The Week

 

News

Minority groups demand hate crime policies

By Kurtis Alexander Daily Planet Staff
Tuesday May 28, 2002

Minority activists of numerous descents took to heart the idiom “strength in numbers” Monday and joined together on the steps of Old City Hall to speak out against the rising incidence of hate crime. -more-



History

The Associated Press
Tuesday May 28, 2002

Historical Highlight -more-


Reflections on Memorial Day

Boona Cheema
Tuesday May 28, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Staff
Tuesday May 28, 2002


Wednesday, May 29


Calendar of Events and Activities

Staff
Tuesday May 28, 2002


Wednesday, May 29

-more-


Memorial Day is not entirely ignored in city of Berkeley

By Matthew Artz Special to the Daily Planet
Tuesday May 28, 2002

There is no Memorial Day parade through downtown Berkeley, but one local resident made sure people remembered there was a holiday to commemorate. -more-


Castroneves victory is upheld

The Associated Press
Tuesday May 28, 2002

INDIANAPOLIS — Preening and playing to the cameras, Helio Castroneves enjoyed the spoils of winning the Indy 500. -more-


Chopping up the UC Theatre would be a mistake — repeated

Garrett Murphy
Tuesday May 28, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Council may send truckers packing

Matthew Artz Special to the Daily Planet
Tuesday May 28, 2002

Don Nunes didn’t know where he was going to sleep last night. As a truck driver making a stop in the Bay Area, his choices are severely limited. -more-


Bryant sees hard work behind Lakers’ lucky break

By Greg Beacham The Associated Press
Tuesday May 28, 2002

SACRAMENTO — No matter what the Sacramento Kings believe, Kobe Bryant knows it’s more than luck keeping the Los Angeles Lakers on track for their third straight championship. -more-


Israel has no right to make arrest in Bethlehem

Marc Sapir
Tuesday May 28, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


UC students in Church of Nativity siege deported from Israel

The Associated Press
Tuesday May 28, 2002

RIVERSIDE — A University of California, Riverside student, who had been detained by Israel after trying to provide humanitarian aid to armed Palestinians during a church siege in Bethlehem, was back in the United States on Monday, his father said. -more-


Berkeley Censor Media?

Helen Rippier Wheeler
Tuesday May 28, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Cal pleased with summer enrollment numbers

The Associated Press
Tuesday May 28, 2002

BERKELEY — Officials at the University of California at Berkeley say they are -more-


Colorful traditions rolls on in Humboldt County on Memorial Day

The Associated Press
Tuesday May 28, 2002

ARCATA — Eric Striedieck’s team was making good time in the race when disaster struck — the 10-foot, human-powered sculpture they were piloting over Humboldt Bay sank, and they were overtaken by a 14-foot iguana. -more-


Workers’ comp bill shows Davis’ way with campaign money

By Martha Mendoza The Associated Press
Tuesday May 28, 2002

SACRAMENTO — After vetoing workers’ compensation reforms for three years, Gov. Gray Davis this year declared the legislation long overdue and signed the labor-friendly bill into law. -more-


AIDS caregiver limits GlaxoSmithKline activities to protest pricing policies

By Simon Avery The Associated Press
Tuesday May 28, 2002

LOS ANGELES — AIDS Healthcare Foundation, one of the largest providers of specialized care for HIV patients in the United States, said it will bar GlaxoSmithKline from marketing drugs at its outpatient sites to protest the company’s pricing policies. -more-


Biotech industry squeezed by lack of ‘breweries’

By Paul Elias AP Biotechnology Writer
Tuesday May 28, 2002

Sales tax increase remains unpopular option

The Associated Press
Tuesday May 28, 2002

Amnesty International Criticizes war on terrorism

The Associated Press
Tuesday May 28, 2002

Mom was right, broccoli is good for you, say cancer researchers

The Associated Press
Tuesday May 28, 2002

WASHINGTON — Broccoli and broccoli sprouts contain a chemical that kills the bacteria responsible for most stomach cancer, say researchers, confirming the dietary advice that moms have been handing out for years. -more-


