Full Text

John Hardgrove and his dog, Tucker, leave the Oakland to San Francisco ferry on his way to work. The Water Transit Authority is considering expanding San Francisco Bay ferry service to Berkeley.
John Hardgrove and his dog, Tucker, leave the Oakland to San Francisco ferry on his way to work. The Water Transit Authority is considering expanding San Francisco Bay ferry service to Berkeley.
 

News

State study: demand high for SF-Berkeley ferry service

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet staff
Tuesday July 23, 2002

Berkeley ranks second only to Treasure Island when it comes to Bay Area demand for a new ferry service, according to a recent state-commissioned study. The results make the city a leading candidate for commuter boats. 

But ferry service still faces significant political hurdles with state approval hanging in the balance and local critics worried about the project’s economic feasibility and environmental impact. 

Written by the San Francisco Bay Water Transit Authority, the study found that by 2025, if service is in place, some 2,776 Berkeley residents will take the ferry to San Francisco on a typical weekday. The Treasure Island to San Francisco route would be the most popular with 3,587 commuters. South San Francisco placed third and Richmond was fourth. 

The Water Transit Authority, established by the legislature in 1999 to examine the potential for expanded ferry service, is now focusing on the four communities with the greatest demand. 

Under current WTA plans, construction on a Berkeley terminal would begin in 2009 and service would start in 2010, with trips to San Francisco and perhaps other parts of the Bay Area.  

The agency has not identified specific sites for a Berkeley terminal, but locals say Berkeley Marina and the shorefront at the end of Gilman Street are the leading contenders. 

Advocates say ferry service would be a boon. 

“Ferries are the people’s yacht,” said Linda Perry of the Berkeley Ferry Committee. “Anybody in this town can get out there and really get to know our Bay – all for the price of a BART ticket.” 

Still, ferry service in Berkeley is anything but a foregone conclusion. Next year, the Legislature will consider having the WTA prepare a planning document and a draft environmental impact report to help it decide whether ferry service is even viable. The costs of the service are yet to be determined. 

And on a local level, some city officials and activists have a range of concerns such as ferry service drawing money from other public transit systems, that it might disturb ducks on the bay or create a parking nightmare. 

“You start out thinking it’s a wonderful thing and you want it to happen,” said City Councilmember Linda Maio. “But the devil is in the details.” 

Heidi Machen, spokesperson for the WTA, said the agency will not drain the budgets of other public transit services like BART or AC Transit. The total funding that WTA would need is unclear. 

Machen said the WTA will draw on a proposed $1 toll hike on Bay Area bridges, which would take hold in 2005, and it would seek additional federal, state and local funding.  

The state would ask municipalities like Berkeley, she said, to help pay for the construction of terminals. 

Still, local officials said they are skeptical about the ferry service’s funding sources and they raised questions about issues like parking. The agency is projecting a need for 560 parking spaces at the Berkeley terminal. 

“The basic proposals generally involve building a massive parking garage and encouraging people to drive to the ferry, which is somewhat counterproductive for a public transit system,” said City Councilmember Kriss Worthington. 

Mayor Shirley Dean, who supports the push for ferry service, said anything approaching 600 spaces is unacceptable. But the city could cut down on the number of parking spaces by providing a bus service to the terminal, she said. 

Norman La Force of the Sierra Club said he has a number of environmental concerns regarding the project. Drudging the polluted bay to build a terminal would be a problem, he said. The ferries, he explained, would unsettle the water, preventing ducks from “drafting,” or getting proper rest on the water. 

The WTA’s Machen, though, said the drudging would be minimal and that birds would be unharmed. 

“The reality is, birds are a little smarter than we give them credit for,” said Machen. “Birds tend to relocate as necessary.”  

In the end, Dean said, the city and state should be able to work out any environmental concerns.  

“I don’t think anyone wants to kill a rafting duck, for goodness sake,” she said. 

Mayoral candidate Tom Bates was more cautious about the ability to prevail over environmental and economic barriers. 

“I would be skeptical about our ability to overcome those problems,” he said. “But I think it’s worth looking into.” 

Tonight, the City Council will consider naming Assistant City Manager for Transportation Peter Hillier to a community advisory board for the WTA. Hillier said that if appointed to the board he will bring Berkeley’s environmental concerns to the table. 

The advisory committee has been up and running for a year-and-a-half, but a City Council fight over naming an appointee has left Berkeley without a representative.  

City Councilmembers said they don’t expect any opposition to Hillier’s appointment. 


B-TV proposal is limiting

Linda Mac Berkeley
Tuesday July 23, 2002

To the Editor: 

I am the co-host of Unlimited Possibilities, one of the two shows on B-TV targeted for censoring by the proposed measure that the Berkeley City Council is considering. This proposed measure came about because a few people were offended by what we present on our show. A lot of letters have appeared in this forum about this proposed ordinance. They have been overwhelmingly against it, detailing the many dangers of this ordinance within the big picture of taking away our freedoms. 

But allow me to talk about the “small” picture of how this would censor our show and audience. I do the show with Frank Moore. Our show is politically, culturally, and artistically radical. Our show is a 2 1/2-hour variety show offering in-depth conversations about issues that affect us all with a wide range of people, live music, and cutting edge performances, films, and art. Although we get complaints that the show has too much talk, what the few people find objectionable is the cutting edge art... the same kind of art that got Frank targeted by Sen. Jesse Helms in the early 90s. 

This cutting edge art would get the show exiled to after midnight under this ordinance. This ordinance requires producers to label their shows' contents as sexually explicit. “Sexually explicit” shows will be moved to midnight. We don't know what sexually explicit means. But failure to correctly label a show will have your show moved to after midnight as punishment. 

We have always requested our show be shown after 10 p.m. to have the freedom to cover a wide range of topics. But exiling the show to after midnight denies people easy access to it in a very intrusive way. It denies the show “foot traffic,” cutting down the number of people discovering the show.  

It is like moving a store from Shattuck and University to Dwight Way and Eighth... or limiting a politician to halls of 50 or less. Imagine the uproar. 

 

Linda Mac 

Berkeley 

 

 


Calendar of Events & Activities

Tuesday July 23, 2002

Tuesday, July 23 

Myanmar (formerly Burma): "The Golden Land" 

7:30 p.m.  

Easy Going Travel Shop & Bookstore, 1385 Shattuck Ave.  

Ricky Fishman gives a slide presentation/talk about this isolated and remote land. 

843-3533 

Free 

 

Q & A with a Personal/Business Coach 

noon to 1 p.m. 

YWCA Turning Point Career Center, 2600 Bancroft Way 

For those interested in professional coaching careers, speak with a pro. 

848-6370 

$3 

 

Wednesday, July 24 

Berkeley Gray Panthers General Meeting 

1:30 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center, 1901 Hearst St. 

Pharmacist Fred Mayer prescriptions and their costs, etc. 

548-9696  

Free 

 

Getting Help When You Need It 

7:30 to 9 p.m.  

Summit North Pavilion, Cafeteria Annex A 

350 Hawthorne Ave. Oakland 

Free interactive workshop to help caregivers obtain free assistance, deal with paid in-home help, and create plans to care for loved ones. 

869-6737 

Free 

 

"Green Building" Workshop 

6:30 to 8 p.m. 

Berkeley Public Library, Meeting Room A, 2090 Kittredge 

Henry Siegel, Architect, on how to use building materials that are healthier for your family and the environment.  

614-1699 

 

Thursday, July 25 

Combat Medic: World War II 

7:30 p.m.  

Easy Going Travel Shop & Bookstore, 1385 Shattuck Ave.  

Memoir presentation by San Francisco physician John Kerner, describing experiences as a combat medic in World War II.  

843-3533 

Free 

 

California Landscapes: A Geologist's Perspective 

7 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

John Karachewski presents an educational slide show on such amazing places as the Sierra Nevada, Coast Ranges the Great Valley and Cascades 

For more information: (510) 527- 4140. 

Free 

 

Saturday, July 27 

Test Ride Kestrel Bicycles 

11 a.m.-1 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Pristine Sandusky of Kestrel, a premier manufacturer of high-end, carbon-fiber road and mountain bikes, introduces their latest design. 

Free 

 

Graywater Workshop  

10 a.m. to 1 p.m. 

Ecology Center, 2530 San Pablo Ave 

Learn the ins and outs of reusing water with the Guerrilla Graywater Girls 

548-2220 x233  

$10 members, $15 non ( no one turned away for lack of funds) 

 

Santa Fe Right of Way Path Walk 

10 a.m. 

Meet at the Ohlone Greenway at Cedar St, in Cedar Rose Park. 

A new path opportunity, recently funded by the City Council. 

649-9874, or http://www.internettime.com/path 

 

"Neon: The Living Flame" 

7:00 p.m.  

Alameda Museum, 2324 Alameda Ave.  

The Alameda Museum presents Michael Crowe, author, and neon artist Karl Hauser 

lecture by Michael Crowe 

748-0796 or 841-8489.  

Members free, non-members $5  

 

Grand Summer Rummage Sale 

9 a.m. to 4 p.m 

Berkeley Fellowship of Unitarian Universalists, Cedar and Bonita Streets 

A benefit for ANSWER- Act Now to Stop War and End Racism. Donations and volunteers are needed 

(415) 821-6545. 

 

Sunday, July 28 

Hands-on Bicycle Repair  

11 a.m.-12 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Learn from an REI bike technician basic repairs such as brake adjustments and fixing a flat. 

(510) 527-4140 Free 

 

Tuesday, July 30 

The Birdhouse Chronicles: Surviving the Joys of Country Life 

7:30 p.m.  

Easy Going Travel Shop & Bookstore, 1385 Shattuck Ave.  

Reading and discussion of Cathleen Miller's personal account of moving from San Francisco to Amish Pennsylvania to restore an old house. 

843-3533 

Free 

 

Wednesday, July 31 

Twilight Tours at UC Botanical Gardens 

(through August 28) 5:30 p.m.  

200 Centennial Drive, Berkeley, CA.  

Tour the garden at twilight with an expert horticulturist every Wednesday. 

643-2755  

Free with garden admission.  

 

Mountain Adventure Seminars: Introduction to Rock Climbing 

7 p.m.-9 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

An introduction to rock climbing including knot tying, belaying and movement. 

For more information: (209) 753-6556 

$115 REI members; $125 non-members 

 

Thursday, August 1 

Putting it Together 

7:00 p.m. 

Zellerbach Hall, Bancroft Way at Telegraph Ave. 

Middle school students of Berkeley/Oakland AileyCamp perform dance techniques, spoken word, theater. 

Free 

 

Public Meeting to Plan New National Historic Park in Richmond 

1:30 p.m. 

Richmond Senior Center, 2525 Macdonald Ave. 

Meeting to gather input for National Park Service to prepare plans that will guide development of historic WWII sites in Richmond. 

817-1517 

Free 

 

Nutrition Career Open House 

7 to 8:30 p.m. 

Institute of Educational Therapy, 706 Gilman St. 

Become a Nutrition Educator or Nutrition Consultant. 

558-1711 for reservations 

Free 

 

Saturday, August 3 

Mountain Adventure Seminars: Introduction to Rock Climbing 

8 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

An introduction to rock climbing including knot tying, belaying and movement. 

For more information: (209) 753-6556 

$115 REI members; $125 non-members 

 

10th Annual Stroll for Epilepsy 

Six Flags Marine World, Vallejo 

The public is invited to join the Epilepsy Foundation of Northern California at Six Flags Marine World for a 5K walk/fundraiser. 

1-800-632-3532 for registration 

 

Storytelling at the Berkeley Public Library 

10:30 a.m. 

Berkeley Public Library, Central Branch 

2090 Kittredge St. 

Storyteller Joel Ben Izzy will present a variety of stories filled with warmth, humor, drama in the Children's Story Room. 

981-6223 

 

Sick Plant Clinic 

9 a.m. to Noon  

200 Centennial Drive 

UC Botanical Garden; First Saturday of every month. UC plant pathology and entomology experts will diagnose what ails your plant. 

643 - 2755. 

Free 

 

Sunday, August 4 

Top of the Bay Family Days 

1 to 3 p.m. 

Lawrence Hall of Science, Centennial Drive, above UC campus 

Enjoy an afternoon outdoor concert in our family picnic area as well as art and science activities and hands-on exhibits inside LHS. 

643-5961 

$8 adults 

 

Monday, August 5 

National Organization for Women East Bay Chapter monthly meeting 

6:30 p.m. 

Mama Bears Bookstore and Coffeehouse, 6536 Telegraph Ave. 

Discussion of harassment of females employed by the City of Oakland Fire Department 

Monthly meeting: NATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR WOMEN Oakland 

549-2970, 287-8948  

 

Arts Education Department Open House 

6:30 to 8:30 p.m. 

Richmond Art Center, 2540 Barrett Ave, Richmond 

Meet teachers, see studios/galleries, info about classes in the arts. 

620-6772 

Free 

 

Public Meeting to Plan a New National Park in Richmond 

1:30 p.m. 

Richmond Public Library, Whittlesey Room 

325 Civic Center Plaza (near Macdonald Ave. and 25th St.) 

Meeting to gather input for National Park Service to prepare plans that will guide development of historic WWII sites in Richmond. 

