The Week

 

News

Berkeley native trapped in Bethlehem

By Jia-Rui Chong, Daily Planet staff
Friday April 05, 2002

Berkeley native Kenneth Cardwell and Oakland native Myron Collins, professors at St. Mary’s College in Moraga, are among the 12 Lasallian brothers, a group of Catholic priests, still surrounded by Israeli troops at Bethlehem University. -more-


Revolting, the peace protest was anything but

Tom Wandall
Friday April 05, 2002

Editor: -more-


Out & About Calendar

Compiled by Guy Poole
Friday April 05, 2002


Friday, April 5

-more-


Story of Mozart returns to the big screen — through the eyes of the film’s director

by Peter Crimmins Special to the Daily Planet
Friday April 05, 2002

The advent of DVD technology for home theaters has made the concept of “director’s cut” nearly obsolete. With so much “alternative” footage and running commentary for most movies packed onto those little discs, there is very little thunder left to merit a theatrical re-release of a film. -more-


Arts & Entertainment Calendar

Staff
Friday April 05, 2002

Freshman impresses as Panthers pound Redwood

By Jared Green, Daily Planet Staff
Friday April 05, 2002

Tully throws five-inning shutout, strikes out eight to end St. Mary’s losing streak -more-


UC enrollment down next year

By David Scharfenberg, Daily Planet staff
Friday April 05, 2002

Some students concerned with decline in minority admissions -more-


Kudos to Zoning Adjustment Board

Victor Pineda
Friday April 05, 2002

Editor: -more-


Author Michael Moore continues to pound Bush, war or no war

By John Flesher, The Associated Press
Friday April 05, 2002

TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. — The publisher almost pulled the plug on Michael Moore’s latest book, fearing a backlash because of its bare-knuckle attacks on President Bush. -more-


Sports shorts

Staff
Friday April 05, 2002

Cope wins at Worlds -more-


Local Web site used to urge peace

By David Scharfenberg, Daily Planet staff
Friday April 05, 2002

E-mails, faxes sent to -more-



Nevada Power to appeal PUC ruling on $922 million rate hike

The Associated Press
Friday April 05, 2002

LAS VEGAS — Nevada Power Co. said it will ask the state Public Utilities Commission to reconsider its order that rejected almost half of the $922 million rate increase the utility sought to recover the cost of buying power last year. -more-


The Jews are attacked near campus

By Devona Walker, Daily Planet Staff
Friday April 05, 2002

On Thursday morning at 2 a.m. , two Orthodox Jews were reportedly attacked within one block of the Clark Kerr neighborhood. Witnesses say they believe the crime was just another bloody example of increased anti-Semitism. -more-


BHS crew deserves P.E. credit

Cynthia Papermaster
Friday April 05, 2002

Editor: -more-


Imprisoned Indian activist sues FBI for violating civil rights

The Associated Press
Friday April 05, 2002

WASHINGTON — FBI agents and Director Louis Freeh denied imprisoned American Indian activist Leonard Peltier a fair chance at clemency and parole when they publicly protested against him in 2000, a lawsuit filed Thursday alleged. -more-


Today in History

Staff
Friday April 05, 2002

Today is Friday, April 5, the 95th day of 2002. There are 270 days left in the year. -more-


New HIV infections on the rise in SF

The Associated Press
Friday April 05, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — New HIV infections are on the rise in the San Francisco Bay area, in part, because a small proportion of gay men who are having unprotected sex, a new study shows. -more-


High-tech firms worried about violence in Israel

The Associated Press
Friday April 05, 2002

SANTA CLARA — Silicon Valley firms are worried about the increasing violence in Israel, a major hub of the world’s high-tech industry. -more-


Bay Area Briefs

Staff
Friday April 05, 2002

Salmonella poisoning causes FDA warning on cheese -more-


Senate passes $25 billion school bond issue for ballot

By Stefanie Frith, The Associated Press
Friday April 05, 2002

SACRAMENTO — More than $25 billion in education bonds to help fix up deteriorating schools was approved by the state Senate Thursday, sending the issue to Gov. Gray Davis. -more-


Scientists identify new insect species in Southern California

By Andrew Bridges, The Associated Press
Friday April 05, 2002

SAN DIEGO — Scientists said Thursday they have discovered at least a half-dozen new species of insect in Southern California, some of them in the midst of the nation’s seventh-largest city. -more-


Colorado river rafters want voters to guarantee access

By Robert Weller The Associated Pressv
Friday April 05, 2002

DENVER — Colorado rafting groups, battling a lawsuit aimed at restricting passage through private property, will try to put an initiative on the ballot guaranteeing access rights. -more-


Home Matters: Home repairs are no longer a guy thing

The Associated Press
Friday April 05, 2002

Day-to-day maintenance isn’t gender-specific. Nowhere is it written that leaking faucets are a “guy thing” or wallpaper is “women’s work.” -more-


