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News

Nominees selected for city’s rent board

By Matt Artz, Daily Planet Staff
Monday April 29, 2002

An alliance of progressive organizations sponsored a nominating convention at a packed North Berkeley Senior Center Saturday to select five candidates for the November Rent Board election. The approximately 120 pro-rent control residents in attendance selected a diverse slate that appears poised to use the rent board to further press tenants’ rights. -more-


Berkeley's planned boycott of Israel

Mark Tarses
Monday April 29, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Hope springs eternal for Boller, Bears

By Jared Green, Daily Planet Staff
Monday April 29, 2002

Senior QB completes 10 of 11 in annual Spring Game as starters win a 42-0 romp -more-


Cal event explores healing virtues of reparations

The Associated Press
Monday April 29, 2002

Lawyers and activists discussed how the country can heal lingering wounds of slavery through reparations at a two-day symposium at the University of California’s Boalt Hall School of Law. -more-


History

Staff
Monday April 29, 2002

Today’s Highlight in History: -more-


A case for standardized tests

Gessica Johnston
Monday April 29, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Sports shorts

Staff
Monday April 29, 2002

Errors help Bears beat UW -more-


Budget shortfall TBA

by Jamie Luck, Daily Planet Staff
Monday April 29, 2002

Some city projects may be axed at special meeting -more-


Racism in the Middle East?

Rachel M. Schorr
Monday April 29, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Sports this weekend

Staff
Monday April 29, 2002

Tuesday -more-


Environmentalism is honored at Bay Festival

By Chris Nichols, Daily Planet Staff
Monday April 29, 2002

The annual Berkeley Bay Festival entertained and educated residents from around the Bay Area on Saturday, offering boat rides, live music, environmental education workshops and even a solar cooker demonstration. -more-


Heightened security backfiring

Tod H. Mikuriya
Monday April 29, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


History

Staff
Monday April 29, 2002

Today’s Highlight in History: -more-


SF fire department rescues man from rip tide

The Associated Press
Monday April 29, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — A man out for an early morning swim with two friends was dragged away from the city’s Ocean Beach by a rip tide Sunday, prompting a surfer and the San Francisco Fire Department to come to his aid. -more-


Prankster gets 30 months for duping cat and dog owner

The Associated Press
Monday April 29, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — A California man has been sentenced to 30 months imprisonment for tricking owners of lost pets to wire him money. -more-


Landlords befuddled at how to prevent dog mauling tragedies

By PAUL GLADER, The Associated Press
Monday April 29, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO – Property manager Mark Schultz doesn’t want a rerun of San Francisco’s dog mauling tragedy, so he’s boosting liability insurance by $1 million at an apartment complex he manages. -more-


Train takes honors at California Music Awards

By Ron Harris, The Associated Press
Monday April 29, 2002

San Francisco group wins Best Album, Outstanding Songwriter; No Doubt’s Stefani named Outstanding Female Vocalist -more-


Bay Area Briefs

Staff
Monday April 29, 2002

Perks pay off at Oakland public schools -more-


HP lawyers give scathing closing argument in Compaq merger case

By Brian Bergstein, The Associated Press
Monday April 29, 2002

SAN JOSE – Hewlett-Packard Co. heir Walter Hewlett fell way short of proving his lawsuit against the company and should just admit he lost his fight to stop the Compaq Computer Corp. acquisition, HP attorneys argued in a scathing legal brief. -more-


SF Ferry Building to become public market

By Paul Glader, The Associated Press
Monday April 29, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO – Once a front door to the city by the bay, the historic “Ferry Building at the foot of Market Street” soon will have a market of its own. -more-


First Ford-Firestone case in California ready to go to trial

By Chelsea J. Carter, The Associated Press
Monday April 29, 2002

Survivors say they won’t settle with tire company after losing grandfather, 13-year old -more-


Council looks at finance reform

by Jamie Luck, Special to the Daily Planet
Saturday April 27, 2002

Quiet Berkeley streets are full of surprises

By Susan Cerny, Special to the Daily Planet
Saturday April 27, 2002

There are several residential streets in Berkeley which are almost pristine examples of early 20th century development. Walking down one of these quiet streets (often by-passed and hidden because of street barriers) is to experience a different era. -more-