817-1517 

Free 

 

Saturday, August 10 

Poetry in the Plaza 

2:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Public Library, Central Branch, 2090 Kittredge 

Quarter hour readings by well-known poets, dedicated to June Jordan. 

981-6100 

Free 

 

Tomato Tasting 

10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

Center Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way 

Tasting and cooking demonstrations  

Free 

 

Tea Bag Folding 

2 to 4 p.m.  

Albany Library, 1247 Marin Ave, Albany 

Drop-in crafts program for ages 5 to adult.  

526-3720 ext 19. 

Free 

 

Sunday, August 11 

Hands-on Bicycle Repair 

11 a.m.-12 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Learn from an REI bike technician basic repairs such as brake adjustments and fixing a flat. 

For more information: (510) 527-4140 

Free 

West Berkeley arts Festival 

11 a.m. to 5 p.m. 

4th and University Ave. 

Explore the many resident artists located in Berkeley 

Free. 

 

Monday, August 12 

The First East Bay Senior Games 

10:30 a.m. clinic, 12:30 p.m. tee-off (approximate times) 

Mira Vista Golf and Country Club 

7901 Cutting Blvd. El Cerrito 

A golfing event for the 50+ crowd, in association with the California and National Senior Games Association. 

891-8033 (registration deadline July 29) 

Varying entry fees. 

 

Tuesday, August 13 

Tomato Tasting 

Tasting & cooking demonstrations 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

Derby Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way  

Free 

 

Berkeley Camera Club Weekly Meeting 

7:30 p.m. 

Northbrae Community Church, 941 The Alameda 

Share slides, prints with other photographers 

(510) 525-3565 

Free 

 

Saturday, August 17 

Author Reading and Signing: Haunani-Kay Trask 

3 p.m.  

Eastwind Books, 2066 University Ave., Berkeley 

Meet Hawaiian author Haunani-Kay Trask. 

548-2350 

Free 

 

Cajun & More 

Four Live Bands, crafts fair, Cajun food, dance lessons, micro-brewery beer & dance floor. 

10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

Center Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way 

Free 

 

Sunday, August 18 

Top of the Bay Family Days 

1 to 3 p.m. 

Lawrence Hall of Science, Centennial Drive, above UC campus 

Enjoy an afternoon outdoor concert in our family picnic area as well as art and science activities and hands-on exhibits inside LHS. 

643-5961 

$8 adults 

Hands-on Bicycle Repair 

11 a.m.-12 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Learn from an REI bike technician basic repairs such as brake adjustment and fixing a flat. 

For more information: (510) 527-7470 

 

Thursday, August 22 

Film: "Ralph Ellison: An American Journey" 

8 p.m. 

Berkeley Public Library - Central Branch 

2090 Kittredge St. 

Berkeley filmmaker Avon Kirkland's stirring documentary about the great American author, Ralph Ellison. 

981-6205 

Free 

 

Friday, August 23 

Teen Playreaders present Bizarre Shorts 

(through August 24) 7 p.m. 

Berkeley Public Library - North Branch 

1170 The Alameda 

Playreaders present 20 short, bizarre plays, contemporary and classic. 

644-6850 

Free 

 

Saturday, August 24 

Roller Derby & Big Time Wrestling 

6:30 p.m. 

Richmond Auditorium, 403 Civic Center Plaza 

Roller Derby: Bay Bombers vs. Brooklyn Red Devils, Big Time Wrestling superstars 

636-9300 

$10 Advance, $20 Door 

 

Monday, September 2 

National Organization for Women Oakland/East Bay Chapter  

6:30 PM.  

Mama Bears Bookstore and Coffeehouse, 6536 Telegraph Avenue, Berkeley  

Chapter’s monthly meeting. Speaker: multicultural historian, Lucia Chiavola Birnbaum, received 

the prestigious Valitutti Award for non fiction.  

549-2970 

Free 

 

Sunday, September 8 

Lifelong Medical Care First Annual 5K Fun Run/Walk Fundraiser 

9 a.m. to noon 

West Berkeley 

Individual and team participation, a health fair, food, prizes, live music, free insurance eligibility screening - fun for all ages. 

704-6010 

 


Rumph still out, but Niners are sunny on first day of camp

By Greg Beacham The Associated Press
Tuesday July 23, 2002

STOCKTON — The only things missing from the first day of the San Francisco 49ers’ training camp were the projected 100-degree temperatures — and first-round draft pick Mike Rumph. 

The 49ers kicked off the NFL’s second-earliest camp on Monday under gorgeous conditions at the University of the Pacific. Terrell Owens was smiling, Jeff Garcia was completely healthy and general manager Terry Donahue was in good spirits even without Rumph, one of just two draft picks who haven’t signed. 

But even Rumph’s absence wasn’t enough to cause big problems as the 49ers began eight days of workouts before their trip to Japan to play the Washington Redskins in the Osaka Dome. 

Unlike past seasons, when every top draft choice was expected to contribute immediately to a rebuilding club, these 49ers are already rebuilt. 

“We’ve been looking forward to having increased expectations,” coach Steve Mariucci said. “For two or three years, we were in such a rebuilding mode. We’ve gone through that, and now we have many pieces of the puzzle together.” 

Rumph isn’t expected to be more than a nickel back this season, but his negotiations with the 49ers bogged down on Monday, Donahue said. Since so few first-round picks have signed yet, it’s difficult to assess the former Miami star’s market value. 

“He gets a little further behind with each passing moment,” Mariucci said. 

The only other rookie remaining unsigned is defensive lineman Josh Shaw, a sixth-round pick from Michigan State who’s still recovering from a knee injury. 

But the rest of the Niners seemed to be enjoying what has been an unusual luxury in recent seasons — familiarity with their teammates and their game plan. Twenty of San Francisco’s 22 starters returned from last year’s 12-4 playoff season, with Pro Bowl guard Ron Stone and safety Tony Parrish the only newcomers immediately slated as starters. 

“We know the whole playbook already,” defensive tackle Dana Stubblefield said. “It’s really just refreshing our minds. In the team meetings (defensive coordinator) Jim Mora flew through all the defenses we put in. We pretty much knew them already.” 

Stubblefield helped keep that familiarity fresh by calling his defensive teammates and persuading nearly all of them to spend weeks worth of offseason workouts at the 49ers’ training complex in Santa Clara. 

The 49ers wore shoulder pads and helmets during afternoon workouts, but those couldn’t hide the smile on Owens’ face. The mercurial All-Pro receiver pronounced himself finished with minor league basketball “for six months, at least” and even spoke of becoming a team leader this season. 

“A couple of friends told me I’ll have to step up a little bit, and I’ll try to take that role,” Owens said. “There are going to be times when I might have to say something, but at the same time, I’m going to perform, and let my leadership come from that.” 

It was yet another change of tactic for Owens, who has bemoaned his lack of friends on the 49ers’ roster in the past. But with Owens’ volatile relationship with Mariucci simmering on low for now, the talented wideout seemed happy and healthy — even though he claimed to be “overweight” despite a minuscule body fat percentage. 

“We’ve already ironed that out, and it’s in the closet,” Owens said of his disagreements with Mariucci. “It’s not even an issue. It’s not on my mind. We’re thinking about other things. 

“Guys around here are hungry. They’re hungry for wins and for a championship. It’s been a while since people were like that around here.” 


City to decide fate of 3 developments

By John Geluardi Special to the Daily Planet
Tuesday July 23, 2002

As the city’s need for more housing is pitted against a burgeoning slow-growth movement, City Council will consider appeals against three proposed developments tonight that could result in 179 housing units, 31 of which would be designated for low-income residents. 

The basis for the appeals includes complaints about too little parking, a plan that is too dense with development and a lack of conformity to the neighborhood aesthetics regarding height and design. The Zoning Adjustments Board had previously approved use permits for the projects, all of which were proposed by Berkeley-based Panoramic Interests. 

The projects include a 44-unit project with 3,000 square feet of commercial space at 2119 University Ave. near Shattuck Avenue; a 100-unit project with 8,500 square feet of commercial space at 2471 Shattuck Ave. near Haste Street and a 35-unit project with 5,200 square feet of commercial space at 2700 San Pablo Ave. near Derby Street. 

Berkeley resident Howie Muir, whose name appears on all three of the appeals, is leading the opposition against the developments. Muir, who lives near the 2700 San Pablo Ave. proposal, is also co-author of the height initiative, a slow growth initiative slated for the November ballot. 

At tonight’s meeting, the council has three options. It can follow the recommendation of the ZAB and dismiss the appeals and move the project forward; send the projects back to the ZAB for further consideration; or void the use permits and set additional public hearings regarding each project. 

According to Current Planning Manager Mark Rhoades, city staff has painstakingly reviewed the projects and has recommended that council dismiss all three appeals. 

“We’ve reviewed the project and we didn’t find new or extraordinary circumstances that would require further review of these projects,” he said.  

Panoramic Interests Project Manager Chris Hudson said if the council sent any of the projects back to the ZAB or held more public hearings the developments would be unnecessarily delayed, and that building more housing is a high priority. 

“Staff has been reviewing these projects for a long, long time and I think they are correct in their response and I hope the council supports them,” he said. “There just isn’t a lot of factual background to these appeals.” 

Muir could not be reached Monday to comment on the appeals.  

Mayor Shirley Dean said she couldn’t comment on the specifics of the appeals but is not happy about delaying more housing. 

“Berkeley is in sore need of more housing and especially affordable housing,” she said. “I’m concerned because Mr. Muir doesn’t even live close to two of these projects.” 

But Councilmember Dona Spring said that while more housing is needed in Berkeley, there must be more assurances that affordable housing will be built for those who really need it – people who earn 60 percent or less of area median income, which is $36,000 for a family of three in Berkeley.  

In keeping with the state’s criteria for affordable housing, the 31 units set aside for low-income units are evenly split between those who earn 50 percent of the median income and those who earn 80 percent of the median income, which is $48,640 for a family of three.  

“I support development in the downtown area but I would like to see height bonuses given to developers who will provide more housing for people who earn 60 percent of the AMI [Area Median Income],” Spring said. “The rents are so high that many people who live in affordable housing can’t afford food or medicine after paying rent.”  

Perhaps the most controversial of the three projects being considered is the 35 units proposed at 2700 San Pablo Ave. During the last two years, the project has been kicked around the Department of Planning and Development, the ZAB and the City Council.  

Originally, Panoramic Interests and its partner in the project, Jubilee Restoration, a nonprofit developer, proposed 48 units and 5,392 square feet of commercial space. The size of the proposal generated intense opposition from the surrounding neighbors who lead the ZAB to reject the developers’ application. 

Panoramic Interests and Jubilee Restoration appealed to the City Council, which was considering the issue when the developers abruptly withdrew the application. Several months later, the developers resubmitted an application for the project, but scaled it down to 35 units and 5,266 square feet of commercial space. Much less neighborhood opposition ensued and the ZAB unanimously approved the use permit in February.  

“We first bought this property four years ago,” said Hudson. “It’s really a shame it takes this long to build housing in Berkeley and it’s why more housing isn’t built here.” 


Campaign ought to be interesting

Leon Mayeri Berkeley
Tuesday July 23, 2002

To the Editor: 

Tom Bates says he's not a leftist, yet he is surrounded by leftists from every corner of town, all hoping against hope that he can unseat Shirley Dean. Tom Bates laments about the loss of rent control, a most important issue to leftists. Just what does Bates mean?  

Passage of Costa Hawkins (vacancy decontrol) does not mean that rent control has ended in Berkeley; it has just been modified from the draconian environment that prevailed under the leadership of former mayor Loni Hancock. Thousands of tenants throughout Berkeley enjoy low rents and eviction controls virtually unprecedented in any American city, yet Tom Bates says rent control is a thing of the past. 

Tom Bates says he can work with both sides to solve disputes. Does he mean he'll convince leftist councilmembers like Dona Spring and Kriss Worthington to change their minds on important issues like housing, development, and sensible conversion of warehouse space? What specifically are the disputes that Mr. Bates hopes to resolve? 

Just what is Tom Bates up to? Is he temporarily disassociating himself from the left, very conveniently, to give us the impression that he is a moderate? Sounds like Berkeley voters are in for a slick campaign of deception from Mr. Bates. 

 

Leon Mayeri 

Berkeley


Fenway Park decked out for Ted Williams memorials

By Jimmy Golen The Associated Press
Tuesday July 23, 2002

BOSTON — Nine white doves took flight from home plate toward Fenway Park’s famous Green Monster, soaring over the outfield where Ted Williams once roamed before turning and climbing over the Red Sox dugout and out of the ballpark. 

Then, one-by-one, current and former Red Sox players took their positions on the field — leaving left field empty except for a garland of white carnations in the shape of a ”9.” 

With a wave from shortstop Nomar Garciaparra, they all headed out to Williams’ former domain to say goodbye. 

The Hub bid the Kid adieu a final time on Monday, as Red Sox fans came by the thousands to pay their respects to the team’s greatest player at a pair of events honoring the baseball and war hero. 

About 12,000 people came to the ballpark in the morning to meander around the warning track past mementos of Williams’ Hall of Fame career. At night, those artifacts came to life in the form of Red Sox greats from Carl Yastrzemski to Garciaparra and dignitaries such as John Glenn, the former senator and astronaut and Williams’ squadron leader in Korea. 