Luscious peaches begin with planting

By Lee Reich The Associated Press
Friday April 05, 2002

A truly ripe peach is one that makes you jut your head forward with each bite to keep yourself from being showered with juice. You rarely can buy such a fruit, but you can grow it. Get it off to a good start with correct planting. -more-


Installing decorative ceiling medallions

James and Morris Carey
Friday April 05, 2002

If you regularly read our column you know that we are third-generation contractors. You also might recall that we grew up in a home built by our grandfather at the turn of the 20th century. The home was Mediterranean-style construction, plaster in and out, with spacious rooms and high ceilings. Not only were the ceilings high, in some rooms they were coved at the perimeter and had decorative cornice or picture mold. Other rooms, such as the living room and dining room, had intricate plaster moldings that bordered the ceiling and ornate ceiling medallions used as foils for chandeliers. -more-


Questions and Answers

By Morris and James Carey The Associated Press
Friday April 05, 2002

Questions and Answers -more-


Livermore is like a very near Napa Valley

By Susan Fornoff, San Francisco Chronicle
Friday April 05, 2002

LIVERMORE — The golf nut wants to go to Monterey. The wine lover lobbies for Napa. Yet, they agree on one thing: They want a magic carpet to drop them in the middle of some fun without having to wait behind lines of cars or people. -more-


A year into bankruptcy: Did PG&E choose wisely?

By Karen Gaudette The Associated Press
Friday April 05, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — It was April 5, 2001, and Gov. Gray Davis was assuring millions of Californians watching the evening news that the state was coming to grips with its energy crisis. -more-


Cloth keyboard is chic, but frustrating

By Matthew Fordahl The Associated Press
Friday April 05, 2002

It’s the holy grail of handheld computing: A technology that makes it just as easy to enter information into a mobile device as it is to type into a desktop personal computer. -more-


Berkeley-funded cultural center destroyed

By Jia-Rui Chong Daily Planet staff
Thursday April 04, 2002

The building had been destroyed three times before. Each time, Palestinian refugees in the Dheisheh camp in the West Bank rebuilt it with the help of Berkeley’s Middle East Children’s Alliance. -more-


Berkeley High wins second straight San Marin title

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Thursday April 04, 2002

NOVATO - It’s called the San Marin Tournament, but they might want to rename it the ’Jacket Classic. -more-


Tuesday’s protesters were unorganized, ridiculous

Eric Meyerson Berkeley
Thursday April 04, 2002

Editor: -more-


The Band’s ‘The Last Waltz’ takes another spin

By Scott Bauer The Associated Press
Thursday April 04, 2002

Eric Clapton and Robbie Robertson challenging each other with progressively intense guitar licks. -more-


Staff
Thursday April 04, 2002


Thursday, April 4


School district lessens cuts to music program

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet staff
Thursday April 04, 2002

The Berkeley Unified School District administration has scaled back plans to cut the music program next year, recommending fewer teacher layoffs than it proposed earlier this year. But some teachers and parents still have concerns about the layoffs and the larger class sizes that will result. -more-


Panthers go winless in tourney

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Thursday April 04, 2002

NOVATO – The St. Mary’s Panthers pulled off another huge comeback against El Cerrito on Wednesday, but this time they couldn’t hold on for the win as the Gauchos mounted a comeback of their own to win, 10-9, in extra innings at the San Marin Tournament. Jacob Lucas’s single scored Randy Minix in the bottom of the eighth inning to end the game and send the Panthers home winless in three tries in the tournament. -more-


Developer Kennedy is doing a good thing with the New Arts Theater

Victor Pineda Cal Grad, Former Student Senator and Berkeley Resident
Thursday April 04, 2002

Editor: -more-


Newly released UC study says regular churchgoing links with longer lives

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet staff
Thursday April 04, 2002

Church is good for you, according to a new Bay Area study, which will be published in today’s edition of the International Journal of Psychiatry in Medicine. -more-


Paul McCartney enriches us and endures

Elliot Stephen Cohen Berkeley
Thursday April 04, 2002

Editor: -more-


Today in History

Staff
Thursday April 04, 2002

Today is Thursday, April 4, the 94th day of 2002. There are 271 days left in the year. -more-


League is wrong, we’ve had enough development

James K. Sayre Oakland
Thursday April 04, 2002

Editor: -more-


News of the Weird

Staff
Thursday April 04, 2002

A pizza reward for fire safety -more-


Insurance on Golden Gate Bridge expected to double

The Associated Press
Thursday April 04, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Insurance costs for the Golden Gate Bridge will more than double as a result of the Sept. 11 attacks, and the new policy will not include any coverage in case of future terrorism. -more-


ZAB continues Alta Bates debate to April 25 meeting

By Jia-Rui Chong Daily Planet staff
Thursday April 04, 2002

In a switch of votes after three role call votes were completed on Tuesday night, the Zoning Adjustments Board finally decided 5-3 to continue discussion of the renovation plans for the Alta Bates Summit Medical Center. -more-