Judi Bari trial is about civil rights

- J. B. Neilands
Saturday April 27, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


‘Homebody/Kabul’ – Kushner sends Berkeley Rep audiences on fascinating journey through Afghanistan

By John Angell Grant, Special to the Daily Planet
Saturday April 27, 2002

American playwright Tony Kushner wrote the most famous play of 1990s with his seven-hour, two-part creation “Angels in America,” which won a Pulitzer Prize and many other awards. “Angels” was commissioned by San Francisco’s Eureka Theater, then under the direction of Tony Taccone, who now heads the Berkeley Rep. -more-



Out & About Calendar

Staff
Saturday April 27, 2002


Saturday, April 27 -more-


Panthers drop second straight extra-inning game

By Jared Green, Daily Planet Staff
Saturday April 27, 2002

The St. Mary’s High baseball team lost their second straight extra-inning game on Friday, as Andy Duncan’s sacrifice fly brought home the winning run for St. Joseph in the ninth inning of a 12-11 final at Washington Park in Alameda. -more-


Food activist weighs School Board run

By David Scharfenberg, Daily Planet Staff
Saturday April 27, 2002

Joy Moore, a community nutrition outreach worker for the City of Berkeley, is considering a run for the Board of Education in November. -more-


Berkeley school chiefs should expain need for standardized tests, or oppose them

Joseph Brulenski
Saturday April 27, 2002

aTo the Editor: -more-


ABC insists Peter Jennings take $3 million pay cut

By Frazier Moore, The Associated Press
Saturday April 27, 2002

NEW YORK — ABC’s need to reverse years of excessive spending by its news division may be prompting the network to ask Peter Jennings to take a substantial pay cut, an industry analyst said Friday. -more-


Sports shorts

Staff
Saturday April 27, 2002

LBSU upsets Cal water polo -more-


Nader attacks Congress on energy, campaign finance policies at Cal

By David Scharfenberg, Daily Planet Staff
Saturday April 27, 2002

Consumer advocate and former presidential candidate Ralph Nader criticized Congress for watering down energy and campaign finance legislation and railed against corporate influence on politics at a UC Berkeley appearance Friday afternoon. -more-


Support clearn energy in California

Beth Gunston
Saturday April 27, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Reworking of ‘Long Day’s Journey’ adds little to classic play

By Jacob Coakley Special to the Daily Planet
Saturday April 27, 2002

Eugene O’Neill is one of America’s greatest playwrights. Over the course of his career he almost single-handedly lifted American playwriting from being looked at as narrow and provincial to internationally-respected and first-rate. -more-


Prep scores

Staff
Saturday April 27, 2002

Boys lacrosse – Berkeley 13, College Prep 2 -more-


Transportation is number one issue at Southside Plan meeting

By Chris Nichols, Daily Planet Staff
Saturday April 27, 2002

Officials called for transportation to be the number one priority of the developing Southside Plan at this week's Berkeley Planning Commission meeting. -more-


California Assembly: Vote yes on clean energy SB532

Daniel Wolfe
Saturday April 27, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


SF Intl. Film Festival showcases Berkeley directors

By Peter Crimmins, Special to the Daily Planet
Saturday April 27, 2002

The audiences cuing up outside Bay Area theaters for the San Francisco International Film Festival – continuing until May 2 – are not only getting the first and sometimes only look at films from around the world, they are getting a chance to see and hear makers of those films in person. -more-


History

Staff
Saturday April 27, 2002

Today -more-


Immigration laws face scrutiny at ethics conference

By Chris Nichols, Daily Planet Staff
Saturday April 27, 2002

Scholars and legal experts gathered at UC Berkeley to debate the changing face of immigration laws in the United States at The 6th Annual Travers Ethics Conference. -more-


Student convicted of plotting attack at De Anza College DeGuzman faces up to 94 years in prison for assembling arsenal