Disabled climbers break ground on Mount Shasta

The Associated Press
Tuesday May 28, 2002

REDDING — After five hours traveling at night, four paraplegic climbers have gained 1,200 feet on Mount Shasta by using special handcranked machines. -more-


Breakthrough on UC nurses contract dispute

By David Scharfenberg, Daily Planet staff
Friday May 24, 2002

The University of California has offered to curtail mandatory overtime for its nurses and shift from a merit pay system to one based on seniority, marking a major shift in the contract squabble between the two sides. -more-


Pedestrian death was not isolated event

Lisa Pascopella, PhD, MPH
Friday May 24, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Elvis shows us the origins of his obsession

By Ian M. Stewart, Special to the Daily Planet
Friday May 24, 2002

xIf you think Elvis Costello, the once kingpin of Punk and New Wave angst, has stifled his sharp tongue and rocking sensibilities in favor of just collaborating with the likes of Burt Bachrach and Swedish mezzo-soprano Anne Sofie von Otter only, think again. Costello proved beyond a doubt where his musical roots lay at a recent show at the Berkeley Community Theater. He showed the crowd that though his musical styles have expanded beyond the fast-paced, witty lyrics of his early career, his origins of being a great rock 'n' roll songwriter and a captivating performer are still perfectly intact. -more-


Out & About Calendar

Staff
Friday May 24, 2002


Friday, May 2

-more-


Schools may carry deficit into next year

By David Scharfenberg, Daily Planet staff
Friday May 24, 2002

The Berkeley Unified School District revealed new budget figures and Superintendent Michele Lawrence warned that the district may carry a deficit into next year at the Board of Education meeting Wednesday night. -more-


BUSD is not a good neighbor

V. Peters
Friday May 24, 2002

Solano Avenue is a treat for the senses this weekend

By Jim Emerson, Special to the Daily Planet
Friday May 24, 2002

Solano Avenue sidewalks will explode with chocolate and colorful chalk artwork for three days during the Memorial Day holiday weekend at the Chocolate & Chalk Art Festival running May 25- 27. -more-


University to 86 area food vendors

By Kurtis Alexander, Daily Planet Staff
Friday May 24, 2002

City Council considers new regulations as well -more-


Obscene material is not protected

John Parman
Friday May 24, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Midnight marks witching hour ‘Harry Potter’

The Associated Press
Friday May 24, 2002

LOS ANGELES — If you want to be among the first to own “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone,” you need to get to the store at an appropriate hour: midnight. -more-


Airports gear up for busiest weekend since Sept. 11th

Daily Planet Wire Report
Friday May 24, 2002

All three Bay Area airports are expecting an especially heavy flow of travelers to pass through their terminals this Memorial Day weekend, perhaps the highest numbers since the Sept. 11 attacks traumatized American air travel. -more-


Our society is not colorblind

Paul Hogarth
Friday May 24, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Electronic Music amps up in Motor City

By David Enders, The Associated Press
Friday May 24, 2002

DETROIT — The Detroit Electronic Music Festival drew more than 1 million people in each of its first two years. -more-


Clear sky in the East; Cold front moves into the Central Plains

The Associated Press
Friday May 24, 2002

A high pressure system along the mid-Atlantic coast brought sunny skies to much of the East on Thursday afternoon. -more-


Censorship is not the Berkeley way

Harry Siitonen
Friday May 24, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Stand-up comedienne takes on the big ‘C’

By Jennifer Dix, Special to the Daily Planet
Friday May 24, 2002

Female genital mutilation is not usually the subject of stand-up comedy. But for African-born Sia Amma, humor has proved powerful and healing. Subjected to a clitorodectomy in her native Liberia when she was just nine years old, Amma has made the problem of female circumcision the central subject of a one-woman show. -more-