Dow to use microbes to clean up groundwater contamination

By Jessica Brice The Associated Press
Thursday April 04, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Marking the end of a five-year lawsuit, Dow Chemical Co. announced plans Wednesday to contribute $3 million for San Francisco Bay protection while using new technology to clean up groundwater contamination at its nearby Pittsburg chemical facility. -more-


Police release 911 tape from SF fatal dog mauling incident

The Associated Press
Thursday April 04, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — An elderly neighbor frantically called police as Diane Whipple was fatally mauled outside her apartment door, saying she was too afraid to intervene, according to a tape of her 911 calls. -more-


Improvements planned for Redwood Highway U.S. 199

The Associated Press
Thursday April 04, 2002

GRANTS PASS, Ore. — The first in a series of safety projects to improve the narrow canyon stretch of the Redwood Highway that winds above the Smith River in Northern California has been put out for bid, officials say. -more-


Teen birth rates down statewide

The Associated Press
Thursday April 04, 2002

SACRAMENTO — The rate of teen births in California dropped 31.3 percent since 1990, Gov. Gray Davis announced Wednesday. -more-


INS says no evidence orphans were brought to United States

The Associated Press
Thursday April 04, 2002

SANTA ANA — Federal immigration officials say there is no evidence that hundreds of Afghan women and children, including orphans, have been brought to the United States. -more-


Valdez owners say ship should return to Alaska

By Gene Johnson The Associated Press
Thursday April 04, 2002

SEATTLE — The company that owns the tanker Exxon Valdez argued before a federal appeals court Wednesday that the ship should be allowed to return to Alaska’s Prince William Sound, where it spilled 11 million gallons of oil in 1989. -more-


Drought puts the Southwest, East at high risk for wildfire

By Chuck Oxley The Associated Press
Thursday April 04, 2002

BOISE, Idaho — Wide swaths of the Southwest and a patchwork of forests along the East Coast are at the highest risk for wildfire this summer, National Interagency Fire Center officials said Wednesday. -more-


Senate committee balks at banning houses on old nuclear meltdown sites

By Jim Wasserman The Associated Press
Thursday April 04, 2002

SACRAMENTO — Legislation that would forever ban Ventura County from approving houses on 2,800 acres surrounding an old nuclear meltdown site suffered a temporary setback Wednesday. -more-


Printers quietly become standout technology

By Brian Bergstein The Associated Press
Thursday April 04, 2002

SAN JOSE — While most of the high-tech world perpetually focuses on the next new thing, a familiar device quietly has gotten so good as to be almost stunning: the printer. -more-


Investigators say Enron now cooperating

By Jennifer Coleman The Associated Press
Thursday April 04, 2002

SACRAMENTO — Enron executives have been cooperating with a Senate committee investigating the state’s energy crisis, under threat of a Senate vote to find them in contempt of a legislative subpoena, the committee’s chairman said Wednesday. -more-


Protest takes over University Avenue

By Jia-Rui Chong and Devona Walker Daily Planet staff
Wednesday April 03, 2002

What began as a march for peace in Palestine on Tuesday at approximately 5:00 p.m. ended in an ugly standoff between protesters and the Berkeley Police Department at Fourth Street and University Ave some five hours later. -more-


Berkeley bats remain hot as ’Jackets reach tourney final

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Wednesday April 03, 2002

Berkeley High continued its offensive barrage on Tuesday, coming back from a 2-0 deficit to beat El Cerrito 12-2 in five innings at the San Marin Tournament in Novato. -more-


A solution for the P.E. conundrum at BHS

Jim Sinai Berkeley
Wednesday April 03, 2002

Editor, -more-


Compiled by Guy Poole
Wednesday April 03, 2002


Wednesday, April 3


UC recalls students from Israel

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet staff
Wednesday April 03, 2002

The University of California has pulled the plug on its study abroad program in Israel, citing concerns about escalating violence in the Middle East. -more-


Gabriel Hughes to transfer from Cal

Staff Report
Wednesday April 03, 2002

The Cal men’s basketball team, already hurting for size with the probable departure of freshman Jamal Sampson, got even smaller on Tuesday when sophomore center Gabriel Hughes received a release from his scholarship. -more-


DNA testing of inmates is wrong

Michael Bauce Berkeley
Wednesday April 03, 2002

Editor: -more-


Plainclothes officers to stalk parking meters

By Jia-Rui Chong Daily Planet staff
Wednesday April 03, 2002

Parking vandals, beware. -more-


St. Mary’s slaughtered by league rival Salesian

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Wednesday April 03, 2002

The St. Mary’s High baseball team is taking their lumps in the San Marin Tournament, following a 4-2 loss to Windsor on Monday with a 13-0 thumping by BSAL rival Salesian on Tuesday. -more-


Don’t turn tennis courts into parking lot

Sincerely, Senta Pugh Chamberlain
Wednesday April 03, 2002

Dear Chancellor Berdahl, -more-


Today in History

Staff
Wednesday April 03, 2002

Today is Wednesday, April 3, the 93rd day of 2002. There are 272 days left in the year. -more-