By Jessica Brice, The Associated Press
Saturday April 27, 2002

SANTA CLARA, Calif. — Al Joseph DeGuzman, who assembled an arsenal of guns and homemade bombs while plotting a killing spree of fellow students at De Anza College, was convicted on 108 counts Friday of possessing and planning to use those weapons. -more-


Governor puts $25 billion in education bonds on November ballot

The Associated Press
Saturday April 27, 2002

LOS ANGELES — Measures to put $25.3 billion in education bond measures before California voters in two elections were signed by Gov. Gray Davis on Friday. -more-


Shorebirds migrating past Northwest to the Arctic

By Elizabeth Murtaugh, The Associated Press
Saturday April 27, 2002

HOQUIAM, Wash. — In a rush to get to their arctic breeding grounds, hundreds of thousands of migrating shorebirds are making their annual pit stops along the coast of Washington. -more-


Future’s bright with glass block walls

The Associated Press
Saturday April 27, 2002

As artistry and functionality creep back into modern home design, glass block re-emerges, not just as a privacy solution for bathroom windows, but as an attractive way to keep light flowing in throughout the home. -more-


Japanese-Americans re-create World War II internment experience

By Deborah Kong, The Associated Press
Saturday April 27, 2002

WATSONVILLE, Calif. — At noon on Saturday, Japanese-American men, women and children in fedoras and flowered dresses will report to a government building, attach tags with government-issued numbers to their suitcases and buttonholes, and ride a bus to a place with fences and guard towers. -more-


A year later, no breaks in Chandra Levy’s disappearance

By Mark Sherman, The Associated Press
Saturday April 27, 2002

WASHINGTON — Chandra Levy has been gone for a year now and her parents see no end to the uncertainty that fuels their anguish. -more-


Chronology of events in the year since Chandra Levy disappeared

The Associated Press
Saturday April 27, 2002

A chronology of events in the disappearance of Chandra Levy: -more-


UC Berkeley dance program founder David Wood dies at 77

By Kathleen Maclay, UC Berkeley
Saturday April 27, 2002

Berkeley - David Wood, a renowned dancer, choreographer and professor emeritus at the University of California, Berkeley, who founded the campus's dance program, died on April 21 of complications from Parkinson's disease and muscular dystrophy. He was 77. -more-


Doris Hoffmann, early face of Alzheimer’s in documentary, dies at 94

Staff
Saturday April 27, 2002

OAKLAND, Calif. — Doris Goodday Hoffmann, an Alzheimer’s patient who put a face on the devastating disease in her daughter’s Oscar-nominated film, has died. She was 94. -more-


Veritas backup software thriving on security worries

By Michael Liedtke, The Associated Press
Saturday April 27, 2002

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. — Veritas Software Corp., one of the world’s top-selling software makers, always seemed to take a back seat to other high-tech heavyweights — until Sept. 11. -more-


UCB suspends pro-Palestine student group over Wheeler Hall takeover

By David Scharfenberg, Daily Planet staff
Friday April 26, 2002

UC Berkeley has suspended Students for Justice in Palestine while officials investigate the group’s April 9 takeover of Wheeler Hall. -more-


New citizen votes for clean energy, SB532

Anastassia Shaitarova
Friday April 26, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


NPR icons bring East Coast wit & angst to Zellerbach Hall

By Peter Crimmins, Special to the Daily Planet
Friday April 26, 2002

They are three unlikely stars of American letters – their unsteady, vulnerable voices can be heard through their writing and on the radio – but David Sedaris, Sarah Vowell, and David Rakoff are the crowned triumvirate of humor prose. Their published memoirs wrought with witty failure and anxiety have charmed and amused the in-crowd. -more-


Arts & Entertainment Calendar

Staff
Friday April 26, 2002

Out & About Calendar

Staff
Friday April 26, 2002


Friday, April 26 -more-


Berkeley, El Cerrito split track meet

By Jared Green, Daily Planet Staff
Friday April 26, 2002

Yellowjacket boys, Gaucho girls win -more-


School Board tangles over maintenance budget

By David Scharfenberg, Daily Planet staff
Friday April 26, 2002

The Board of Education tangled with activists over the multi-million dollar maintenance budget and tabled a change in the hiring process for principals at its Wednesday night meeting. -more-