“Just saying his name means excellence in baseball,” said Glenn, who flew more than a dozen missions with Williams. “For me, Ted also stood for excellence in a setting far removed from baseball and for which he is less well-known. ... He never held back.” 

About 20,500 people bought tickets for the star-studded service to remember Williams and forget the fight among his children over whether to have his remains cremated or preserved in cryonic ice. (Williams’ three children declined an invitation to attend.) 

The subject was broached only by former teammate and longtime friend Dom DiMaggio, who drew a standing ovation when he broke from the program with an impassioned plea to scatter Williams’ ashes over his favorite fishing spot, the Gulf of Mexico. 

“I hope and pray this controversy will end as abruptly as it began and that the family will do the right thing by honoring Ted’s last wishes as to his final resting place,” DiMaggio said. “And may he then finally rest in peace.” 

Williams died July 5. Williams’ life was celebrated, with nine “innings” dedicated to No. 9, touching on his life as a young rookie who proclaimed his goal to be known as “the greatest hitter who ever lived”; a veteran of two wars; a tireless charity fund-raiser; and an elder statesman who was inducted into the baseball and fishing halls of fame. 

Fans entering the ballpark for the evening tribute were given a folder with Williams’ stats, a postcard of his Cooperstown plaque and a copy of John Updike’s famous New Yorker piece, “Hub Fans Bid Kid Adieu.” 

Once inside, they said goodbye for good. 

The park was decorated with memories of Williams’ life and his career. Giant banners covered the Green Monster to illustrate three of his biggest passions: hitting, serving in the Marines and talking to kids with cancer. Proceeds of the evening event were donated to the Jimmy Fund, Williams’ favorite charity. 

Stenciled in the infield dirt were the numbers .406, Williams’ batting average in 1941, and 521, his home run total, and “USMC,” just one of many reminders of his patriotism and of the statistics he lost during five years he spent fighting in two wars. 

“What would his baseball records have been if he had not been called back to active duty? Who knows?” Glenn said. “But I never heard Ted complain about that. Not once. Not a word.” 

For five hours in the morning, a steady stream of fans that included families with strollers, camp field trips and even Red Sox first baseman Brian Daubach filed in under a blazing sun to walk along the warning track and see artifacts of Williams’ career. 

The fans peeked in the dugouts and bullpen, pretended to make catches against the Wall and, as they were leaving, had a chance to shake hands with team owner John Henry. 

Two Marines stood guard as fans left a mounting pile of flowers, baseballs and caps and posed for pictures at the base of the center field wall. At night, the bouquets left by fans were used to fill in the No. 9 in left field. 

Williams’ Hall of Fame plaque was affixed to the left-field wall. A dozen more artifacts from Cooperstown were on display under the center-field bleachers, including the bat and ball used when he homered in his last at-bat. 

The Wall also featured a picture gallery of Williams’ career, showing shots of him with Babe Ruth and Joe DiMaggio and Yastrzemski and Muhammad Ali and former president and fishing buddy, George Bush. Forties music wafted from the speakers while the scoreboard video screen played highlights of Williams career and testimonials from friends and colleagues. 

Billboards hung in the netting above the Green Monster in left field called Williams “An American Hero” and “the greatest hitter who ever lived.” 

Fans also had a chance to sign condolence cards, with many choosing to say simply, “Thanks, Ted.” 

“I saw your last homer,” one wrote. “Awesome.” 

And that’s how the Red Sox chose to finish the program as well, with broadcaster Curt Gowdy narrated Williams’ final at-bats on Sept. 28, 1960. With former Orioles pitcher Jack Fisher on the mound, Gowdy called Williams’ final homer. 

“What a way to go out.” 


Greenpeace teaches about ‘Frankenfoods’

By Brian Kluepfel Special to the Daily Planet
Tuesday July 23, 2002

Called “"Frankenfoods” by critics because they’re designed in a lab, genetically engineered foods are increasingly drawing attention and raising concerns among Berkeley residents.  

Friday, environmental group Greenpeace transformed a Berkeley backyard into a teach-in, seeking to share information about the unknown safety risks of using genetically modified organisms, known as GMOs, in food. 

“The [biochemical] industry likes to say [GMOs are] an extension of traditional breeding but it’s not,” said Heather Whitehead of the San Francisco Greenpeace office. “It’s an extension of green revolution pesticides and monoculture farming.” 

Between 60 percent and 70 percent of processed food in American supermarkets contains genetically modified ingredients, according to Whitehead.  

Greenpeace wants to bring this number down. Last year it pursuaded local Trader Joe’s chain management to eliminate GMO ingredients in all of the store’s brand products. 

Now they’ve stepped up the battle by taking on the supermarket giant Safeway. Greenpeace has set up tables in front of the supermarkets in San Francisco and Berkeley, and has gathered more than 600 signatures. It has held demonstrations at Safeway corporate offices in Pleasanton.  

As for the cultivation of GMOs in California, Whitehead said that little is done commercially. She sees greater danger in university’s partnerships with certain industries. 

“UC Berkeley has a partnership with Novartis, doing mostly genetics research. Last year they did genetic studies on the corn crop,” she said. “A lot of initial genetic research is needed by industry... and what industry is making money off on their proprietary products is that initial research. They are using our land grant, publicly-funded universities as their research grounds.” 

The health effects remain an issue. 

“I think people are really concerned about it,” Whitehead said. “All of us are guinea pigs right now. There have never been any human tests. They haven’t asked us, they haven’t told us.” 

A recent ABC news poll showed that 93 percent of Americans would favor the labeling of genetically modified foods. 

Whitehead was pessimistic about a recently-introduced Congressional bill that would require labeling. She was more positive about spreading the non-GMO gospel. 

“The goal of this meeting was to share ideas about why GMOs are bad and talk to parents,” she said. “Parents are a group that is very concerned about it.” 

Judith Barish was one such parent. As her children Sasha, 4, and Rafael, 1, ran around at the backyard teach-in, she said, "As a mom, I just got really concerned about the food that my kids eat. We’ve always eaten organic but now we have a heightened concern about the scary chemicals and organisms that might be in our food.” 

Barish was realistic about education and labeling. 

“I think there’s a huge, slow process of educating people,” Barish said. “I think we do need bigger meetings and mass tools of communication but I also think these smaller gatherings where people can sit down and talk face to face is an important part of this.” 


A fair system is needed

Bruce Joffe Piedmont
Tuesday July 23, 2002

To the Editor: 

Our political leaders need to realize what we taxpayers and 401k pension-savers already know: that our economic system is under attack. 

Three imperatives are necessary to repair our damaged economy. 

1) We need a special prosecutor to investigate the corporate accounting cheats, from the President and Vice President all the way down. 

Their self-serving actions have betrayed the trust that fuels our free market system. They have attacked our country just as surely as Osama bin Laden did, and have caused far more economic damage. 

2) The ill-gotten gains of the stock market cheats must be confiscated. Their bank accounts must be frozen and put in the U.S. Treasury. Take back their money, here and abroad, where their profits are being tax-sheltered by Bush's “tax reform” that allows an “exception for active financing income,” which enables multi-national corporations to shift their money to off-shore subsidiaries, away from our economy. 

3) Rescind the tax loopholes that were passed last year. Bush's repeal of the alternative minimum tax [back to 1986] gave corporations “free” money with no incentive to use it to help support the economy from which they sprang. The estate tax reductions [which the Republicans have tagged as the “death tax”] is the only tax that some well-sheltered wealthy people have to pay. It must be rescinded immediately as well. 

The economy is in the tank and government finances are deep in debt, while security spending is higher than ever and necessary social programs are being cut. It is time to rescind those tax breaks for the rich. Taxpayers need a fair system where those that have benefited most in our country pay the most to maintain it. 

 

Bruce Joffe 

Piedmont 

 

 


Armstrong’s smooth bid for 4th title takes suspense out of Tour de France

By Michael McDonough The Associated Press
Tuesday July 23, 2002

VAISON-LA-ROMAINE, France — Lance Armstrong is taking the suspense out of the Tour de France. 

For the fourth straight year, his rivals are stranded long before the finish. His early success is angering French fans and ruining organizers’ plans to make the Tour less predictable. 

Don’t blame Armstrong: He’s only doing his job. 

“It is what they pay me to do,” the Texan said Sunday. “They say, ’Lance, we want you to win the Tour de France.’ 

“I can’t really concern myself with, ’Is it bad for the event?”’ 

After Monday’s rest day, six stages remained in the world’s toughest cycling race, including three grueling stretches in the Alps. 

Nevertheless, a fourth consecutive title seemed easily within Armstrong’s reach, thanks to his performance in the Pyrenees and on the formidable Mont Ventoux. 

The U.S. Postal Service rider leads his biggest challenger, Joseba Beloki of the Once team, by nearly 4 1/2 minutes in the overall standings. 

Barring injury or illness, or a sudden and drastic loss of form, that advantage is likely to grow in the coming days. 

“Armstrong has shown he has the blood of champions flowing through his veins,” Once team director, Manolo Saiz, told French daily Le Parisien. “He is much stronger than us, we see it day after day. 

“Of course, we will still do the maximum and hope Armstrong has an ’off’ day,” Saiz said. “But it would really have to be a big ’off’ day for us to catch up.” 

Tour organizers saved some of this year’s toughest stages for last in a bid to make the race more suspenseful. In 2001, almost the whole final week was made up of flat stretches, in which rivals had nearly no chance of reducing Armstrong’s lead. 

On Tuesday, riders were to trek from Vaison-La-Romaine, in the southern Provence region, to Les Deux Alpes ski station. Wednesday’s 16th stage is probably the hardest of the three-week race, taking competitors over three exceptionally difficult climbs. Thursday’s leg also runs through the Alps. 

Mountain stages are often unpredictable, but Armstrong looked so strong in the first three that a serious challenge in the Alps seems highly unlikely. 

He won the opening two mountain stages in the Pyrenees, finishing with a sprint both times. 

Although he didn’t win Sunday’s stage on Mont Ventoux, he made the fastest climb to the summit in Tour history. He climbed 5,280 feet over 13 miles in 58 minutes, knocking 53 seconds off the previous best set by Marco Pantani two years ago. 

Frenchman Richard Virenque took the stage, but his victory had almost no impact on Armstrong’s title bid. After the leg, Virenque was 10th overall, 13:12 behind Armstrong. Meanwhile, Beloki’s deficit grew from 2:28 to 4:21. 

During Armstrong’s incredible climb to the top, French fans fearing Virenque would be overtaken jeered the American, and some branded him a drug-user by shouting “Dop-AY! Dop-AY!” (“Doped! Doped!”). 

Armstrong, who has never failed a drug test and repeatedly denied taking banned substances, said his four-year domination of the Tour was likely to blame for the fans’ hostility. 

“Perhaps that’s part of the reason the people are so angry on the climbs,” he said. “They would rather have a new winner every year, a new winner every day, a constant evolution. 

“But I care too much about the event, I care too much about winning to factor that in.” 


A fair system is needed

Bruce Joffe Piedmont
Tuesday July 23, 2002

To the Editor: 

Our political leaders need to realize what we taxpayers and 401k pension-savers already know: that our economic system is under attack. 

Three imperatives are necessary to repair our damaged economy. 

1) We need a special prosecutor to investigate the corporate accounting cheats, from the President and Vice President all the way down. 

Their self-serving actions have betrayed the trust that fuels our free market system. They have attacked our country just as surely as Osama bin Laden did, and have caused far more economic damage. 

2) The ill-gotten gains of the stock market cheats must be confiscated. Their bank accounts must be frozen and put in the U.S. Treasury. Take back their money, here and abroad, where their profits are being tax-sheltered by Bush's “tax reform” that allows an “exception for active financing income,” which enables multi-national corporations to shift their money to off-shore subsidiaries, away from our economy. 

3) Rescind the tax loopholes that were passed last year. Bush's repeal of the alternative minimum tax [back to 1986] gave corporations “free” money with no incentive to use it to help support the economy from which they sprang. The estate tax reductions [which the Republicans have tagged as the “death tax”] is the only tax that some well-sheltered wealthy people have to pay. It must be rescinded immediately as well. 

The economy is in the tank and government finances are deep in debt, while security spending is higher than ever and necessary social programs are being cut. It is time to rescind those tax breaks for the rich. Taxpayers need a fair system where those that have benefited most in our country pay the most to maintain it. 

 

Bruce Joffe 

Piedmont 

 

 


Oakland council to decide on baseball-only stadium site

Daily Planet Wire Service
Tuesday July 23, 2002

OAKLAND – The Oakland City Council will vote Tuesday on an exclusive negotiating agreement with developer Forest City Residential West, which is looking to build on a plot of land that has been deemed as the most suitable location for a new baseball-only stadium. 

The exclusive agreement would prohibit city officials from discussing development plans with any other party, including the Oakland Athletics, on the so-called uptown site, located north of City Hall along Telegraph Avenue, an area that includes the shuttered Fox Theatre building. 

The move, along with a decision to scratch a presentation on the baseball stadium from the agenda, has some baseball fans crying foul, alleging that city officials are ruining the chance of getting a new stadium in Oakland. 