Experts dissect Enron, criticize reform legislation

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet staff
Wednesday April 03, 2002

A panel of experts dissected the Enron fiasco, and poked holes in the pension and accounting reform proposals that have emerged in the wake of the energy company’s scandal, at a UC Berkeley seminar Tuesday. -more-


Dead infant found in San Francisco’s financial district

The Associated Press
Wednesday April 03, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Police are investigating the death of a premature infant found discarded in a financial district building’s restroom. -more-


Bay Area Briefs

Staff
Wednesday April 03, 2002

VIP parking tightened at Oakland airport -more-


San Jose airport starts runway construction

By Michelle R. Smith The Associated Press
Wednesday April 03, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Seven flights were diverted and others were delayed Tuesday after construction began on a major runway at San Jose’s international airport, one of three San Francisco Bay area airports renovating runways this summer. -more-


Mill Valley mother, child found safe after lost in Maui

The Associated Press
Wednesday April 03, 2002

HALEAKALA NATIONAL PARK, Hawaii — Park rangers on horseback found a California woman and her 3 year-old-daughter Tuesday morning near a cabin in the crater of a dormant volcano on Maui, where they had spent the night after losing their way while hiking the day before. -more-


Paul McCartney packs Oakland Coliseum concert with Beatles tunes

By Kim Curtis The Associated Press
Wednesday April 03, 2002

OAKLAND — Paul McCartney has nothing left to prove. -more-


Gemstar-TV Guide shares drop on accounting concerns

By Gary Gentile The Associated Press
Wednesday April 03, 2002

LOS ANGELES — Executives of Gemstar-TV Guide International tried to calm nervous investors Tuesday as worries over its accounting practices sent its shares tumbling more than 37 percent. -more-


Microsoft’s linking competitors with state adversaries may not be enough

By D. Ian Hopper The Associated Press
Wednesday April 03, 2002

WASHINGTON — Microsoft Corp. is using a potentially risky strategy to avoid tough antitrust penalties, legal experts say. The company is portraying states that want the penalties as tools of its competitors. -more-


PeopleSoft shares skid after first-quarter revenue warning

The Associated Press
Wednesday April 03, 2002

NEW YORK — The stock of PeopleSoft Inc. dropped sharply Tuesday after the maker of business software warned that first-quarter revenue would be well below Wall Street’s expectations. -more-


BHS slugger leads the ‘Jackets in Giambi, Bonds fashion

By Nathan FoxDaily Planet Correspondent
Tuesday April 02, 2002

Matt Toma is a home run king. Last spring as a junior, Toma led his Berkeley High School Yellowjackets squad in long balls. He is not without some measure of pride when he says this. -more-


League, the Hearst zoning is consistent with Plan

Zelda Bronstein,ChairPlanning Commission
Tuesday April 02, 2002

Editor: -more-


Staff
Tuesday April 02, 2002


Tuesday, April 2

-more-


Alta Bates renovation could go forward today

By Jia-Rui Chong Daily Planet staff
Tuesday April 02, 2002

Alta Bates Summit Medical Center, the only hospital that provides emergency services in Berkeley, may finally get to work on renovating its emergency department, if the Zoning Adjustments Board approves its plan at tonight’s meeting. -more-


Postal Service must stop cutting its services to save finances

Dr. Mickey Frazier Sr.
Tuesday April 02, 2002

Editor: -more-


Some athletics included in school district budget cuts

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet staff
Tuesday April 02, 2002

Community members and Berkeley High School administrators are questioning athletic cuts already approved by the Board of Education, and debating further cuts suggested by district administration. -more-


Friday deaths double city’s homicide rate

By Devona Walker Daily Planet staff
Tuesday April 02, 2002

On Friday, 25-year-old Raymond Smith and 54-year-old Dwight Leeray both died at Highland Hospital from unrelated assaults, effectively doubling Berkeley’s homicide rate for the year. -more-


Today in History

Staff
Tuesday April 02, 2002

Today is Tuesday, April 2, the 92nd day of 2002. There are 273 days left in the year. -more-


News of the Weird

Staff
Tuesday April 02, 2002

A tardy note from the Department of Transportation -more-


Attorneys argue over John Walker Lindh’s conspiracy

By Larry MargasakThe Associated Press
Tuesday April 02, 2002

ALEXANDRIA, Va. — Prosecutors acknowledged Monday they do not have evidence that John Walker Lindh killed Americans in Afghanistan. But a federal judge said that would not be necessary to prove Lindh joined a conspiracy to murder Americans as a Taliban fighter. -more-


Abalone divers deal with new rules

By Margie MasonThe Associated Press
Tuesday April 02, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Abalone season opened in Northern California on Monday, but divers used to bringing home 100 of the meaty mollusks a year will now be limited to 24, thanks to poachers, overfishing and potential disease. -more-


Some facts and rules governing abalone diving

Staff
Tuesday April 02, 2002

•Abalone season runs from April 1 to June 30 and Aug. 1 to Nov. 30 off the California coast north of San Francisco. Diving is restricted to 30 minutes before sunrise and 30 minutes after sunset. -more-