California should clean up its energy policy

Lauren Perlman
Friday April 26, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


‘Jihad’ explores dynamics of Islamist movements

By Andy Sywak Special to the Daily Planet
Friday April 26, 2002

The calamity of September 11 has unleashed a flurry of books – both old and new – that seek to explain the intricacies of the volatile region to a hungry public. Gilles Kepel, author of “Jihad: The Trail of Political Islam”, will discuss his own historical viewpoint tonight at 7:30 at Cody’s Books on Telegraph Avenue. -more-


Gauchos blast BHS

By Jared Green, Daily Planet Staff
Friday April 26, 2002

El Cerrito volleyball completes season sweep over Berkeley -more-


Protesters call on UCB to end animal research

By Jamie Luck, Special to the Daily Planet
Friday April 26, 2002

Berkeley Organization for Animal Advocay (BOAA) held a vigil last night before UC Berkeley’s Northwest Animal Facility to protest the use of animals for experimentation. Clutching signs and candles, the black-clad protesters stood in silence along Oxford St. between Hearst and Berkeley streets while campus police video-taped the scene. -more-



Sports this weekend

Staff
Friday April 26, 2002

Friday -more-


Earth First! exuberant in FBI/OPD conspiracy trial

By Devona Walker, Daily Planet Staff
Friday April 26, 2002

The third week of testimony in the civil suit of Earth First v. The FBI and the Oakland Police Department came to a close Thursday evening with the plaintiffs feeling exuberant over early strides made in their case. -more-


Responsibility for securing a clean energy future rests on us

Cat Hare
Friday April 26, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Prep scores

Staff
Friday April 26, 2002

History

Staff
Friday April 26, 2002

Today is Friday, April 26, the 116th day of 2002. There are 249 days left in the year. -more-


Not all who oppose Israel’s policies are anti-Semitic

Gray Brechin
Friday April 26, 2002

To the Editor, -more-


16 sexual predators go free

By Kim Curtis, The Associated Press
Friday April 26, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — While Gov. Gray Davis’ efforts to keep Patrick Ghilotti behind bars went all the way to the California Supreme Court, few noticed when at least 16 other sexually violent predators were allowed to disappear quietly into their communities. -more-


Ghilottii denied release

By Kim Curtis, The Associated Press
Friday April 26, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — The California Supreme Court ruled Thursday that Gov. Gray Davis cannot arbitrarily overrule a state law that sets guidelines for freeing rapists and child molesters after they have served their sentences. -more-


Livermore lab director says no more nuclear testing

By Martha Mendoza, The Associated Press
Friday April 26, 2002

LIVERMORE — A year ago, President Bush asked the director of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory to find out how long it would take to restart nuclear test explosions. -more-


Local man arrested in airport security sting

Daily Planet Wire Report
Friday April 26, 2002

The FBI announced Thursday that four Oakland International Airport employees have been arrested on suspicion of failing to disclose prior felony convictions when applying for airport badges that gave them access to secure areas of the airport. -more-


State sued over timber logging practices

By Don Thompson, The Associated Press
Friday April 26, 2002

SACRAMENTO — A Sierra Nevada conservation group sued the state Thursday over its approval of logging plans by the state’s largest timber company. -more-


New wholesale power market design approved

By Jennifer Coleman, The Associated Press
Friday April 26, 2002

Five glasses of water per day keeps the doctor away

The Associated Press
Friday April 26, 2002

Home and Garden – Q&A

By Morris and James Carey The Associated Press
Friday April 26, 2002

Q. I have a humming noise in my water lines, caused by a vibration that results when the tank float valve in my toilet nears shut-off. Is there a way to fix it other than by replacing the float and shut-off valve assembly? -more-


California existing home prices hit record in March

By Simon Avery, The Associated Press
Friday April 26, 2002

LOS ANGELES — The cost of home ownership in California broke another barrier in March, with the median home price topping $300,000 for the first time, according to industry figures released Thursday. -more-


Airport scanner reduction hurts InVision Tech.

