. 

“As long as that type of discrimination exists, there’s no reason an Asian-American scientist would want to go in there and work in these Department of Energy labs,” he told the San Jose Mercury News for a story Sunday. 

Wang, the head of the ethnic-studies program at the University of California-Berkeley, initiated the boycott at a conference of Asian-Pacific Americans in Higher Education in Long Beach in March 2000. He persuaded the organization to pass a resolution calling for “all Asian-American scientists and engineers not to apply for jobs at the national labs.” The resolution came at a vulnerable time for the labs. As a result of the Wen Ho Lee case, Los Alamos and Livermore had already seen a drastic drop in the number of Asians, both U.S. citizens and foreigners, applying for assignments at the labs.  

 

 


Emeryville replaces historic shellmound with street mall

By Mary Spicuzza, Special to the Daily Planet
Saturday March 16, 2002

Emeryville Vice-Mayor Nora Davis sat on the steps of City Hall on a recent Sunday morning and offered a preview of the city’s efforts to honor a Native American shellmound as it replaces it with a modern development.  

“They beat Emeryville to that whole mixed-use idea,” Davis said of the Ohlone and their ancestors. “Bay Street will be a gathering place very similar to the use by the Native Americans.” 

Much like Native Americans once gathered at the Emeryville Shellmound to exchange goods, she said, Bay Area residents will come together at Bay Street to shop — at stores like Banana Republic, Gap, Pottery Barn and Victoria’s Secret. But while Native Americans relied mainly on a shellfish diet, modern shoppers will have restaurants like Pasta Pomodoro and Prego to choose from. 

This may sound like an unlikely comparison. But at least, residents will soon get to learn more about what the $400 million Bay Street project replaced. Next month the city will launch a Web site devoted to the shellmound. It will feature a much-awaited report about what archeologists found there, and include educational Web pages for children and adults. 

The battle over the plans for the Bay Street project, a combination shopping center, 12-screen movie theater and condominiums, began in 1999 when the city found human remains while digging a pit to keep toxics in the soil from washing into the Bay.  

Most thought years of industrial use, toxic contamination, and a brief stint as an amusement park had destroyed what was left of the mound, but when the burials were discovered Native Americans, conservation activists, and archeologists started packing city council meetings to protest destruction of the site.  

The number of burials found recently still remains a mystery. 

"We did find a lot of intact burials," said Oakland archeologist Sally Salzman Morgan, who was hired by Emeryville to study the site. "It’s too inflammatory to say how many there were. But most (burials) were disturbed." 

Morgan, who works for Oakland-based URS Corporation, said she found artifacts, animal bones, and tools in addition to human burials. But dangerous toxic waste made for serious problems at the shellmound, she said. 

"I do think the city did the right thing," Morgan said. "People have to understand that time marches on." 

Emeryville may face criticism from those who say they did the Ohlone wrong. But city staff said when the shopping center opens next to Ikea this fall, it will honor the Native Americans who once lived, died, and remain buried at the site. 

The city and developers from Madison Marquette are now planning exactly how they will celebrate the past as they move on the future. DeeDee Taft, a project spokeswoman who works for Tiburon-based Spin Communications, said Bay Street developers are committed to "commemorating the cultural and natural history of the Emeryville site."  

Taft declined to provide details because developers haven’t made any final decisions about commemoration plans. But in an emailed statement, Taft said Bay Street will feature sculptures, artwork, and a community room with Native American exhibits and artifacts. 

Lynn Tracy Nerland, assistant city attorney for Emeryville, said a commemoration committee has discussed a "water feature" to honor nearby Temescal Creek, and possibly an open model of a Native American-inspired home, know as a ghost structure. 

"They may do a ghost structure," Nerland said. "But they don’t want to call it that." 

Several streets in the project may have Ohlone-inspired names. 

Nevertheless, Native American activists and advocates say the city should have done more to preserve the shellmound, or at least a portion of it. 

"Why look at the Taliban when you can look at the Emeryville City Council?" said Perry Matlock, who has volunteered with the International Indian Treaty Council for 10 years. He compares building over the shellmound site to the recent destruction of Buddha statues in Afghanistan. "They’re both destroying cultural resources." 

Matlock, who’s grandmother was a Chippewa Indian, began working with the Berkeley Architectural Heritage Society to protest development. He calls the developer’s commemoration plans "pathetic."  

"I’m very disappointed that Emeryville decided to destroy its most precious resource," said Stephanie Manning of the Berkeley Architectural Heritage Society. She said the worst part was the pile drivers, which she could hear from her West Berkeley home. "It’s going to make me sick to think of those mothers and babies buried there, with those piles driven through them." 

Emeryville said any remains excavated during construction are being treated respectfully, and will be reburied near the shopping center.  

But Rosemary Cambra, tribal chair of the Muwekma Ohlone, calls the city’s new, culturally-sensitive development the legally-permitted erasing of a culture. 

"We’re still living in the world of politics of erasure," Cambra said. "It’s just an old way of racism. Nothing has really changed for tribal groups in the Bay Area." 

Vice-Mayor Nora Davis said the emotional attachment people have to the land makes it impossible to please everyone. And that becomes quickly apparent while Bay Street opponents talk passionately about the importance of the site. 

"There is no question," said long-time Oakland archeologist Allen Pastron, who quit the project after a few weeks. "Even the remnant of the Emeryville Shellmound that I saw had to be one of the most significant, if not the most significant, archeological site in the Bay Area. If not all of Northern California."  

Pastron said thousands of bodies, and hundreds of artifacts, were buried at the site over the 2,500 years Native Americans lived there, making it one of the oldest mounds and "crucial to understanding early cultures in California." 

"The portion of the shellmound that I saw in 1999 was a large intact remnant of that," he said. He urged the city to delay construction for several months, but they refused. 

Archeologists already removed more than 700 burials during excavations in the early 1900s. Despite early archeologists, and the lead, arsenic and DDT that leached into the soil from paint and pesticide factories on the project, some burials remained. He acknowledged that toxic contamination was a problem, but said Emeryville used it as an excuse to avoid dealing with an important cultural resource. 

Kent Lightfoot, a UC Berkeley anthropology professor, agreed that development has quickly destroyed most of the areas more than 400 sites. So fast, he said, there hasn’t been enough time to understand them before they’re gone. 

"They have a great significance with Native peoples," he said. "but we still know very little about them."