State authorities to visit Littleton in beach death case

The Associated Press
Tuesday April 02, 2002

DENVER — California authorities planned to visit Littleton this week to continue their investigation into Tuesday’s apparent double homicide-suicide near a Santa Cruz beach. -more-


Baseball fans, concertgoers face traffic woes around Oakland Coliseum

By Michelle R. SmithThe Associated Press
Tuesday April 02, 2002

OAKLAND — Take 40,000 baseball fans, add an ex-Beatle, a jazz crooner and a Latin pop sensation, then top it off with a dose of holiday airport traffic, and what do you get? -more-


Woman shot and wounded; husband arrested after San Jose standoff

The Associated Press
Tuesday April 02, 2002

SAN JOSE — Police are investigating a bizarre family disturbance that ended after an 11-hour standoff involving a woman found lying shot in the head on the family’s front lawn. -more-


Vietnam vets exposed to Agent Orange win round against feds

By David KravetsThe Associated Press
Tuesday April 02, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Vietnam veterans suffering from diabetes and prostate cancer after being exposed to Agent Orange won a round Monday in their battle against the federal government. -more-


California beekeepers lead country, but worry about their future

The Associated Press
Tuesday April 02, 2002

VENTURA — Although their business is sweeter than that of out-of-state competitors, California’s beekeepers are worried they’re about to get financially stung. -more-


States using tobacco settlement money to balance their budgets

By Paul QuearryThe Associated Press
Tuesday April 02, 2002

OLYMPIA — Less than four years ago, Washington state’s attorney general helped win billions of dollars from the tobacco industry for 46 states — money she saw as a bonanza for smoking-prevention programs and other health measures. -more-


Priest sex abuse case settles at $1.2 million

By Chelsea J. CarterThe Associated Press
Tuesday April 02, 2002

IRVINE — A woman who claimed she was sexually abused by priests more than 20 years ago will receive a $1.2 million settlement from the Roman Catholic Diocese of Orange and the Archdiocese of Los Angeles, the parties said Monday. -more-


Data storage rivals try to profit from Compaq-HP fiasco

By Justin PopeThe Associated Press
Tuesday April 02, 2002

BOSTON — With little to celebrate lately, businesses in the $25 billion data-storage industry are looking for some gains from the confusion over the planned merger between Compaq Computer Corp. and Hewlett-Packard Co. -more-


Walter Hewlett excluded on HP’s board candidate list

By Matthew FordahlThe Associated Press
Tuesday April 02, 2002

SAN JOSE — Hewlett-Packard Co.’s board axed an olive branch to dissident director Walter Hewlett on Monday, reversing a plan to renominate him after he sued to try to stop the merger with Compaq Computer Corp. -more-


Silicon Valley ’most wired’ area in nation

By Justin PopeThe Associated Press
Tuesday April 02, 2002

BOSTON — Silicon Valley still rules, but an annual survey of America’s most Internet-savvy cities found that Boston and Salt Lake City made huge strides over the past year. -more-


Israeli reservist pans military campaign

By K.L. Alexander, Special to the Daily Planet
Monday April 01, 2002

As the Middle East peace process reeled from a week of heavy fighting in the West Bank, about 250 Berkeley residents packed a Unitarian church yesterday to renew their hope for an end to the violence. -more-


The East Bay belongs to us

James K. Sayre
Monday April 01, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Out & About Calendar

Compiled by Guy Poole
Monday April 01, 2002


Monday, April 1

-more-


Girls shine, boys stumble for St. Mary’s at Stanford meet

By Jared Green, Daily Planet Wire Services
Monday April 01, 2002

Last year, the St. Mary’s High boys were the strength of the track & field program, winning a North Coast Section title and finishing third at the state championship meet. But by the looks of it, the boys may take a back seat to their female counterparts this year. -more-


Strike ends, rebuilding network next task for radio news reporters

By Devona Walker, Daily Planet Staff
Monday April 01, 2002

Goliath has officially cried uncle. -more-


Arrogance to blame for speaker series departure

Baird Whaley
Monday April 01, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Bears salvage doubleheader

Daily Planet Wire Services
Monday April 01, 2002

STANFORD – Eighth-ranked Cal (35-11, 2-1 Pac-10) was shut out, 6-0, by No. 3 Stanford (28-5, 1-2 Pac-10) in the first game of a double header, but came back to defeat the cross-bay rivals, 7-6, in the rubber match of the weekend series, Saturday afternoon in front of a Stanford softball record crowd of 962 at the Smith Family Stadium. -more-


Coming attractions for Shattuck is a five-story theater/apartment complex

By Jia-Rui Chong, Daily Planet staff
Monday April 01, 2002

When the credits roll on the last day of June, Berkeley cinéastes will have to bid adieu to the Fine Arts Cinema on Shattuck Avenue — but only temporarily. -more-