The Associated Press/Dow Jones
Friday April 26, 2002

NEW YORK — Shares of InVision Technologies Inc., which makes airport luggage scanners, fell Thursday after the Transportation Department reduced the number of such machines it plans to deploy at airports this year. -more-


City Council looks back at Israel vote

By Jamie Luck Special to the Daily Planet
Thursday April 25, 2002

After input from citizens and councilmembers, the controversial resolution from the Peace and Justice Commission to divest from Israel and Palestine that contained several items supporting peace processes in the region was picked apart, rewritten, but in the end it was still voted down. -more-


Panthers drop extra-inning thriller to Albany

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Thursday April 25, 2002

The St. Mary’s High baseball team missed a chance to put itself ahead of the BSAL pack on Wednesday, falling apart in the ninth inning to lose, 8-3, to Albany. -more-


Teacher challenges standardized tests

Martha Hoppe Berkeley
Thursday April 25, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


O Music, Where Art Thou?

Staff
Thursday April 25, 2002

Blue grass music is alive and well and can be heard in Berkeley and Albany. The Ashkenaz hosts a monthly Fling Ding, where local bluegrass performers jam, as pictured at left on April 17. -more-


Staff
Thursday April 25, 2002


Staff
Thursday April 25, 2002


Thursday, April 25


Berkeley High releases new blueprint for change

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet Staff
Thursday April 25, 2002

Berkeley High School has released a blueprint for reform four weeks before a crucial visit by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges, a Burlingame-based accrediting group which has threatened to withdraw its seal of approval if BHS does not make progress in 11 areas first identified in 1999. -more-


Support human rights for Palestinians

Sami Kitmitto Berkeley
Thursday April 25, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Sony’s summer sequels seek super size sales

By David Germain The Associated Press
Thursday April 25, 2002

LOS ANGELES — Sony Pictures is spinning a commanding box-office web this summer, with a lineup anchored by that blockbuster-in-the-making, “Spider-Man,” and sequels to “Men in Black” and “Stuart Little.” -more-


City Council denounces plan for Dublin juvenile facility

By Chris Nichols Daily Planet Staff
Thursday April 25, 2002

The Berkeley City Council passed two resolutions opposing a new Alameda county juvenile facility planned for construction in Dublin. Opponents of the facility say there is no need for a larger facility and that the proposed Dublin location will be inaccessible to most Alameda county families. -more-


City Council spoke clearly against Israel boycott

Hilla Abel Berkeley
Thursday April 25, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Bush official defends U.S. treatment of Taliban prisoners at Guantanamo Bay

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet staff
Thursday April 25, 2002

John Yoo, a Bush Administration official on loan from UC Berkeley, defended the president’s handling of the 299 alleged Taliban and Al Qaeda fighters at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba at a Wednesday appearance at the university’s Boalt School of Law. -more-


What the Israelis and the Palestinians really want

Harry Lieberman Berkeley
Thursday April 25, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


History

The Associated Press
Thursday April 25, 2002

Today is Thursday, April 25, the 115th day of 2002. There are 250 days left in the year. -more-


University clerical workers rally again, prepare for possible strike

By Jamie Luck Special to the Daily Planet
Thursday April 25, 2002

Armed with signs, flyers, food and a woman in a peanut suit, the Coalition of University Employees Local 3 held a lunch-hour rally on the lawn before Sproul Hall on Wednesday to demand an increase in wages for clerical workers from the university. -more-


Rep. Barbara Lee wins integrity award

The Associated Press
Thursday April 25, 2002

BERKELEY – U.S. Rep. Barbara Lee has been named the winner of the Wayne Morse Integrity in Government Award for 2002, in part for challenging President Bush’s military plans after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks. -more-


Berkeley cyclist sues AIDS Ride charity

Staff
Thursday April 25, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — A Berkeley bicyclist has sued the organizer of the AIDS Vaccine Rides for allegedly misrepresenting how much money raised by the events ends up going to medical research. -more-


Calif. teachers’ bid to select textbooks slips as bill stalls in Assembly committee

By Stefanie Frith The Associated Press
Thursday April 25, 2002

SACRAMENTO — A hotly debated bill that would let teacher contract negotiations include textbook and curriculum selection stalled Wednesday night in an Assembly committee. -more-