News of the Weird

The Associated Press
Friday May 24, 2002

FBI agent allegedly switched allegiance to gangsters -more-


Stayner pleads innocent by reason of insanity

The Associated Press
Friday May 24, 2002

xSAN JOSE — Attorneys for former motel handyman Cary Stayner, who has admitted in grotesque detail how he killed three Yosemite National Park tourists in 1999, will try to save his life by arguing to a jury he is mentally ill. -more-


Judge rules that parole board should give more guidance to former Manson family inmate

The Associated Press
Friday May 24, 2002

xSAN BERNARDINO — A judge said Thursday that a board that has repeatedly denied Leslie Van Houten parole in two Manson Family murders has failed to give her any guidance on what she could do to make herself suitable for release. -more-


BAY AREA BRIEFS

Staff
Friday May 24, 2002

Goat killer sought -more-


Rubber bullets found to maim and sometimes kill

By Emma Ross, The Associated Press
Friday May 24, 2002

LONDON — Some types of rubber bullets used by police to restrain unruly protesters kill and maim too often to be considered a safe method of crowd control, new research concludes. -more-


Netflix gets thumbs up in stock market debut

By Michael Liedtke The Associated Press
Friday May 24, 2002

Online company’s shares skyrocket by almost 12 percent after initial IPO -more-


Agency sets up ’Enron link’ for reporting suspicious activities

The Associated Press
Friday May 24, 2002

WASHINGTON – A federal agency set up an “Enron Information Link” for people to report suspicious activities involving Enron or other companies that may have affected West Coast energy prices. -more-


Orbitz and Gay.com team up to offer gay vacation packages

The Associated Press
Friday May 24, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO – Online travel service Orbitz will target footloose gays and lesbians under a marketing partnership announced Wednesday with Web portal Gay.com. -more-


Budget negotiators to consider boosting logging fees

The Associated Press
Friday May 24, 2002

SACRAMENTO – Budget negotiators will consider boosting logging fees to help trim the state’s projected $23.6 billion budget shortfall, lawmakers decided Wednesday evening. -more-


Yahoo! withdraws some of its European auctions

The Associated Press
Friday May 24, 2002

SAN JOSE — Yahoo! Inc. said Thursday it plans to pull most of its online auction initiatives in Europe and instead promote eBay’s market-leading auction site there. -more-


Hundreds evacuate as New Mexico wildfire grows to 6,000 acres

The Associated Press
Friday May 24, 2002

TRUCHAS, N.M. — Hundreds of people left their homes Thursday as a fast-moving 6,000-acre wildfire threatened a small northern New Mexico town. -more-


Landmark tobacco cases come to fruition

The Associated Press
Friday May 24, 2002

xLandmark cases brought by individual smokers against the tobacco industry, listing date, location, award, parties and status: -more-


Two convicted in Tennessee ‘love connection’ bank heist cas

The Associated Press
Friday May 24, 2002

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Two men who forced a bank manager to rob her own bank while they held her family hostage were convicted Thursday of armed bank robbery by extortion. -more-


Mayor, ex-mayor join campaign against Los Angeles breakup

The Associated Press
Friday May 24, 2002

Hahn, Riordan speak out against plan to separate San Fernando Valley from second-biggest U.S. city -more-


Report: More than a third of state’s single women in poverty

The Associated Press
Friday May 24, 2002

SACRAMENTO – More than a third of California’s single women live in poverty, according to a report released Wednesday by the San Francisco-based Women’s Foundation. -more-


Immigrants fear proposal to allow local police to enforce federal laws

By Deborah Kong, The Associated Press
Friday May 24, 2002

Justice Department considering giving cops power to enforce immigration laws; Florida the first state to agree to idea -more-