“This site in Oakland is the only viable site for a ballpark,'' says Lil Bartholo, a member of the Oakland A's Fan Coalition. “We fear that (city officials) are setting us up for a situation where the Oakland A's will have no other ballpark opportunities.'' 

City Council President Ignacio De La Fuente says that the characterization is unfair. 

He notes that the baseball team has not expressed an interest in the uptown site, and adds that the city can't afford to put everything on hold at the location, especially when there's the possibility of movement on the long-dormant, blighted corridor. 

“The A's haven't made any decision -- or any commitment -- they've made no indication that they want an uptown stadium,'' De La Fuente said. “I don't know why these people want the A's to force the decision.'' 

The council gave approval to the exclusive negotiating agreement with Forest City in closed session earlier this month.  

At a July 9 meeting of the Community and Economic Development Committee, an amendment was passed calling for the agreement to allow the city to keep negotiating with the Oakland A's about a baseball only stadium. 

But a report from CEDA staff signed by City Manager Robert Bobb, a proponent of the new stadium, recommends that the city council not expand the agreement with Forest City to include the baseball team. 

The report says that the proposed inclusion “negates the objective of exclusivity because it would permit the [Redevelopment] agency to negotiate simultaneously with Forest City and the Oakland Athletics.'' 

The report concludes that the amendment would also be costlier and take more time, since Forest City would have to consider the effects of the ballpark in an environmental impact document. 

So far, the baseball team has kept quiet when it comes to talking about a location for a new ballpark. At a news conference earlier this month, team co-owner Steve Schott dodged questions about the team's preference for a new home. 

The news conference was held to address another aspect of the relationship between the team and its host city -- one that the Oakland officials are also expected to consider at the Tuesday meeting. 

City officials are expected to approve a five-year lease extension agreement with the Athletics that would allow the baseball team to keep playing at the Oakland Coliseum until 2007, with a three single-year extension options. 

According to De La Fuente, accepting the lease extension is as far as the city can go with the A's until the team makes further indications of its plans. 

“I'm absolutely ready to work with the owners of the A's when they decide where they want to be,'' De La Fuente said. 

He added that even if the baseball team expresses interest in the uptown location after the exclusive agreement is reached, there is still a chance that the team can work an agreement with Forest City that could lead to an uptown stadium.


Apartment rents flat in most Western markets

By Michael Liedtke The Associated Press
Tuesday July 23, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Apartment rents remain in a holding pattern in most major Western markets except California, where the contrasting fortunes of the state’s northern and southern regions continue to push rates in opposite directions, according to a real estate survey released Monday. 

Pressured by a long run of layoffs in high-tech industries, San Francisco Bay area apartment rents during the three months ended June 30 fell for the sixth consecutive quarter, according to RealFacts, a Novato-based research firm. 

Although rents in most markets remain about the same as a year ago, RealFacts said signs of weakness are appearing in Seattle, Denver, Phoenix and Reno, Nev. 

Although apartment rents in the San Francisco metropolitan area remain the West’s highest, the average June 30 rate of $1,653 is 19 percent below its December 2000 peak of $2,036, RealFacts said. The June rent represents a 14 percent decrease from a year ago. 

Rents in Santa Clara County — the Silicon Valley’s hub — have plunged even further, falling to an average of $1,432 in June, down 27 percent from a high of $1,951 in early 2001. Santa Clara County rents are 21 percent lower than a year ago. 

Sacramento continues to attract more residents fleeing the Bay Area’s high housing costs, keeping it as the only Northern California rental market on the upswing. Second-quarter rents in Sacramento averaged $853, a 5 percent increase from the same time last year. 

Meanwhile, Southern California rents continued to climb, reflecting the region’s healthier economy, experts said. While unemployment has climbed higher throughout the state, the job losses haven’t been as dramatic in Southern California as in the Bay Area. 

Riverside and San Bernardino counties emerged as the West’s strongest rental market with an average second-quarter rent of $857, a 6 percent increase from the same time last year. 

In San Diego, the average rent rose 5 percent to $1,112. Average rents went up 4 percent in Los Angeles to an average of $1,248 while Orange County’s rents edged up 2 percent to $1,215. 

Outside California, rents barely fluctuated, moving up or down by 1 percent or less everywhere but Boise, Idaho, RealFacts said. The firm surveys 6,000 apartment complexes in 19 major markets west of the Mississippi River every three months. 

The San Francisco Bay area’s steady decline in rents is raising concerns that the region’s still-rising home prices are headed for a hard fall in the next year or two. 

A mid-priced Bay Area home in May sold for $413,000 — 21 percent higher than at the height of the region’s tech boom in early 2000, according to industry research firm DataQuick Information Systems. 

Some economists believe the Bay Area home prices reflect an unrealistic expectation of a robust high-tech recovery. 

“The only people that appear to be betting on a near-term tech recovery are the people buying homes in the Bay Area right now,” said economist Edward Leamer of the UCLA Anderson Forecast. “Investors around the world certainly aren’t expecting it.” 

Unless the tech industry recaptures its former vigor, Leamer fears Bay Area home prices will crash, dealing another financially demoralizing blow to households that have already absorbed substantial losses in the freefalling stock market. 

Home prices also are hitting new highs in Southern California, but the accompanying increase in rents make those gains look more rational, Leamer said. A mid-priced home in Southern California sold for $273,000 in June, a 17 percent increase from the prior year, DataQuick said.


Japanese supercomputer beats top U.S. machine

By Matthew Fordahl The Associated Press
Tuesday July 23, 2002

LIVERMORE — U.S. supercomputers have been the world’s most powerful since the first high-performance machines analyzed virtual nuclear blasts, climate change and the makeup of the universe. 

Now, one built in Japan with an “old” design runs five times faster than the previous record holder, a machine that simulates nuclear tests at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. 

Japan’s Earth Simulator supercomputer hasn’t quite rattled the United States like the Soviet Union’s launch of Sputnik in 1957. But it does highlight some drawbacks of recent U.S. machines — and it has made more than a few scientists envious. 

“This machine is powerful enough that a researcher who uses it can do in one day what it takes a researcher in the U.S. to do in one month,” said Jack Dongarra, a University of Tennessee professor who tracks the world’s 500 speediest computers. 

More than national pride is at issue. Certain research is better suited to machines like the Earth Simulator, whose design was abandoned by most U.S. manufacturers in favor of one that melds better with the rest of their computing businesses. 

Supercomputers are built with thousands of processors that work in tandem to analyze the most complex issues — including nuclear test simulations, aircraft designs, drug creation and others — for governments, research centers and corporations. 

Livermore’s ASCI White supercomputer, like most recent U.S.-built machines, used off-the-shelf processors rather than custom parts specifically geared for high-performance scientific jobs. 

The trend took off in the 1990s, as such processors grew increasingly powerful, making it difficult to justify the cost of developing chips just for the small scientific supercomputer market. 

Now, supercomputers like ASCI White use the same chips — but thousands more of them — as do servers sold to businesses. 

Such machines now make up nearly 92 percent of the top 500 supercomputers worldwide. In 1993, they made up only about 27 percent. 

But some say the move away from custom processors places business concerns ahead of scientific needs. 

“The arguments are all based on strange economic theories — none of them are based on technical grounds,” said Burton Smith, chief scientist at Cray Inc., which still sells custom supercomputers. 

NEC-built Earth Simulator, which will be used in climate and earthquake studies, is faster than all 15 of the biggest supercomputers in the United States combined, Dongarra said. 

It performs 35.9 trillion calculations a second with 5,104 processors. ASCI White, by contrast, performs 7.2 trillion calculations a second with its 8,192 microprocessors. 

“U.S. scientists want to use it,” said Kiyoshi Otsuka, leader of the Earth Simulator’s research exchange group in Yokohama, Japan. 

The high-performance title isn’t expected to stay in Japan forever. IBM, which built ASCI White, Hewlett-Packard Co. and other U.S. supercomputer makers say they are working on even more powerful machines. 

“We could do that in a heartbeat and we could do that for a lot less money,” said Peter Ungaro, vice president of high performance computing at IBM, which sells supercomputers to foreign nuclear governments, research centers and corporations. 

Officials at the Livermore Lab say their machine and others like it offer better price performance than those designed like the Japanese supercomputer. Earth Simulator cost about $350 million, compared with ASCI White’s $110 million. 

“For global climate, (Earth Simulator) is a great advance,” said David Nowak, the ASCI program leader at Livermore. “It’s just a very expensive machine.” 

But supercomputers built with off-the-shelf parts can be more expensive in the long run, said Guy Robinson, research liaison at the Arctic Region Supercomputing Center, where scientists study everything from climate change to how galaxies form. 

Price isn’t the only factor, however. Scientists say certain research problems work better or are easier to program on one supercomputer type over the other. 

Custom supercomputers, for instance, have bigger data pipes, known as memory bandwidth, which is critical in climate modeling and some nuclear research. 

That can be a drawback for off-the-shelf processors. 

“In one sense, we have a tiny straw for data,” Dongarra said. “And we have the processor, which would like a fire hose of data to come at it.” 

But off-the-shelf machines work best on data analysis such as in genetic research. 

It’s a case of finding the best fit for the research — and budget, said Fran Berman, director of the San Diego Supercomputer Center. 

“From a political and financial perspective, we’re not in an environment where we could build all these different kinds of tools with equal emphasis,” she said. 

J. David Neelin, atmospheric scientist at the University of California, Los Angeles, said computing is ultimately just another tool, like a laptop is for a student assigned to write a paper. 

A faster machine does not guarantee quality. 

“Are they going to get that essay out any faster or is it going to be any better? Well, their spell checker is going to run a little faster,” he said. “In the end, it’s the thought that goes into it that really makes the essay.” 


Suspect in kidnap-murder could face death penalty

By Chelsea J. Carter The Associated Press
Tuesday July 23, 2002

SANTA ANA — The factory worker arrested in the abduction and slaying of 5-year-old Samantha Runnion was charged Monday with murder and other counts that could bring the death penalty. 

The charges against Alejandro Avila came a week after Samantha was abducted kicking and screaming outside her apartment while playing with a friend. The girl’s nude body was found a day later. Investigators said she had been sexually assaulted and strangled. 

Avila, 27, was charged with murder, kidnapping and two counts of forcible lewd acts on a child. Prosecutors could seek the death penalty under special circumstances included with the charges: the murder occurred after a kidnapping and the crime involved lewd acts with a person under 14. 

Orange County District Attorney Tony Rackackaus said no decision has been made on whether to seek the death penalty. 

“I do want to make one thing very clear,” he said. “Anyone who commits an act like this in Orange County will either die in prison of natural causes or be executed. It is almost impossible to overstate the amount of damage this type of crime causes in our community and the entire nation.” 

Avila, who works at a plant that makes pacemakers and other medical devices, appeared at the hearing via video from a jail. He did not enter a plea Monday and was ordered held without bail. He was scheduled to be arraigned Aug. 9. 

Avila has denied involvement in the girl’s disappearance.


Port labor talks end weekend with finger pointing

By Justin Pritchard The Associated Press
Tuesday July 23, 2002

OAKLAND — Negotiations over a new West Coast dock workers contract broke off late Sunday with longshoremen and shipping lines accusing each other of ignoring their good faith offers and ruining what had appeared to be a hopeful exchange of proposals. 

Officials at both the Pacific Maritime Association and the International Longshore and Warehouse Union have been publicly upbeat about negotiations — even as they conceded there was little progress since their contract officially expired July 1. 

Talks this weekend, they said, would foreshadow either a quick conclusion or a protracted dispute over a deal that governs about $260 billion worth of goods that transit 29 major ports from San Diego to Seattle. 

Last week, the union offered what it cast as a fair and reasonable proposal to the tangled problem of how to introduce more efficient technology to the waterfront without making too many jobs obsolete. Shipping lines countered Sunday afternoon and the two sides emerged pointing fingers. 

“They seem to almost reject my proposal out of hand and it’s a bitter disappointment to me,” Joseph Miniace, the association’s chief executive officer, said after Sunday’s negotiations. “This was a melding of both proposals and we’ve come a great distance since negotiations began.” 

A union spokesman responded that the association had hardly budged from a preliminary offer of months ago — and that was galling because the union had offered to accept job cuts for job security as computers do more work on the docks. 

“We offered him everything he asked for. He gave us nothing. Zero, zip, zilch,” said Steve Stallone, a spokesman for the union which represents 10,500 dock workers. “It’s a major disappointment and it shows that he’s not really trying to negotiate.” 

Both sides did approve another 24-hour contract extension, as they have done since July 1. Union negotiators also will present the association’s latest proposal at a meeting of delegates from local chapters that convenes this week in San Francisco, where the negotiations are taking place. 

“I wouldn’t call it a breakdown yet,” Miniace said. “I consider it a significant event, but I wouldn’t say it’s a breakdown.” 

Both sides have promised harmony on the docks. The union downplayed initial murmurs of a strike and shipping lines say they won’t lock out workers unless they determine there has been an organized slowdown. 

With Pacific Rim trade projected to double in the next decade, shipping lines complain West Coast ports won’t be able to keep up unless they catch up with their more automated Asian peers. 