Schools get connected

Planet Wire Report
Monday April 01, 2002

The Alameda County Office of Education announced this week that schools throughout the county now have direct access to the Internet, including access to resources from the University of California and the California State University systems. -more-


LWV distorted facts to prove a point

Rob Wrenn
Monday April 01, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Trojans sweep Cal

Daily Planet Wire Services
Monday April 01, 2002

Cal ruggers remain undefeated with win in British Columbia

Daily Planet Wire Services
Monday April 01, 2002

BRITISH COLUMBIA, Vancouver - In the second match of the two game home-and-away series versus British Columbia, Cal (14-0) traveled to Vancouver and came out on top 28-17 over the Thunderbirds. Senior Dave Guest scored a team-high 13 points in the win. -more-


HISTORY

Staff
Monday April 01, 2002

Happy April Fool’s Day! -more-


NEWS OF THE WEIRD

The Associated Press
Monday April 01, 2002

Bankrobber needs tip about discretionary spending -more-


NEWS OF THE WEIRD

Staff
Monday April 01, 2002

No barefoot reading, please -more-


Man convicted in dog-mauling case says he fears for his life

The Associated Press
Monday April 01, 2002

SAN JOSE — The man recently convicted along with his wife in the dog-mauling death of their neighbor last year said he is not surprised by his conviction, but accused the prosecutors and judge of political maneuvering -more-


Windsor standoff ends with 2 dead

Staff
Monday April 01, 2002

WINDSOR — An elderly man shot and killed his teen-age grandson before taking his own life Sunday, according to a Sonoma County sheriff’s spokesman. -more-


Zinfandel grape might become state fruit

By Stefanie Frith, The Associated Press
Monday April 01, 2002

SACRAMENTO – David Phillips grows grapes, Zinfandel grapes. And one of his wine labels seems to describe best the way people feel about a wine that may finally be getting some respect. -more-


Less abalone this season as concerns rise about maintaining fishery

By Margie Mason, Associated Press Writer
Monday April 01, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO – Sport divers who revel in finding abalone clinging to reefs will be bagging less of the meaty mollusks this season thanks to poachers, over fishing and potential diseases. -more-


Fallen priest’s Healdsburg parish still reeling

By Kim Curtis, The Associated Press
Monday April 01, 2002

Rape trial shocks community -more-


Report: Ex-LAPD deputy chief investigated for money laundering

The Associated Press
Monday April 01, 2002

Son’s alleged cocaine ring under scrutiny -more-


Government trains cyberdefenders

By Matthew Fordahl, The Associated Press
Monday April 01, 2002

MONTEREY — Long before Sept. 11 and last year’s virus-like attacks over the Internet, the U.S. government announced plans to train an elite corps of computer security experts to guard against cyberterrorism. -more-


Botox awaits FDA approval

The Associated Press
Monday April 01, 2002

LOS ANGELES — Not since the early days of Viagra has a lifestyle drug garnered so much attention as Botox. -more-


East Bay honors Cesar Chavez

By Jia-Rui Chong, Daily Planet staff
Saturday March 30, 2002

Si, se puede! -more-


Keeler Avenue in Cragmont tract was named for Berkeley poet, naturalist and artist

By Susan Cerny, Special to the Daily Planet
Saturday March 30, 2002

On March 21, 1907 the Berkeley Reporter announced “Poet Keeler Gets First Honor. Literature and art are to be highly honored and especially Berkeley writers and artists, in the naming of streets in the new Cragmont tract. ... The poet Charles Keeler will have the first street in the new tract named after him. This is particularly appropriate, as Keeler is one of the most ardent admirers of Berkeley and has never let a chance slip by when he could sing her praises.” -more-


War, snake oil and circuses

Philip Farruggio
Saturday March 30, 2002

Editor: -more-


Spike Lee documentary tails convicted football hero Jim Brown

By Christy LeMire, The Associated Press
Saturday March 30, 2002

Jim Brown began a six-month jail sentence this month for bashing his wife’s car windows with a shovel in 1999. -more-


Out & About Calendar

Compiled by Guy Poole
Saturday March 30, 2002


Saturday, March 30

-more-


’Jackets bash Pinole Valley

By Jared Green, Daily Planet Staff
Saturday March 30, 2002

Berkeley High explodes for 20 hits against thin Spartan pitching staff -more-


Embattled lecture series leaves town

By David Scharfenberg, Daily Planet staff
Saturday March 30, 2002

The Berkeley Speakers Lecture Series, which has brought luminaries from documentary filmmaker Ken Burns to former Secretary of the Interior Bruce Babbit to town, is packing up and heading for Oakland, citing frustration with the city manager’s office and the Berkeley Police Department. -more-


Getting beyond fear of change to a thriving community

Nancy Bickel
Saturday March 30, 2002

Editor: -more-


Broadway returns a portion of money given to help buy theater tickets

By Michael Kuchwara, The Associated Press
Saturday March 30, 2002

NEW YORK — Broadway has given back a bit of what it got from the City of New York to help the theater after the Sept. 11 attacks on the World Trade Center — and the money will go to other needy arts organizations. -more-