Walker Lindh pleaded ‘Please don’t kill me,’ defense motion says

By Larry Margasak, The Associated Press
Friday May 24, 2002

ALEXANDRIA, Va. – John Walker Lindh pleaded “please don’t kill me” as U.S. troops took the captured Taliban soldier to a U.S. military camp in Afghanistan, his defense lawyers said Thursday. -more-


Walker Lindh pleaded ‘Please don’t kill me,’ defense motion says

By Larry Margasak, The Associated Press
Friday May 24, 2002

ALEXANDRIA, Va. – John Walker Lindh pleaded “please don’t kill me” as U.S. troops took the captured Taliban soldier to a U.S. military camp in Afghanistan, his defense lawyers said Thursday. -more-


Senate OKs sales of hypodermic needles without prescriptions

The Associated Press
Friday May 24, 2002

SACRAMENTO – Pharmacies could sell hypodermic needles to adults without a doctor’s prescription under a bill approved Thursday by the state Senate. -more-


Police chief: Condit may be questioned again

By Mark Sherman, Associated Press Writer
Friday May 24, 2002

WASHINGTON – Police and forensic experts worked Thursday to solve the mystery of how Chandra Levy died, with investigators saying most evidence points to murder. -more-


Suspect in Montana child slaying gets 130 years for separate assaults

By Tom Laceky, Associated Press Writer
Friday May 24, 2002

GREAT FALLS, Mont. – Nathaniel Bar-Jonah, the man accused of butchering a 10-year-old boy here and feeding his remains to unsuspecting neighbors, was sentenced Thursday to 130 years in prison without parole for assaults on two other boys. -more-


Committee approves altered textbook bill

By Stefanie Frith The Associated Press
Friday May 24, 2002

Provisions to give teachers power over book and curriculum selection dropped -more-


Lesbian teacher settles discrimination lawsuit

The Associated Press
Friday May 24, 2002

Oceanside Unified School District to pay more than $140,000 -more-


Court: Inmate can’t mail sperm from prison

By David Kravets, The Associated Press
Friday May 24, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO – A California inmate has no right to mail his sperm from prison to impregnate his wife, a divided federal appeals court ruled Thursday. -more-


City pans ‘racial privacy’ plan

By Chris Nichols Daily Planet Staff
Thursday May 23, 2002

The Berkeley City Council unanimously voted to oppose the Racial Privacy Initiative Tuesday night, an initiative that would prohibit state and local governments from collecting or using information about race, ethnicity, color or national origin. -more-


History

The Associated Press
Thursday May 23, 2002

Today is Thursday, May 23, the 143rd day of 2002. There are 222 days left in the year. -more-


A plan to save UC Theatre, nurture arts

Steven Finacom
Thursday May 23, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Staff
Thursday May 23, 2002


Thursday, May 23


Staff
Thursday May 23, 2002


Thursday, May 23


’Jackets mash Antioch in NCS first round

By Jared GreenDaily Planet Staff
Thursday May 23, 2002

The Berkeley Yellowjackets scored in each of the first five innings, including a five-run fourth, and cruised to a 12-6 win over Antioch High in the first round of the North Coast Section 3A East Bay playoffs on Wednesday at Cal’s Evans Diamond. -more-


BUSD seeks settlement with teachers

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet staff
Thursday May 23, 2002

Officials from the Berkeley Federation of Teachers and the Berkeley Unified School District say they hope to settle union claims of improper layoffs out of court, but a disagreement over seven “probationary status” teachers may get in the way. -more-


Missing raisin found

The Associated Press
Thursday May 23, 2002

Mayor Dean is doing right for Berkeley

Gabriella Raymond
Thursday May 23, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


City commits to street safety after nun’s death

By Kurtis Alexander Daily Planet Staff
Thursday May 23, 2002

City leaders have fast-tracked safety plans for the neighborhood where a 72-year-old nun was struck and killed by a car on Addison Street earlier this month. But central Berkeley residents are concerned that bureaucratic roadblocks may delay the safety process. -more-