That made technology the focus this contract. 

Early last week, the union pitched a proposal that Stallone said would cost about 600 of the 2,100 longshoremen clerk jobs. The trade-off was that the union would control new jobs generated from increased efficiency. 

The association responded guardedly, saying the proposal wouldn’t cut costs at all. On Sunday, Miniace reiterated his promise that no current longshoreman clerk would lose his job. 

“When you guarantee somebody that I am going to protect your job as I modernize, that is a tremendous offer,” he said. 

He also said his proposal would give longshoremen a 17 percent increase in compensation — wages, health benefits and pension — over five years. He said the union had asked for a 57 percent increase in those costs over three years. Overall, he said, the cost of the contract would rise about $200 million to $1.4 billion. 

The union’s response to the association’s offer will emerge soon. 

About 80 rank-and-file longshoremen from along the coast are set to meet this week in San Francisco. During negotiations in 1999, that caucus offered a chance to debate a draft contract. This year, it could become a forum for the union to brace for battle. 

Already, the union has scheduled a Wednesday demonstration outside the association’s San Francisco headquarters. 


Stock groups object to state’s arbitration rules

Tuesday July 23, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — The New York Stock Exchange and the National Association of Securities Dealers sought Monday to undo California’s strict arbitration standards when it comes to resolving securities disputes. 

The exchange and the association said in a federal suit that the new ethics standards for California arbitrators should not apply in securities disputes. 

California’s rules, adopted by the state Judicial Council in April, “may work to the detriment of investors,” the two stock groups said in court papers. The Judicial Council, the state judiciary’s rule-making arm, enacted the guidelines over the groups’ objections. 

The groups said that arbitration agreements between investors and their brokers should be governed by the less-restrictive rules used by the association and exchange. 

Many brokers demand that investors arbitrate some disputes rather than go to court. 

The suit says California requires an arbitrator to disclose too much personal and professional information, a cumbersome requirement that may limit the number of arbitrators. The suit also says California’s rules make it easier to disqualify an arbitrator. 

No court date has been set. 


Forest Service considering quarry in national forest near I-80

Tuesday July 23, 2002

EMIGRANT GAP — The U.S. Forest Service is considering allowing the first large rock quarry within the Tahoe National Forest, to provide granite for rebuilding Interstate 80. 

The quarry would cover about 60 acres near Yuba Gap, 40 miles east of Auburn.  

The interstate is being rebuilt between Auburn and the Nevada border for the first time since its construction 42 years ago, a process expected to take another 10 to 15 years. 

The rebuilding will require so much rock that Granite Construction Co. proposed quarrying it nearby, within the national forest, said Jim Robertson, vice president of the Watsonville-based company. 

The proposed quarry is within the 1,370 acres burned in last summer’s Gap Fire, though the proposal predates the fire, Forest Service geologist Bob DeTar said. 

The site is about 1 1/2 miles from I-80. It can’t been seen from the interstate, but is in an area used by cross-country skiers, DeTar said. A private ski lodge is on the county road leading to the site. 

The proposal will undergo extensive public environmental review, he said. 

Granite is the only company that has indicated interest in quarrying rock in the national forest, DeTar said, but the forest service may solicit bids from others who might also use the quarry. 

While other national forests host quarries, the Tahoe National Forest has only a few small gold mines, said Tahoe forest supervisor Steven Eubanks. However, a granite quarry has been operated on nearby private lands, he said. 


Cave paintings offer glimpse of tribal past few can see

By Michelle Locke The Associated Press
Tuesday July 23, 2002

BYRON — On a grassy hillside a 30-minute drive from the 21st-century bustle of San Francisco lies a secret from California’s past — rock art left by the region’s original inhabitants. 

They are paintings that time forgot, faint etchings of red and black in tantalizing swirls and patterns inscribed by the Indian tribes who once met here for ceremonies and purposes that now can only be guessed at. 

Getting to the cave paintings isn’t easy. The area is secured by locks and fences. Local parks officials, who own the land, have a caretaker on site to keep off trespassers. 

Time and the elements are slowly destroying the paintings, drawn on the walls of shallow caves amid the rolling hills of Contra Costa County. The rock surface is slowly flaking away as water seeps in from the hillside. But birdlike figures and possibly other animals, which may be representations of tribal gods, can still be seen. 

Some would like to see the paintings made more accessible to the public before they are swept into oblivion. 

“We would love to open this area up so we could tell schoolchildren at an early age about history,” says Tom Mikkelsen, assistant general manager of the East Bay Regional Park District. 

Before that happens, officials would have to find a way to address the concerns of California Indians, who consider the site sacred. They also have to figure out how to keep it from being vandalized or simply loved to death. 

“It’s extremely fragile, that’s the problem,” says Jeff Fentress, an anthropologist who has studied the paintings. 

The paintings, known as pictographs because they consist of symbols, are about four miles from the town of Byron and about 50 miles east of San Francisco. 

The caves are believed to have been in use as early as 500 A.D. and carry a variety of rock art styles. The site is striking — rocky outcroppings jutting out from gentle hills where golden eagles soar. But there isn’t much in the way of food here, few oaks or other nut-bearing trees, leading researchers to conclude the site was reserved for ceremonial and spiritual purposes. 

Tribal traditions link the caves to two other nearby landmarks — Mt. Diablo, now a state park and at 3,850 feet the San Francisco Bay area’s highest mountain, and Brushy Peak, which is about 1,700 feet high. The three sites are part of the creation mythology of the region’s Miwok, Ohlone and Yokurt Indians. 

“For native people, these weren’t casual use places. They weren’t places that everyday people went to,” says Bev Ortiz, an ethnographic consultant who has also studied the pictographs. 

The issue of how to appreciate, but not destroy, ancient sites has been tackled all over the world. In Egypt, the number of visitors allowed daily at the Great Pyramid was cut from thousands to 300 to prevent damage. 

At the Chaco Culture National Historical Park in New Mexico, home to fascinating ruins of the prehistoric Anasazi culture, officials offer guided tours and keep some trails unmarked as they try to balance public access and historic preservation. 

“There are some special rock art sites that we have actually covered up and we now no longer show people because of the vandalism,” says park guide G.B. Cornucopia. 

The tension between ancient ways and modern life has also played out at Brushy Peak, a 1,700-foot mountain about 10 miles south of the Northern California pictograph caves, where a plan to provide more access to the summit drew protests from some California Indians. 

“This site was visited by certain people in our society to conduct private secretive ceremonies,” says Don Hankins, a Plains Miwok Indian. “Not only is it the place of our origin as referred to in our creation stories and songs but it’s also a place where many of our ceremonies stem from.” 

Park officials agreed to monitor access to the peak and work out a way to make sure the area is protected if more trails are open, perhaps through guided tours. But they aren’t getting the budgetary support they’d hoped for — in March, voters defeated a parcel tax that would have paid for projects including fencing, gates and staff to lead tours to the pictograph caves. 

A bill now before the Legislature would give added protection to sacred sites such as the pictographs. The legislation, written by state Sen. John Burton, D-San Francisco, would stop approval of projects deemed to adversely affect such sites unless tribal officials accepted mitigation measures, such as allowing public access but keeping the site closed during periods deemed particularly sacred. The bill has passed the Senate and is pending before the Assembly. 

For now, the pictograph caves are surrounded by chain link fences. When the weather warms up, rattlesnakes join the anti-trespasser patrol, slithering through tall grasses surrounding the rocky outcroppings. 

For those who do get to see them, the pictographs are a glimpse of a culture that was all but wiped out by the disease, destruction and dispossession wrought by colonialism and the Gold Rush.


Yosemite killer says he would have struck again if not caught

The Associated Press
Tuesday July 23, 2002

SAN JOSE — Yosemite killer Cary Stayner told FBI agents that he would have struck again if he hadn’t been caught. . 

Stayner’s tape-recorded confession was played Monday to the jury that could give him the death penalty in the killing of three park tourists. 

The confession is the centerpiece of prosecutors’ case, who say it details how Stayner plotted the killings, how he carried them out and how he tried to throw investigators off his trail. 

On the tape, Stayner said he wanted tell someone that he had killed tourists Carole Sund, 42, her daughter, Juli, 15, and their friend Silvina Pelosso, 16, in February 1999 and then six months later beheaded park nature guide Joie Armstrong. But he kept quiet until the FBI interrogated him.


President promotes new department in Illinois visit

By Scott Lindlaw The Associated Press
Tuesday July 23, 2002

ARGONNE, Ill — With Congress headed into summer recess, President Bush called on lawmakers Monday to make the Homeland Security Department a reality as he showcased new anti-terrorism technology at a national research lab. 

“This Department of Homeland Security is not a good Republican idea, it’s not a good Democratic idea, it’s simply an American idea, and they need to get their work done,” Bush told hundreds of workers at the lab. 

The House leaves Friday on its summer break, the Senate a week later. 

“If they don’t get it done, Congress is setting itself up for a great traffic jam” leading into the weeks before adjournment this fall, White House spokesman Ari Fleischer said, referring to the trade, corporate responsibility and homeland security measures left unfinished. 

As part of his effort to bolster security, Bush has called on Congress to thoroughly review the 19th century law that bans the Army, Navy, Air Force and Marine Corps from participating in arrests, searches, seizure of evidence and other police-type activity on U.S. soil. 

Some lawmakers have expressed concern about rushing decisions on far-reaching changes in the bureaucracy that Bush envisions. House Majority Leader Dick Armey said Sunday on NBC’s “Meet the Press”: “It’s time to move forward with this. The president’s got a good plan.” 

In the Senate, a version of the measure by Governmental Affairs Committee Chairman Joseph Lieberman, D-Conn., tracks closely with Bush’s plan. It also would augment the department’s ability to gather and analyze intelligence from the FBI, CIA and others. Lieberman’s panel is to take up the bill Wednesday. 

Bush told reporters that “I believe there’s a good chance” he will get the legislation by Sept. 11. 

In his sixth visit to politically vital Illinois, a state he lost in 2000, Bush toured the lab on Monday and viewing new technologies aimed at thwarting terrorism. 

“That’s why I’m here: to look in the eyes of those who possess the genius and creativity of the American people,” Bush said. “Our scientific community is serving on the front lines of this war by developing new technologies that will make America safer, and as you tackle new kinds of challenges, I want you to know, our government will stand by your side to make the job easier.” 

Among the technology Bush saw: A computer simulation of how disasters could affect infrastructure such as transportation and energy conduits; DNA analysis of biological agents; and a portable system of sensors for detecting their release. 

Argonne, an Energy Department lab, is not slated to be absorbed into the Homeland Security Department, but the department would likely channel research dollars to the facility, said Gordon Johndroe, spokesman for domestic security chief Tom Ridge. 


Latin dance... not just another trend

Peter Crimmins
Monday July 22, 2002

A few years ago, at the height of the swing dance revival, Bay Area hipsters could find live music for lindy-hops and rock-steps seven nights a week. But as its popularity ebbed, many hung up their zoot suits and saddle shoes for a different kind of dance. 

Today, salsa and its Caribbean kindred samba have fast become a Bay Area favorite, and a Berkeley nightclub has been attracting young and old, novice and experienced, to step into its polyrhythms. 

Salsa and samba are not, or course, new to the area. The annual Brazilian Carnival celebration in San Francisco’s Mission District has been attracting large and spirited crowds for years. After the last Brazilian Carnival in May, the Down Low club on Shattuck Avenue hosted an evening of Afro-Carribean dancing to keep the energy of the carnival going, said organizer Theo Williams. 

Saturday Williams and his company Cuice Y Clave returned to the Down Low for the third time, presenting “Salsamba Carnival,” which, as the title suggests, is a mixture of Cuban Salsa and Brazilian Samba. 

And the crowd turned out. The club, formerly Mr. E’s, was filled with young and old dancers. Most of the tables were open because few people were sitting down. The dance floor was packed. 

Performing on stage was Oakland-based, Cuban band Orquesta Charanson, whose name comes from another mixture of musical styles – charanga and son. Charanga is a traditional Cuban music played with violin and flute. Son is the type of music made popular in the United States by the Buena Vista Social Club movie and soundtrack. 

With added saxophone, percussion and upright electric bass, the Orquesta Charanson never lost the crowd’s enthusiasm. Between sets the band broke for a DJ to spin music, but the dance floor did not clear. The salsa turned to Carribean-styled hip-hop and the crowd kept swiveling and spinning. 

One of the great appeals of salsa dancing – which it shares with swing– is that it is a partner dance. Rather than the frenetic freestyle bouncing and gyrating of techno or hip-hop dancing, the discipline of salsa steps require response and reaction from a partner – which is why it is also a sexy dance. 

 

A performance by a Carnival troupe showed another reason why salsa is sexy. In full costume of feathered headgear and sequined G-strings, Sambadat put on a show in space on the dance floor cleared by the crowd. Headed by Tedje Rose, a professional dancer and instructor, Sambadat performed showcase dancing in a chorus line and solo routines. 

The night also featured a freestyle solo performance by Silfredo la o Vigo, a dancer from a small village near Santiago de Cuba who mixed styles and movements in an Afro-Caribbean stream of physical consciousness. 