Golden Bears win series opener against Stanford

SDaily Planet Wire Services
Saturday March 30, 2002

Forest comes out on top of aces’ duel -more-


Talks breaking down between workers, KSL

By Devona Walker, Daily Planet staff
Saturday March 30, 2002

The ongoing battle between Claremont Spa workers and management of the KSL Recreation corporation came to a head on Friday after months of failed negotiations and the well-intentioned interventions of both Berkeley and Oakland’s city councils. -more-


‘Fight Club’ director is ‘pleased with himself’ for ‘Panic Room’

By Christy LeMire, The Associated Press
Saturday March 30, 2002

David Fincher is entirely too pleased with himself. -more-


Grand jurd finds county morgue substandard

By Jia-Rui Chong, Daily Planet staff
Saturday March 30, 2002

Oakland facility criticized for lack of space, parking, disabled access, poor ventilation -more-


New translation hopes to show ‘Kamasutra’ in new light

By Jill Lawless, The Associated Press
Saturday March 30, 2002

LONDON — More than 1,700 years after it was completed by an enigmatic Indian scribe, the “Kamasutra” is among the most famous Hindu books ever written — and, many believe, the most misunderstood. -more-


Today in History

Staff
Saturday March 30, 2002

Saturday, March 30th is the 89th day of 2002. There are 276 days left in the year. -more-


Joe Joe Rawlings: a new literary hero for kids

By Alexandra R. Moses, The Associated Press
Saturday March 30, 2002

DETROIT — Her young son stood in the department store, hands stuffed in his pockets. He was just 9 years old, but Jean Alicia Elster feared that because of the color of his skin, and the way he was standing, people would think her son was stealing. -more-


Oakland police cracks down on car sideshows

Staff
Saturday March 30, 2002

OAKLAND — The Oakland police department plans to put extra officer on the streets this weekend to crack down on “sideshows,” loosely organized events where fast cars spin doughnuts in parking lots as young onlookers stand dangerously nearby. -more-


Lindh treated the same as U.S. soldiers, government says

By Larry Margasak, The Associated Press
Saturday March 30, 2002

WASHINGTON — American-born Taliban John Walker Lindh received the same food and medical care as U.S. soldiers while in custody in Afghanistan, and even slept on a stretcher while his physician made do on a concrete floor, U.S. prosecutors said Friday. -more-


Palestinian refugee charged with assaulting an INS agent

By Chelsea J. Carter The Associated Press
Saturday March 30, 2002

ANAHEIM — A Palestinian refugee who gained national attention three years ago for his hunger strike protesting INS treatment has been charged with assaulting a federal immigration agent. -more-


LA police receiving allegations of long-ago clergy abuse

The Associated Press
Saturday March 30, 2002

LOS ANGELES — Publicity about sexual abuse by Roman Catholic priests has prompted 20 to 30 calls to police from people who claim they were victimized years or decades ago, authorities said Friday. -more-


Earthquake rattles Baja California

The Associated Press
Saturday March 30, 2002

CALEXICO — An earthquake rattled Baja California early Wednesday, but there were no immediate reports of injuries or damage. -more-


Jack rabbits attack walkers in Sonoma County, man bitten

The Associated Press
Saturday March 30, 2002

SANTA ROSA — Sonoma County musician Doug Bowes will remember this Easter season as the one where he happened upon the Easter Bunny, and it attacked him. -more-


Audit shows school bus safety program’s costs $67 million each year

By Don Thompson, The Associated Press
Saturday March 30, 2002

SACRAMENTO — A school bus safety program projected to cost no more than $1 million each year is instead costing California $67 million annually, according to a new audit. -more-


Bush administration moves to repudiate biologists’ Alaska report

By John Heilprin, The Associated Press
Saturday March 30, 2002

WASHINGTON — The Bush administration acted Friday to repudiate a report by government biologists that concluded drilling for oil in an Alaskan wildlife refuge would pose substantial risks to the Porcupine caribou herd and other wildlife. -more-


FBI to turn over findings in 1975 disappearance of Jimmy Hoffa to local prosecutors

The Associated Press
Saturday March 30, 2002

DETROIT — The FBI said Friday it will refer its findings in the nearly 27-year-old disappearance of former Teamsters President James R. Hoffa to local prosecutors for possible state charges. -more-


NY corrections dept. ends sale of inmate art

By Rik Stevens, The Associated Press
Saturday March 30, 2002

ALBANY, N.Y. — The Department of Correctional Services has discontinued its annual inmate art show and banned the sale of art produced in prisons amid an uproar over a serial killer who profited from his works. -more-


Skeletal remains found at Kentucky construction site

The Associated Press
Saturday March 30, 2002

FRANKFORT, Ky. — Nearly 70 sets of skeletal remains have been found at the construction site of the state Transportation Cabinet complex in the three weeks since the first bones were spotted in a dump truck. -more-