Calif. cities can ban gun shows, high court rules

By David Kravets The Associated PRess
Thursday April 25, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Counties and cities in California may prohibit gun shows on their fairgrounds and other public properties, despite state laws that allow such events, the state Supreme Court ruled Monday. -more-


California’s first new prison since 1995 nixed in Senate

By Don Thompson The Associated Press
Thursday April 25, 2002

SACRAMENTO — A Senate budget subcommittee stripped money intended to build California’s first new prison since 1995 on Wednesday, saying the maximum-security facility is unnecessary as the state’s prison population falls. -more-


State Board of Education adopts new standardized test

By Stefanie Frith The Associated Press
Thursday April 25, 2002

SACRAMENTO — The state Board of Education picked a new standardized test Wednesday to replace the Stanford 9 exam students take each spring. -more-


Supreme Court squelches Lake Tahoe development

By Jim Wasserman The Associated Press
Thursday April 25, 2002

SACRAMENTO — Land-use planners and government agencies, accustomed to second guessing themselves when saying no to developers, are hailing a new U.S. Supreme Court ruling as a victory for sound planning in California. -more-


Berkeley software company sues for consumers’ right to copy commercial DVDs

By Ron Harris The Associated Press
Thursday April 25, 2002

SAN JOSE, Calif. — A small software company that has an office in Berkeley is taking on entertainment behemoths, suing nine major movie studios for the right to sell a program that allows the user to copy commercial DVDs. -more-


Microsoft agrees to support AMD’s next Athlon microprocessor chip

By Matthew Fordahl The Associated Press
Thursday April 25, 2002

SAN JOSE, Calif. — In an endorsement of Advanced Micro Devices Inc.’s next-generation processor, Microsoft Corp. has agreed to work on adding support for the chip to its Windows operating system. -more-


South Berkeley explosion injures construction crew

By Jamie Luck Special to the Daily Planet
Tuesday April 23, 2002

A South Berkeley construction crew was burned early Monday when fumes from a diesel mixture combusted. The crew was working on a new foundation in the basement of a five-unit building at the southeast corner of Milvia and Parker streets. -more-


St. Mary’s jumper hurtles toward 2008 Olympics

By Nathan Fox Daily Planet Correspondent
Tuesday April 23, 2002

Three steps, for most of us, is the distance between the fridge and the cupboard while rummaging for yet another commercial-break snack. But St. Mary’s High track standout Solomon Welch stretches those three steps out a bit. -more-


Rally for more school funding

John Selawsky Director, Berkeley Board of Education
Tuesday April 23, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


‘Scorpion King’ stings competition, opens with $36.1 million weekend

The Associated Press
Tuesday April 23, 2002

LOS ANGELES — The Rock was ready to rumble at the box office. -more-


Staff
Tuesday April 23, 2002


Tuesday, April 23


Schultz retires from School Board; Riddle seeks vacant seat

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet staff
Tuesday April 23, 2002

Ted Schultz, an eight-year veteran of the Board of Education, has announced that he will not run for re-election in November. Nancy Riddle, chief financial officer for Monster Cable Products, Inc. of Brisbane and long-time parent activist, has declared her candidacy for the coming vacancy. -more-


Richard Cherry belongs on BHS team

The Berkeley Athletic Fund
Tuesday April 23, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Berkeley group protects world’s islands

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet staff
Tuesday April 23, 2002

It’s the environmental catastrophe no one seems to know about – the degradation of the world’s islands – and a Berkeley group is addressing it head-on. -more-


Save the El Cerrito Theater

Michael Mejia Richmond
Tuesday April 23, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


History

The Associated Press
Tuesday April 23, 2002

Today is Tuesday, April 23, the 113th day of 2002. There are 252 days left in the year. -more-


Long live the atheist

Carol Denny Berkeley
Tuesday April 23, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


News of the Weird

The Associated Press
Tuesday April 23, 2002

ERIE, Pa. (AP) — Police are looking for three very unwelcome wedding guests. -more-