Williams said the Bay Area is a magnet for performers and enthusiasts, coming from Cuba and all over the Caribbean and Latin America, and even a Peruvian company nearby. And because Down Low used to be Mr. E’s where Caribbean music was a mainstay, people are accustomed to coming to the corner of Shattuck and Bancroft to hear salsa and samba. 

Williams said that there will be more nights like this. “We’re pumping (the Brazilian) Carnival all year long.”


Listen to the point

Staff
Monday July 22, 2002

To the Editor: 

The July 5 article on the Police Tower missed the point. The tower is not on the roof but is in the rear of the residentially zoned block. Without consulting neighbors, city staff, not residents, proposed the council item for further study of the tower. 

The new tower was not publicly reviewed in 1997 (and remains out of compliance) and in 2000 was erected on the weekend (also our of compliance). It violated the processes of review in multiple ways. 

Who expected the historic civic center to have a massive 170-foot industrial structure? No other city has had the bad taste to have erected such an embarrassing structure in its city center. It is humiliating to live in a city that has so little sense of taste or respect for itself.  

Would Gordon Wozniak's neighborhood tolerate placement of such a ridiculous structure or such a lack of process? I think not. 

 

Wendy Alfsen 

Berkeley


Monday July 22, 2002

Monday, July 22 

An evening of song & resistance 

7 p.m.  

AK Warehouse, 674-A 23rd St. Oakland 

With music from Samsara, James Tracy and David Rovics 

208-1700, or akpres@akpress.org 

$5 donation 

 

Tuesday, July 23 

Myanmar (formerly Burma): "The Golden Land" 

7:30 p.m.  

Easy Going Travel Shop & Bookstore, 1385 Shattuck Ave.  

Ricky Fishman gives a slide presentation/talk about this isolated and remote land. 

843-3533 

Free 

 

Q & A with a Personal/Business Coach 

noon to 1 p.m. 

YWCA Turning Point Career Center, 2600 Bancroft Way 

For those interested in professional coaching careers, speak with a pro. 

848-6370 

$3 

 

Wednesday, July 24 

Berkeley Gray Panthers General Meeting 

1:30 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center, 1901 Hearst St. 

Pharmacist Fred Mayer prescriptions and their costs, etc. 

548-9696  

Free 

 

Getting Help When You Need It 

7:30 to 9 p.m.  

Summit North Pavilion, Cafeteria Annex A 

350 Hawthorne Ave. Oakland 

Free interactive workshop to help caregivers obtain free assistance, deal with paid in-home help, and create plans to care for loved ones. 

869-6737 

Free 

 

"Green Building" Workshop 

6:30 to 8 p.m. 

Berkeley Public Library, Meeting Room A, 2090 Kittredge 

Henry Siegel, Architect, on how to use building materials that are healthier for your family and the environment.  

614-1699 

 

Thursday, July 25 

Combat Medic: World War II 

7:30 p.m.  

Easy Going Travel Shop & Bookstore, 1385 Shattuck Ave.  

Memoir presentation by San Francisco physician John Kerner, describing experiences as a combat medic in World War II.  

843-3533 

Free 

 

California Landscapes: A Geologist's Perspective 

7 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

John Karachewski presents an educational slide show on such amazing places as the Sierra Nevada, Coast Ranges the Great Valley and Cascades 

For more information: (510) 527- 4140. 

Free 

Saturday, July 27 

Test Ride Kestrel Bicycles 

11 a.m.-1 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Pristine Sandusky of Kestrel, a premier manufacturer of high-end, carbon-fiber road and mountain bikes, introduces their latest design. 

For more information: (510) 527-4140 

Free 

 

Graywater Workshop  

10 a.m. to 1 p.m. 

Ecology Center, 2530 San Pablo Ave 

Learn the ins and outs of reusing water with the Guerrilla Graywater Girls 

548-2220 x233  

$10 members, $15 non ( no one turned away for lack of funds) 

 

Santa Fe Right of Way Path Walk 

10 a.m. 

Meet at the Ohlone Greenway at Cedar St, in Cedar Rose Park. 

A new path opportunity, recently funded by the City Council. 

649-9874, or http://www.internettime.com/path 

 

"Neon: The Living Flame" 

7:00 p.m.  

Alameda Museum, 2324 Alameda Ave.  

The Alameda Museum presents Michael Crowe, author, and neon artist Karl Hauser 

lecture by Michael Crowe 

748-0796 or 841-8489.  

Members free, non-members $5  

 

Grand Summer Rummage Sale 

9 a.m. to 4 p.m 

Berkeley Fellowship of Unitarian Universalists, Cedar and Bonita Streets 

A benefit for ANSWER- Act Now to Stop War and End Racism. Donations and volunteers are needed 

(415) 821-6545. 

 

Sunday, July 28 

Hands-on Bicycle Repair  

11 a.m.-12 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Learn from an REI bike technician basic repairs such as brake adjustments and fixing a flat. 

(510) 527-4140 Free 

 

Tuesday, July 30 

The Birdhouse Chronicles: Surviving the Joys of Country Life 

7:30 p.m.  

Easy Going Travel Shop & Bookstore, 1385 Shattuck Ave.  

Reading and discussion of Cathleen Miller's personal account of moving from San Francisco to Amish Pennsylvania to restore an old house. 

843-3533 

Free 

 

Wednesday, July 31 

Twilight Tours at UC Botanical Gardens 

(through August 28) 5:30 p.m.  

200 Centennial Drive, Berkeley, CA.  

Tour the garden at twilight with an expert horticulturist every Wednesday. 

643-2755  

Free with garden admission.  

Mountain Adventure Seminars: Introduction to Rock Climbing 

7 p.m.-9 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

An introduction to rock climbing including knot tying, belaying and movement. 

For more information: (209) 753-6556 

$115 REI members; $125 non-members 

 

Thursday, August 1 

Putting it Together 

7:00 p.m. 

Zellerbach Hall, Bancroft Way at Telegraph Ave. 

Middle school students of Berkeley/Oakland AileyCamp perform dance techniques, spoken word, theater. 

642-9988 

Free 

 

Public Meeting to Plan New National Historic Park in Richmond 

1:30 p.m. 

Richmond Senior Center, 2525 Macdonald Ave. 

Meeting to gather input for National Park Service to prepare plans that will guide development of historic WWII sites in Richmond. 

817-1517 

Free 

 

Nutrition Career Open House 

7 to 8:30 p.m. 

Institute of Educational Therapy, 706 Gilman St. 

Become a Nutrition Educator or Nutrition Consultant. 

558-1711 for reservations 

Free 

 

Saturday, August 3 

Mountain Adventure Seminars: Introduction to Rock Climbing 

8 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

An introduction to rock climbing including knot tying, belaying and movement. 

For more information: (209) 753-6556 

$115 REI members; $125 non-members 

 

10th Annual Stroll for Epilepsy 

Six Flags Marine World, Vallejo 

The public is invited to join the Epilepsy Foundation of Northern California at Six Flags Marine World for a 5K walk/fundraiser. 

1-800-632-3532 for registration 

 

Storytelling at the Berkeley Public Library 

10:30 a.m. 

Berkeley Public Library, Central Branch 

2090 Kittredge St. 

Storyteller Joel Ben Izzy will present a variety of stories filled with warmth, humor, drama in the Children's Story Room. 

981-6223 

 

Sick Plant Clinic 

9 a.m. to Noon  

200 Centennial Drive 

UC Botanical Garden; First Saturday of every month. UC plant pathology and entomology experts will diagnose what ails your plant. 

643 - 2755. 

Free 

 

Sunday, August 4 

Top of the Bay Family Days 

1 to 3 p.m. 

Lawrence Hall of Science, Centennial Drive, above UC campus 

Enjoy an afternoon outdoor concert in our family picnic area as well as art and science activities and hands-on exhibits inside LHS. 

643-5961 

$8 adults 

 

Monday, August 5 

National Organization for Women East Bay Chapter monthly meeting 

6:30 p.m. 

Mama Bears Bookstore and Coffeehouse, 6536 Telegraph Ave. 

Discussion of harassment of females employed by the City of Oakland Fire Department 

Monthly meeting: NATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR WOMEN Oakland 

549-2970, 287-8948  

 

Arts Education Department Open House 

6:30 to 8:30 p.m. 

Richmond Art Center, 2540 Barrett Ave, Richmond 

Meet teachers, see studios/galleries, info about classes in the arts. 

620-6772 

Free 

 

Public Meeting to Plan a New National Park in Richmond 

1:30 p.m. 

Richmond Public Library, Whittlesey Room 

325 Civic Center Plaza (near Macdonald Ave. and 25th St.) 

Meeting to gather input for National Park Service to prepare plans that will guide development of historic WWII sites in Richmond. 

817-1517 

Free 

 

Saturday, August 10 

Poetry in the Plaza 

2:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Public Library, Central Branch, 2090 Kittredge 

Quarter hour readings by well-known poets, dedicated to June Jordan. 

981-6100 

Free 

 

Tomato Tasting 

10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

Center Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way 

Tasting and cooking demonstrations  

Free 

 

Tea Bag Folding 

2 to 4 p.m.  

Albany Library, 1247 Marin Ave, Albany 

Drop-in crafts program for ages 5 to adult.  

526-3720 ext 19. 

Free 

 

Sunday, August 11 

Hands-on Bicycle Repair 

11 a.m.-12 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Learn from an REI bike technician basic repairs such as brake adjustments and fixing a flat. 

For more information: (510) 527-4140 

Free 

 

West Berkeley arts Festival 

11 a.m. to 5 p.m. 

4th and University Ave. 

Explore the many resident artists located in Berkeley 

Free. 

 

Monday, August 12 

The First East Bay Senior Games 

10:30 a.m. clinic, 12:30 p.m. tee-off (approximate times) 

Mira Vista Golf and Country Club 

7901 Cutting Blvd. El Cerrito 

A golfing event for the 50+ crowd, in association with the California and National Senior Games Association. 

891-8033 (registration deadline July 29) 

Varying entry fees. 

 

Tuesday, August 13 

Tomato Tasting 

Tasting & cooking demonstrations 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

Derby Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way  

Free 

 

Berkeley Camera Club Weekly Meeting 

7:30 p.m. 

Northbrae Community Church, 941 The Alameda 

Share slides, prints with other photographers 

(510) 525-3565 

Free 

 

Saturday, August 17 

Author Reading and Signing: Haunani-Kay Trask 

3 p.m.  

Eastwind Books, 2066 University Ave., Berkeley 

Meet Hawaiian author Haunani-Kay Trask. 

548-2350 

Free 

 

Cajun & More 

Four Live Bands, crafts fair, Cajun food, dance lessons, micro-brewery beer & dance floor. 

10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

Center Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way 

Free 

 

Sunday, August 18 

Top of the Bay Family Days 

1 to 3 p.m. 

Lawrence Hall of Science, Centennial Drive, above UC campus 

Enjoy an afternoon outdoor concert in our family picnic area as well as art and science activities and hands-on exhibits inside LHS. 

643-5961 

$8 adults 

Hands-on Bicycle Repair 

11 a.m.-12 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Learn from an REI bike technician basic repairs such as brake adjustment and fixing a flat. 

For more information: (510) 527-7470 

 

Thursday, August 22 

Film: "Ralph Ellison: An American Journey" 

8 p.m. 

Berkeley Public Library - Central Branch 

2090 Kittredge St. 

Berkeley filmmaker Avon Kirkland's stirring documentary about the great American author, Ralph Ellison. 

981-6205 

Free 

 

Friday, August 23 

Teen Playreaders present Bizarre Shorts 

(through August 24) 7 p.m. 

Berkeley Public Library - North Branch 

1170 The Alameda 

Playreaders present 20 short, bizarre plays, contemporary and classic. 

644-6850 

Free 

 

Saturday, August 24 

Roller Derby & Big Time Wrestling 

6:30 p.m. 

Richmond Auditorium, 403 Civic Center Plaza 

Roller Derby: Bay Bombers vs. Brooklyn Red Devils, Big Time Wrestling superstars 

636-9300 

$10 Advance, $20 Door 

 

Monday, September 2 

National Organization for Women Oakland/East Bay Chapter  

6:30 PM.  

Mama Bears Bookstore and Coffeehouse, 6536 Telegraph Avenue, Berkeley  

Chapter’s monthly meeting. Speaker: multicultural historian, Lucia Chiavola Birnbaum, received 

the prestigious Valitutti Award for non fiction.  

549-2970 

Free 

 

Sunday, September 8 

Lifelong Medical Care First Annual 5K Fun Run/Walk Fundraiser 

9 a.m. to noon 

West Berkeley 

Individual and team participation, a health fair, food, prizes, live music, free insurance eligibility screening - fun for all ages. 

704-6010 

 


A little bit of Mexico, right here in Berkeley

Jared Green
Monday July 22, 2002

Mexican Premier League teams Morelia and Atlas played in front of a raucous crowd at Cal’s Edwards Stadium on Sunday, giving Bay Area fans a rare glimpse at soccer tradition and passion. 

The exhibition game was a bit of a snoozer, with just one goal and few opportunities, but that didn’t matter to the fans of the two teams, who came decked out in red and black (for Atlas) or yellow and red (for Morelia). Plastic trumpets blared constantly from thirty minutes before the kickoff until the final whistle and the crowd cheered loudly for their favorites and booed lustily at the villains. 