Historians decry Liberty Bell home’s location

By Joann Loviglio, The Associated Press
Saturday March 30, 2002

PHILADELPHIA — When visitors walk through the brand-new $9 million pavilion housing one of the nation’s most enduring icons of freedom, they will tread above the spot where the first president kept his slaves. -more-


Artificial heart patient says his motivation is to someday go home

By Dylan T. Lovan, The Associated Press
Saturday March 30, 2002

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Even if he was a little out of breath from his morning workout, Tom Christerson still stopped a hospital employee Friday to shake his hand. -more-


Domestic steel producers raise prices

By Dan Nephin, The Associated Press
Saturday March 30, 2002

PITTSBURGH — As cheaper foreign steel imports are being hit with new tariffs, U.S. mills are raising prices to meet increased demand for domestic steel. -more-


Documentary outlines Columbine killers’ warning signs

By Jon Sarche, The Associated Press
Saturday March 30, 2002

DENVER — Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold showed signs of depression and violent fantasies two years before their suicidal rampage at Columbine High School, according to an upcoming TV documentary. -more-


Navy: former Nebraska priest court martialed for lewd conduct

By Kevin O’Hanlon, The Associated Press
Saturday March 30, 2002

LINCOLN, Neb. — The Navy confirmed on Good Friday that an ex-priest accused of sexually abusing four Nebraska boys in 1978 was later convicted of lewd conduct involving boys as a military chaplain. -more-


Oprah declines Bush’s invitation to Afghanistan

The Associated Press
Saturday March 30, 2002

CHICAGO — Talk show host Oprah Winfrey declined President Bush’s offer to join an official U.S. delegation to tour Afghanistan’s schools, saying she didn’t have the time. -more-


Home Matters: Plan now to counter chaos

The Associated Press
Saturday March 30, 2002

Get through the dirty, invasive as stressful time of remodeling with communication and understanding -more-


on the house Questions & Answers by James and Morris Carey

James and Morris Carey
Saturday March 30, 2002

Q. Scott asks: Urgent! What is it meant by the term “grade of abrasive paper” and what is meant by the term “raising the grain”? -more-


Making room for guests

By Carol McGarvey, The Associated Press
Saturday March 30, 2002

When you plan a spot for visitors, pretend you are the guest. What would you need to feel comfortable? -more-


Show off style in the kitchen

By Carol McGarvey, The Associated Press
Saturday March 30, 2002

If a new or remodeled kitchen is in your future, be prepared for myriad choices to show off your personal style. Abandon any rules you think “must” be followed in kitchen planning. The sky’s the limit. -more-


Sierra fir logs sent to South Africa to be recycled into California furniture

The Associated Press
Saturday March 30, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Douglas fir logs cut from the Sierra Nevada in the 1800s are about to complete a round trip that has taken more than a century. -more-


Allergan awaits FDA approval to market Botox for cosmetic use

By Simon Avery, The Associated Press
Saturday March 30, 2002

LOS ANGELES — Not since the early days of Viagra has a lifestyle drug garnered so much attention as Botox. -more-


Opinion

Editorials

Path to be dedicated to Anne Brower, local environmentalist

By Jia-Rui Chong, Daily Planet staff
Friday April 05, 2002

Though Anne Brower was often overshadowed by her husband David, Berkeley will be honoring the woman who was a worthy environmentalist in her own right by dedicating a path in her name on Stevenson Avenue on Saturday. -more-


EPA sued over red-legged frog

The Associated Press
Thursday April 04, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO— In an effort to save the threatened red-legged frog, a group of environmentalists has sued the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. -more-


Four Marin County ‘family’ members plead innocent

By Colleen Valles The Associated Press
Wednesday April 03, 2002

SAN RAFAEL — The patriarch of a 13-child family, and three of the four women he lived with, pleaded innocent Tuesday to charges they let one young child starve to death and severely neglected the other 12 children. -more-


Million-dollar dinosaur egg lands in Lawrence Hall of Science

The Associated Press
Tuesday April 02, 2002

Easter egg hunters would have had to look 65 million years ago to find this prize. -more-


England’s Queen mother Elizabeth dies

Staff
Monday April 01, 2002

LONDON — The Queen Mother Elizabeth, a symbol of courage and dignity during a tumultuous century of war, social upheaval and royal scandal, died in her sleep Saturday died at Royal Lodge, Windsor, outside London. She was 101 years old. -more-


News of the Weird

Staff
Saturday March 30, 2002

Who has the most horses? -more-


Columns

Entertainment workers to seek duties on films made in Canada

The Associated Press
Saturday March 30, 2002

WASHINGTON — A group representing entertainment industry workers said it will file a complaint with the federal government seeking duties on Canadian-made productions sent to the United States for editing or distribution. -more-


PG&E wins approval to repay some creditors

The Associated Press
Saturday March 30, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — PG&E Corp. won approval to repay $790 million to a group of Pacific Gas and Electric creditors, overcoming objections that the deal is designed to sway an upcoming vote on how the utility will emerge from bankruptcy. -more-