Gore criticizes Bush administration’s environmental policies

By Karin MillerThe Associated Press
Tuesday April 23, 2002

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Al Gore used Earth Day to unleash his harshest criticism of President Bush since losing the White House to him, saying the administration’s environmental policies serve “special interests instead of public interests.” -more-


Bush defends his environmental record as Gore and others criticize his record; promotes “clear skies” anti-smog plan

By Ron Fournier The Associated Press
Tuesday April 23, 2002

WILMINGTON, N.Y. — After a muscle-burning walk through snowy Adirondack Mountain woods, President Bush defended his environmental record on Earth Day and dismissed a chorus of Democratic critics, including former rival Al Gore. -more-


Trash talk: New York mayor’s proposed recycling halt angers environmental groups

By Larry McShane The Associated Press
Tuesday April 23, 2002

NEW YORK — The nation’s recycling movement has been steadily expanding for three decades — so much that it has become almost standard practice for people to separate their paper, plastic and glass. -more-


California shaves $3.5 billion off cost of power contracts

By Paul Glader The Associated Press
Tuesday April 23, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — California will save $3.5 billion on its long-term energy pacts, state officials said Monday, under reworked terms on eight contracts with four power companies, including San Jose-based Calpine Corp. -more-


Measure boosting benefits retroactively sent to Davis

By Steve Lawrence The Associated Press
Tuesday April 23, 2002

SACRAMENTO — Lawmakers on Monday sent the governor a bill raising unemployment benefits for workers who lost their jobs following the Sept. 11 attacks, but a partisan fight will delay the increases for months. -more-


A day in the life ... campesinos from Latin America work long days in Arizona fields

By Luke Turf The Associated Press
Tuesday April 23, 2002

YUMA, Ariz. — It’s 2:30 a.m. and Francisco Perez Marez wakes to his alarm. He’s had six hours of sleep. -more-


California court allows local bans of gun shows on public property

By DAVID KRAVETS Associated Press Writer
Tuesday April 23, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Counties and cities in California may prohibit gun shows on their fairgrounds and other public properties, despite state laws that allow such events, the state Supreme Court ruled Monday. -more-


Southern farmers pin hopes on growing demand for goat meat

By Elliott Minor The Associated Press
Tuesday April 23, 2002

ALBANY, Ga. — Charles Batten turned a few goats loose on his cow pastures 10 years ago to keep weeds down. They do a great job, but these days they’re more valuable for their meat. -more-


Cable network for women gets minuscule ratings in first survey

The Associated Press
Tuesday April 23, 2002

NEW YORK — Oxygen, the cable television network for women that began with great fanfare two years ago, is barely being seen. -more-


‘Dateline NBC’ and General Motors make peace after flaming truck incident

The Associated Press
Tuesday April 23, 2002

NEW YORK — A decade after “Dateline NBC” got in trouble for staging a collision to illustrate fire dangers in a General Motors truck, the newsmagazine and automaker have apparently made peace. -more-


Univison to unveil new strategy, programs for Galavision cable

By Gary Gentile The Associated Press
Tuesday April 23, 2002

LOS ANGELES — Univision Communications Inc. is programming its Galavision cable channel to appeal to different audiences than its two broadcast networks. -more-


Opinion

Editorials

News of the Weird

Staff
Monday April 29, 2002

High times for pilot -more-


News of the Weird

- The Associated Press
Saturday April 27, 2002

Flowers pilfered -more-


Eastshore State Park plan nearing maturity

By Jamie Luck, Special to the Daily Planet
Friday April 26, 2002

The plans to establish Eastshore State Park, the swath of coastal greenbelt that stretches from the foot of the Bay Bridge to Marina Bay in Richmond, is taking a somewhat cohesive form. Entitled the “preferred park plan,” it is ready for the next stage after a Tuesday presentation in Berkeley. The city will be receiving it with a special meeting composed of the City Council, the Parks and Recreation Commission, and the Waterfront Commission this Tuesday, April 30, 7 p.m. at the Berkeley Community Theater, 1930 Allston Way. -more-


News of the Weird

Associated Press
Thursday April 25, 2002

Earwax, you’re history -more-