Atlas won the game on an early goal from Jose Luis Calderon, who received a feathery flick-on from Martin Machon and slid the ball under Morelia goalkeeper Moises Muñoz. Morelia had a golden opportunity to equalize late in the first half when Hernan Bujan was pulled down in the penalty area, but Tato Antonio Noriega shanked the ensuing penalty kick wide left. Each team hit the woodwork in the second half, but no more goals were scored. 

There were distinct factions to the crowd, which numbered approximately 2,500. Most of the fans seemed to be rooting for one team or the other, but there were scattered faces that was there simply to see good soccer. Cal assistant coach Brad Agoos was one of those, although Sunday’s game could hardly compare to his last experience as a fan. Agoos returned not long ago from watching his brother Jeff and the rest of the U.S. men’s national team at the World Cup in Asia. 

Agoos has played soccer all over the globe, including in our own domestic league, the fledgling Major League Soccer. According to him, the main difference between a Mexican game and an MLS game is the atmosphere. 

“Just look at how many fans showed up with just week’s notice,” Agoos said. “That’s a big part of soccer. Mexicans are a passionate people, and they don’t hold back. There’s not a lot of etiquette at these games.” 

Fremont’s Jorge Parra was wearing an Atlas jersey and hat, clearly identifying which side he was on. But for Parra, 47, the game was mainly a chance to relive memories of watching games as a teenager in Monterrey, Mexico. 

“I haven’t seen a live Mexican game since I was 18,” he said. “Mexican soccer is the best in the world outside of Europe.” 

Daniel Montero, 36, moved to Oakland from Mexico a decade ago, and his son, Eddie, had never seen a Mexican game in person.  

“He’s been to MLS games, but I wanted him to see a Mexican game,” Montero said of his 9-year-old son. “It helps him understand where he comes from. Soccer is life in Mexico. This feels like real soccer.”


International trio talks trash in Berkeley

Brian Kluepfel
Monday July 22, 2002

Scholars from around the globe come to Berkeley to study a variety of subjects. This month, one of those subjects was trash. 

Sonia Mendoza came from the Philippines. Zini Mokhine came from South Africa. And Shibu Nair came from India. Supported by Berkeley’s Ecology Center and the Global Anti-Incinerator Alliance’s Zero Waste Fellowship, the visitors spent three weeks gaining first-hand insights into Berkeley’s waste removal and recycling programs. 

While Berkeley has had recycling and composting programs in place for nearly three decades, less developed nations are just beginning to address the growing piles of waste in their homeland. 

 

We don’t have anything like [these recycling programs]. Everything [in South Africa] goes in one container," said Mokhine, who works for Earthlife Africa, one of the oldest environmental organizations in South Africa. “I learned quite a lot here.” 

What they learned in Berkeley was to reduce, reuse and recycle and to ‘please don’t burn.’ 

Mokhine marveled at Berkeley’s recycling infrastructure. “Recycling is quite an accomplished process here," he said. “The other thing that was an inspiration to me is the reuse." He pointed to the Urban Ore site as an example of this kind of thrift. 

But the South African man also said that American ways could be improved and that the United States has trash problems too. 

There is a lot of waste because there’s a lot of unnecessary consumption, driven by the profit-making American psyche,” he said. “When you look at some of the materials that are discarded, it totally explains the [attitude]. I wouldn’t copy America on that score.” 

Mendoza, who works for Mother Earth Unlimited in Manila, echoed Mokine’s sentiments. “I learned that people [in the United States] are disciplined, putting plastics #1 and #2 in the right containers,” she said. “But there’s still a lot of waste... directly proportional to per capita income level. We generate a lot less in Philippines.”  

Nair, who works for Thanal Conservation Action Network in India, also offered perspective on America’s ways. 

“[Here in the United States] I saw glass bottles, perfect in shape, being crushed and melted for making glass,” he said. “Actually, that is energy lost. In India [that is] employment for washing and cleaning.” 

Nair offered some positive sentiments about Berkeley as well. “Berkeley has a lot of community-based activities and lots of laws. Americans have 30 years of experience.” 

The common goal of the visiting scholars is to introduce “Zero Waste” programs in their homes. 

While the focus of Berkeley’s Ecology Center is reuse and recycling, the international GAIA’s goal is to eliminate incineration as a waste-disposal means. Incineration is hardly common in the West, but many developing nations are being asked by manufacturers to consider burning as a quick-fix method of getting rid of mounting consumer and industrial debris. 

Incinerators are banned in the Philippines, but not in South Africa or India. 

Dave Williamson, operations manager of the Ecology Center, said the international fellowships were a good platform for information exchange. 

“We got a feeling of solidarity and of confidence. They [the visiting scholars] learned a lot about the people of the United States,” he said. 

Williamson said he learned from the visitors. 

“With plastic, there’s not much you can do with it, so in India they are replacing it with jute,” a fiber for sacking and cordage obtained from two Asian plants, he said. “They also use banana leaves to make disposable utensils [which] are different looking, but first world Americans would feel comfortable using them.” 

The Ecology Center and GAIA have plans to train as many as 100 international colleagues through similar programs.


Americans must examine the corporate power

Monday July 22, 2002

To the Editor: 

At time when Americans have just caught sight of the tip of the iceberg of corporate malfeasance on Wall Street, it's a bracing exercise to pry our eyes from the balance sheet and glance at what's happening in the far reaches of our global empire where, when people lose out to corrupt corporate management, they pay not merely with their life savings, but with their very lives. 

Remember that at the Bhopal insecticide plant run by Union Carbide in the 1980s, emergency alert systems were deliberately turned off as part of cost-cutting measures meant to protect the bottom line. 

Nearly 18 years later, the death toll from the largest industrial catastrophe in history stands at 20,000. And it is not over yet. 

Now, under pressure from the Union Carbide Corporation, and its parent, the Dow Chemical Corporation, the Indian government is seeking to use part of the Bhopal disaster victim reparations fund to clean up the contaminated soil and water of the region – a financial burden that ought to be borne not by the surviving, disease-ridden victims, but by Union Carbide and Dow. Moreover, as a sweetener to its Hindu voter base, the government wishes to stretch the limited reparations fund to include several districts, populated predominately by Hindus, which are thought never to have been exposed to the toxic clouds. 

Finally, and in a spirit wholly subservient to Wall Street hubris, it seems clear that the Indian authorities will succeed in diluting or dismissing the culpable homicide charges against Warren Anderson, former CEO of Union Carbide. 

What started as a case of sensational corporate negligence far removed from the American public's eye has evolved into a case of election manipulation and government corruption encouraged by unbridled corporate power – a destructive force that Americans have only just begun to examine critically.  

 

Sheila Newbery 

Berkeley 


Rangers beat A’s to snap eight-game losing streak

Monday July 22, 2002

By Greg Beacham 

The Associated Press 

 

OAKLAND – Precious little luck has run the Texas Rangers’ way since Alex Rodriguez joined them before last season. 

When a big dose of good fortune helped the Rangers snap their eight-game losing streak on Sunday with a remarkable victory, Rodriguez hoped it was the start of a bigger change. 

Ivan Rodriguez drove in the go-ahead run with a bases-loaded single in the 12th as the Rangers survived three straight innings of peril before rallying for a 7-3 victory over the Oakland Athletics. 

Gabe Kapler had a two-run single and Alex Rodriguez hit an RBI triple in a five-run burst in the 12th as the Rangers escaped the Coliseum with just their second victory since the All-Star break. 

The final score made it look easy, but the 16 runners left on base by the A’s — including nine in the final four innings — suggested otherwise. On almost every key play, the Rangers got the break. 

“It felt so good to sneak one out,” said Alex Rodriguez, who went 3-for-5. “I think we’ve hit rock-bottom. It was nice to come up with a big win. Hopefully, we’re on the way up now. This could change a lot of things for us.” 

Oakland wasted another strong start by Mark Mulder and several chances to claim their fourth straight victory. The A’s stranded two runners in the ninth and left the bases loaded in the 10th and 11th. 

“We finally got some big outs when we needed them,” Texas manager Jerry Narron said. “When you do that, you win ballgames.” 

In the 12th, Jim Mecir (3-2) allowed Ivan Rodriguez’s drive to center field and Michael Young’s sacrifice fly before Kapler and Alex Rodriguez put it out of reach. 

Jay Powell (2-1) allowed three hits and three intentional walks while pitching out of two jams for the victory, giving Texas a rare dose of resilient relief pitching. 

“All it takes is one hit. They got it, we didn’t,” Oakland manager Art Howe said. “It looked like we were taking strikes and swinging at balls.” 

Adam Piatt had an RBI single in the 12th against Todd Van Poppel.


County supe throws support behind Bates

John Geluardi
Monday July 22, 2002

Alameda County Supervisor Keith Carson made an official endorsement of Berkeley mayoral candidate Tom Bates at a rally Saturday. He told about 60 of the candidate’s supporters that he was endorsing the former state assemblyman because of their political like-mindedness and their long personal friendship. 

Carson, who said he has had a productive working relationship with incumbent Mayor Shirley Dean, did not endorse a Berkeley mayoral candidate in the last two elections, which were both won by Dean. 

“I didn’t have to give a second thought about supporting Tom Bates,” Carson said, citing their 20-year political and personal relationship. “Tom has focused in on the issues that affect people like affordable housing and the disparity of health care especially among people of color.” 

Also attending the rally were city councilmembers Linda Maio, Kriss Worthington, Dona Spring and Bates’ wife, Loni Hancock. Hancock is running for the 14th District state Assembly seat, the same position her husband held for 20 years before he was forced out by term limits in 1996. 

Carson joins a growing list of political incumbents who have endorsed Bates, including U.S. Rep. Barbara Lee and 14th District state Assemblywoman Dion Aroner.  

Carson said the state is facing a $26 billion deficit that is bound to impact critical housing, health and education programs. He said the personal working alliance he has formed with Bates and Hancock will help the city and county attain state funds. 

“We have to focus in on how we are going to help the least of us, the homeless, the battered, the hungry and the unemployed,” Carson said. “I think, with the economic state of affairs, it’s important to have the best possible collaboration with federal, state and local bodies to figure out ways to deal with our fiscal challenges.” 

Dean, who plans to launch her re-election campaign in August, said that like Bates, she has enjoyed a productive working relationship with Carson while collaborating on such issues as the Alameda County Courthouse, health disparities and affordable housing. But Dean admitted that she wasn’t surprised when Carson endorsed Bates.  

She said in the last election she won 60 percent of the vote without any endorsements from the “political machine” and she’s confident she can do it again. 

“I’m energized to take my campaign to the streets,” Dean said. “I have been a 24-7 mayor and have worked really, really, really hard to bring this city back from the precipice and people can see the difference.” 

Bates said Carson’s endorsement doesn’t have anything to do with a “political machine” and reflects simply what the supervisor feels is best for Berkeley residents.  

“Eight years she’s been mayor and the people are ready for a change and now is a good opportunity,” he said.  

Bates said he has spent nearly 24 hours walking the precincts since his campaign launch July 13. He has discovered that the issue people are most concerned with is education, and he has already begun devising plans to address the issue. 

If elected, he will not draw a salary because he would have to forfeit his state pension plan from the state Assembly, he said. “Instead I’ll take the money that would have gone to my salary and assign a deputy mayor to deal with education issues such as the development of Vista College downtown,” he said. “I want somebody in my office day in and day out to be accountable.”


This country needs to think

Monday July 22, 2002

To the Editor: 

The eruptive surfacing of the corporate accounting scandals in the past few months exposes a much deeper pathology in the human family. Unfortunately, what it demonstrates is that we are not acting like a family at all. With American big-business practices leading the charge, it has become painfully clear that, for the most part, the players on the world stage have yet to see beyond their atomized self-interest and reconcile themselves to the fact that actions have consequences for the entire fabric of human society, including the perpetrators of the socially solipsistic self-serving mantra of the ‘marketplace.’ 

Greed, avarice and stupidity are nothing new in the denouement of this planet’s evolution, or perhaps lack thereof. What is new is the spiraling, momentous effects of unbridled ignorance, in the spirit of infinite opportunism, infesting the mythology that suggests anyone and everyone can have it all.  

Despite appearances, this pathetic condition “inhumane” is not confined to American capitalism. Corruption and the hoarding of economic power has earmarked virtually every social-political community from the inception of the agricultural era and what is commonly accepted as the beginning of history. But it is in American capitalism that the moral pathogens display themselves with such inglorious abandon. Moreover, the technology and communications revolution that the western economic fortress has spawned, has thrown its ugly ethical emptiness smack back in the face of its pollyanna poses and counterfeit commercial smiles. 

In what may be evolution’s greatest ploy, it is this irony wherein lies our greatest hope: To see ourselves for what we are becoming while having the presence of mind and resolve to act upon ourselves before we are all girdled in passive witness to an orgy of rapacious, elitist entitlement and the complicit, convulsive consumption that has come to define modern man and his aiding abetting, better half. 