City Council wants to censor local TV

Teresa Cochran
Thursday May 23, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Claremont spa, union workers face off in the rain

By Matthew Artz Special to the DailyPlanet
Thursday May 23, 2002

Approximately 100 Claremont food and beverage workers, spa workers and sympathizers braved the rain on Sunday to continue their fight against KSL Resorts Corporation, the spa’s parent company. -more-


Stockton woman pleads guilty to concealing birth of baby she dumped at casino

Staff
Thursday May 23, 2002

STATELINE, Nev. — An 18-year-old Stockton, Calif. woman has pleaded guilty to misdemeanor charges she concealed the birth of her son, who was found dead at a Stateline casino. -more-


Years after Riders removed, Oakland’s streets much the same

By Kim Curtis The Associated Press
Thursday May 23, 2002

OAKLAND — Boarded up storefronts, corner liquor stores and rundown houses dominate west Oakland, where a gung-ho band of police officers known as “the Riders” were taken off the streets two years ago. -more-


Parks district to acquire 276 acres

Daily Planet Wire Report
Thursday May 23, 2002

Squirrel puts a cog in the works

Staff
Thursday May 23, 2002

SFO screeners given citizenship deadline

Staff
Thursday May 23, 2002

Workers to plunge into Bay for oil

Staff
Thursday May 23, 2002

Faultline may put the brakes on co-op, gallery

By Maya Smith Special to the Daily Planet
Thursday May 23, 2002

It is not the artists’ fault that they live on a fault, but an expensive retrofitting job, to the co-operative gallery located in the 1700 block of Shattuck, will be their problem. -more-


Lab takes on biological, chemical threats

Staff
Thursday May 23, 2002

LIVERMORE — Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory officials today launched a program to give public safety officials access to state-of-the-art technology to battle chemical and biological threats. -more-


Williams says it didn’t manipulate power prices

By Clayton Bellamy The Associated Press
Thursday May 23, 2002

TULSA, Okla. — Williams Cos. told energy regulators Wednesday that some of its California trades resembled those allegedly made by Enron Corp., but were not designed to manipulate the state’s power market. -more-


Gap shares plunge as CEO retires

By Michael Liedtke The Associated Press
Thursday May 23, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Gap, Inc.’s shares plunged 15 percent Wednesday amid investor worries the unexpected retirement of Millard “Mickey” Drexler as chief executive will hobble the already limping retailer. -more-


BHS gets mixed review

By David Scharfenberg, Daily Planet Staff
Wednesday May 22, 2002

After a two-and-a-half-day visit, a five-member team from the Western Association of Schools and Colleges said Berkeley High School has made progress on communications and governance, but needs to improve on staff development and its approach to the “achievement gap” that separates white and Asian-American students from African-Americans and Latinos. -more-


History

- The Associated Press
Wednesday May 22, 2002

Today is Wednesday, May 22, the 142nd day of 2002. There are 223 days left in the year. -more-


Berkeley needs fewer cars

- Charlene M. Woodcock
Wednesday May 22, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Arts & Entertainment Calendar

Staff
Wednesday May 22, 2002

Out & About Calendar

Staff
Wednesday May 22, 2002


Monday, May 20

-more-


Yellowjackets ready for another shot at NCS

By Jared Green, Daily Planet Staff
Wednesday May 22, 2002

Souders gets the start against Antioch -more-


State cuts shouldn’t hurt BUSD

By David Scharfenberg, Daily Planet Staff
Wednesday May 22, 2002

xGov. Gray Davis’s proposed education budget shouldn’t inflict much harm on the Berkeley Unified School District next year, according to one highly-placed district official. But concerns about health care costs, special education and mentoring programs at two Berkeley schools linger. -more-


School board process unfair

Michael Bauce
Wednesday May 22, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Cal women fall at NCAAs

Daily Planet Wire Services
Wednesday May 22, 2002

STANFORD – Cal’s representatives in the NCAA Women’s Tennis singles championship were eliminated Tuesday, as sophomore Raquel Kops-Jones and junior Christina Fusano both lost in the first round. -more-


Sports field solution may lie just beyond Berkeley border — in Oakland

By Kurtis Alexander, Daily Planet Staff
Wednesday May 22, 2002

xIf Berkeley can’t readily muster space for new sports fields within its city limits, maybe the city of Oakland can pinch hit. -more-


Palestinian peace promises sound too familiar

-Mark Schickman
Wednesday May 22, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Sports this week

Staff
Wednesday May 22, 2002

Wednesday -more-


Bush told bigger lie than previous president

- Bruce Joffe
Wednesday May 22, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


News of the Weird

- The Associated Press
Wednesday May 22, 2002

Desperate jury search -more-


Prosecution of Palestine activists is a waste

-Michael Minasian
Wednesday May 22, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Berkeley searches for inner peace

By Michelle Locke, The Associated Press
Wednesday May 22, 2002

BERKELEY — In a time of war, the University of California, Berkeley, is launching a center devoted to the study of inner peace. -more-


Staff
Wednesday May 22, 2002

City Council


Mayor Dean honored for fighting hate crimes

Daily Planet Wire Services
Wednesday May 22, 2002

BERKELEY — A Berkeley group concerned about a recent rash of racially-motivated hate crimes in the city honored Mayor Shirley Dean Tuesday for her efforts to bring the crimes to a quick halt. -more-


SF Presidio plan triples employment base and adds 99 acres open space

By Justin Pritchard, The Associated Press
Wednesday May 22, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Developers who want a piece of a one-time military oasis may find themselves squeezed under a new plan for San Francisco’s last sprawl of prime real estate. -more-


Open government constitutional amendment passes first test

By Steve Lawrence, The Associated Press
Wednesday May 22, 2002

SACRAMENTO — A constitutional amendment to bolster California’s open government requirements passed its first test Tuesday, but supporters said it was still only a “semi-work in progress” that would be reshaped as it moves through the Legislature. -more-


Senator accuses grid operators of manipulating energy market

By Jennifer Coleman, The Associated Press
Wednesday May 22, 2002

SACRAMENTO — California grid officials asked state energy traders to buy unnecessary power at above-market rates, which the state later had to sell at a loss, a senator investigating California’s energy market said Tuesday. -more-


Legislative committee requests subpoenas for Oracle Corp. testimony

By Jennifer Coleman, The Associated Press
Wednesday May 22, 2002

SACRAMENTO — The legislative committee investigating a $95 million no-bid software contract asked for permission Tuesday to subpoena five top Oracle Corp. officials to testify. -more-


Opinion

Editorials

Emeryville development at burial site protested

The Associated Press
Tuesday May 28, 2002

Lady Bird Johnson goes home

The Associated Press
Friday May 24, 2002

AUSTIN, Texas — Lady Bird Johnson was released from an Austin hospital Thursday, three weeks after suffering a mild stroke. -more-


Chandra Levy search comes to tragic end

By Brain Melley The Associated Press
Thursday May 23, 2002

MODESTO — The parents of Chandra Levy tried to avoid watching television Wednesday after word broke that a body was found in a Washington, D.C., park not far from their daughter’s apartment. -more-


Commonality beats contrast for Cuban sister city

By Jamie Luck, Special to the Daily Planet
Wednesday May 22, 2002

Berkeley’s urbanity, Palma Soriano’s agriculture, and thousands of miles may serve to separate these two cities, but as of last week they have joined an increasing sisterhood despite the estrangement. -more-


Columns

Ex-Davis aide didn’t expect Oracle donation

By Steve Lawrence, The Associated Press
Friday May 24, 2002

SACRAMENTO – A former aide to Gov. Gray Davis says he was surprised when a computer company lobbyist gave him a $25,000 campaign contribution for the governor at a Sacramento bar. -more-