 

Marcus O'Realius 

Oakland


News of the Weird

Monday July 22, 2002

Plastic pistol packer files suit 

MINNEAPOLIS — A 72-year-old man has filed a lawsuit over an incident last year in which he was arrested for carrying a plastic pistol while delivering a singing telegram. 

Fritz Herring said he told deputies at the Hennepin County Government Center why he was there and they retrieved paperwork from his pocket that had information about his telegram appointment. 

Still, he was taken to jail and held for nearly 12 hours, he says. 

In the lawsuit filed in federal court in Minneapolis, Herring seeks damages for false imprisonment and defamation, among other claims. 

 

Man bites pit bull 

NEW YORK — Man bites dog. Really. 

Police said a Long Island man bit a pit bull that was attacking his pet Siberian husky, and may have saved the pooch’s life. 

Richard Robbins, 44, said he was walking his three dogs Saturday morning when three pit bulls dashed from their owner’s side and one attacked his husky, Gina Marie. 

Robbins sank his teeth into the attacking pit bull’s head. He suffered multiple puncture wounds in the attack. 

“I wasn’t going to watch my dog die,” Robbins said. 

Suffolk County Police Lt. Kenneth Fasano said Gina Maria “would have been severely injured or even killed” without Robbins’ intervention. 

 

Judge finds a jury of ‘Gs’ unfair 

MIAMI — A man who won a new trial on federal gun charges because his jury had too many people whose last names started with the letter “G” has been acquitted. 

Roderick B. Carter, 24, of Opa-Locka, had been charged with possession of a handgun by a convicted felon. U.S. District Judge Adalberto Jordan granted Carter a new trial after Carter’s attorney argued that his client’s right to a jury of his peers had been violated. 

Federal jury pools in Miami are selected by dividing potential jurists alphabetically by the first letter of their last name and then selecting letters randomly. 

Carter’s attorney, David O. Markus, argued that because the jury pool was full of Hispanic names that started with “G” — such as Garcia, Gomez, Gonzalez and Gutierrez — Carter, who is black, could not have gotten a fair trial because the jury did not have a fair cross sample. 

The judge declared a mistrial in May. The original 12-person jury had seven Hispanic members; last week, Carter was acquitted by a jury of six blacks, two whites and four Hispanics.


Vietnam an ultimate journey for Berkeley students

Katie Flynn
Monday July 22, 2002

By Katie Flynn 

Daily Planet Intern 

 

Vietnam was a country that Berkeley High School teacher Rick Ayers never thought he'd visit. But after five months of planning and a 20-hour plane ride, Ayers made the journey. It was the ultimate field trip for 13 of his students who explored the bustling cities and wet rice paddies. 

“Vietnam was far more advanced than I expected,” said Arose Umar-Bey, a senior at Berkeley High. “You think of a third world country lacking technology, but really it was almost like being at home: People were going to work, going CD shopping.” 

For two weeks last month, the students and four teachers toured the country by bus and stayed in inexpensive hotels. Tran Tuong Nhu, a Vietnamese-born Berkeley High parent, and Lan Cao, a professor at Hanoi University, helped guide the group. 

They traveled to Halong Bay where they swam in the warm ocean water. They visited a traditional Moung village and went to Hanoi and saw the Temple of Literature, Ho Chi Min's Mausoleum and the Presidential Palace. In Danang, they met the family from the film “A Girl from Danang.” And in Hui, the group saw Buddhist pagodas.  

They met with Vietnamese war veterans who told the group about how they won the Vietnam War, which they call the “American War,” through determination and guerrilla fighting. 

“I use to idealize Vietnamese like the ultimate jungle warriors that couldn't be beat,” Ayers said. “But I learned they got beat up too. They just kept going back at it.” 

The group visited the Amsterdam School, where a class of mostly girls was learning English and hoping to one day attend an American college. The United States and Vietnamese students paired up, sang songs, taught each other dances, and went to a karaoke bar that night. 

“It was so great to meet other high school kids,” said Umar-Bey. “We realized we had a lot of things in common and we talked about boyfriends and crushes and parties.” 

The group also met children at the Peace Village, a school for people born with disabilities blamed on Agent Orange, a toxin that Americans used to defoliate the Vietnam jungles during the war. 

“Seeing kids who had these huge physical deformities like the wrong size head or eyes, made such an impression on us... We all started crying when we first got there,” Umar-Bey said. “It’s like looking at what carelessness can do.” 

When summer vacation is over, the Berkeley High students plan to focus on sending funds to the Peace Village, as well as teaching others about it. 

“We got a sense of responsibility and how it is our job to help at the Peace Village,” said Gabby Miller, a senior who has visited Vietnam three times before. Miller said she wished they could have done more for the Peace Village while in Vietnam. 

A highlight of the trip was an unexpected meeting with the vice president of Vietnam, Nguyen Thi Binh, who was a friend of Nhu.  

For Ayers, Binh represented the many years of fighting with the National Liberation Front, the group that opposed the United States’ involvement in Vietnam. 

Ayers and two students met Binh in her office and discussed Vietnam's history while eating litchi nuts and drinking tea. 

“The idea that I, a high school English teacher who was a rather small light in the peace movement of 30 years ago, should be sitting having a cup of tea with Mme. Binh and a few students, seemed almost unbelievable to me,” Ayers wrote in an e-mail about the meeting. 

Next year, the students will present their trip photos, videos and notes to other students. 

“Vietnam is this country filled with amazing stories. Everyone has a story of war, determination and pride,” Miller said. “You almost become jealous that you are not a part of such a proud culture.” 

The trip cost about $1,600 for each person, with some of the expense offset by fundraising. 

“For me it was a real pilgrimage, a trip of a life time,” said Ayers. “I never thought it would happen.”


Unattended bag prompts LA airport terminal evacuation

Monday July 22, 2002

LOS ANGELES — An unattended suitcase prompted the evacuation Sunday of part of a terminal at Los Angeles International Airport, authorities said. 

The Los Angeles Police Department bomb squad was notified about 5 p.m. of a suspicious suitcase in the upper level of Terminal 3, said Officer Don Cox, a police spokesman. 

Only the upper level of the terminal, for departing flights, was evacuated, Cox said. The lower level arrival area and all other terminals continued to operate normally, he said. 

“They’re trying to determine who it belongs to and what might be there,” said Cox. “There are no threats, they don’t have anything to indicate that it is a device.” 

Several airlines operate out of Terminal 3, including: Alaska, American, Frontier, Horizon and Midwest Express. 


Brifs

Monday July 22, 2002

San Jose woman sentenced  

to jail for hate crime 

SAN JOSE — A San Jose woman was sentenced to nine months in jail after being convicted of a hate crime in which she attacked a man of Middle Eastern descent while shouting slurs during a road rage incident. 

Angel Ann Coley, 28, also was ordered Friday to pay restitution to Mohamed Aram, the 31-year-old man she kicked, bit, and punched in November after using her car to ram Aram’s limousine into an intersection for not getting out of her way at a red light. 

Witnesses told police Coley got out of her car and confronted Aram. She bit his hand, kicked him in the groin and punched him, they said. During the attack Coley called Aram, who emigrated from Egypt six years ago, a “towel head” and “foreigner.” 

Aram tried tossing his cell phone to a passerby to call 911, but the man took the phone and left the scene. 

During her trial Coley maintained that Aram refused to show his identification after his vehicle hit her car — which conflicted with evidence and testimony from witnesses. 

Coley’s sentence comes three weeks after a Superior Court jury found her guilty of committing a hate crime resulting in injury, making threats to commit death or injury, hit-and-run, and battery. 

 

Fourth week without budget 

SACRAMENTO — California is entering the fourth week without a state budget, which is putting the squeeze on state workers. Legislative employees were the first to go without a paycheck last week, leaving others to wonder who’s next. 

Still, Assembly Republicans maintain they will not vote for the state spending plan that uses tax hikes to help fill a $23.6 billion budget hole. 

Man accused of stealing car caught  

after demanding air 

FAIRFIELD — A man accused of stealing a truck was caught after he threatened a service station clerk with a sawed-off shotgun and demanded two quarters to put air in his tires. 

Shane V. Cavalin was ordered to stand trial on robbery and auto theft charges, which carry a possible eight years in prison. Using the shotgun could tack on an additional 10 years. 

Cavalin allegedly went into a gas station on May 4 and asked to use the air machine for the tires of the stolen truck he was driving. 

The cashier told him he needed two quarters for the machine. Vacaville police officer Brian Larsen testified at a preliminary hearing Friday that Cavalin returned a moment later toting a sawed-off shotgun and ordered the cashier to empty the cash register. 


Materials to build radioactive explosives abound in California

Staff
Monday July 22, 2002

ACRAMENTO — There are plenty of ingredients easily accessible in California to assemble a “dirty bomb,” or explosives laced with radioactive material, according to a newspaper’s investigation. 

The Sacramento Bee reported Sunday that radioactive materials are scattered across the state at thousands of sites, and hundreds of them hold enough for a “dirty bomb,” according to state and federal records. 

Machines that operate using large amounts of radioactivity have become commonplace in medicine, research and construction. Radioactive material can be found in the lunchbox-sized construction tool used to peer inside pipelines and walls; in the giant irradiators used to purify foods and sterilize medical supplies; in the medical equipment used to cut brain tumors and treat blood. 

In some places, such equipment is left unattended for hours or days behind locked doors, the Bee reported. 

With the exception of nuclear plants and weapons sites, the nation’s system of radiological safeguards is aimed at preventing accidents, not thwarting well-planned thefts. 

“Safety is different from security. We need to do a much better job of controlling the radioactive materials we have out there,” said Steven E. Koonin, a nuclear physicist and provost at the California Institute of Technology who has advised the government on security issues. 

A “dirty bomb,” known formally as a radiation dispersal device, probably would kill no more people than a conventional blast. It would cause far fewer deaths than a chemical or biological attack, experts say. 

But some predict the dirty bomb is one of the likeliest weapons to be unleashed by terrorists because the ingredients are so easy to get and the potential damage in panic and cleanup costs are so huge. 

“I would be surprised if we didn’t see one within a decade,” Koonin said. 

Although medical and industrial uses of radiation are widely documented, The Bee chose not to identify the owners of significant quantities in light of concerns about how simple it might be to gather enough radioactivity to create a “dirty bomb.” 

People have to take safety courses before getting a license to own even small amounts of radioactive materials, but they do not need to undergo criminal or background checks. A federal law to require background checks for hazardous materials haulers is at least two months away from being implemented. 

The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission recently reduced the frequency of inspections for most radioactive materials license holders and does not fully check large inventories to ensure their owners know what is on hand. 


Natural gas use expected to increase 50 percent by 2010

Monday July 22, 2002

SACRAMENTO — California relies too heavily on natural gas to fuel the power plants that generate nearly half of its electricity, leaving the state’s consumers vulnerable to price swings, a new study has found. 

In pursuit of cleaner power, California increasingly has switched to natural gas for its power plants during the past 20 years. But that means higher prices and even electricity shortages if the gas supply dwindles, according to RAND, a nonpartisan Santa Monica-based research organization. 

California produces only 15 percent of its natural gas, importing the rest from Canada, the Rocky Mountain states and New Mexico. 

Consumers already saw their natural gas bills zoom upward during late 2000 and early 2001 because of tight supply, which state power regulators blamed on gas sellers not using pipelines to their full capacity. The industry has denied any wrongdoing. The shortage, however, raised electricity prices because gas fuels 45 percent of power plants in the state. 

RAND, which wrote the report for the Energy Foundation, a San Francisco-based nonprofit organization, projects the state’s natural gas consumption will increase between 18 percent and 50 percent by 2010, mostly due to new power plants. Researchers say there could be supply bottlenecks unless more pipelines are built or existing pipes widened. 

Rather than completely shift away from the fuel, the state should speed the permitting process, boost reliance renewable energy and expand incentives for electricity conservation, the study recommended. 

Coal and nuclear power fuel a third of the state’s power plants. Hydroelectric dams and alternative energy sources comprise the rest. 


Giant cane grows fast, sucking up state’s water

Monday July 22, 2002

RIVERSIDE — A giant cane, the largest member of the grass family, swallows up gallons of water, grows up to a foot a day and is stubbornly resisting efforts around California to control it. 

“It’s kind of unstoppable,” said Kyle Washburn, who was working with crews using tractors to cut through dense growth of the grass known as Arundo donax along the San Jacinto River in western Riverside County. 

So far, the oversized reed has taken over 20,000 acres of riverbed in three Southern California counties. The plant, which is not native to California, sends up new shoots when it is cut down. It also becomes a natural fire carrier when it dries out. 

“The only thing I can compare it to is cancer. It spreads so fast, and it won’t let anything else live in its midst,” said Kerwin Russell, an environmental horticulturist with the Riverside-Corona regional conservation district. 

The cane, with its firm, straight structure, was first mentioned in the Bible and Greek myths, and is considered the best material available for clarinets and other reed instruments. 

No one is sure when or how the plant first came to the United States, but Spanish settlers used it as building material for California missions. 

Since 1960, when the federal government started planting Arundo along riverbanks to control erosion, the cane has spread dramatically. It is now spotted as far north as Willamette, Ore., and as far east as New Orleans. 

“They had the right idea, but they put it near water,” Russell said. “It loves water, and it has no natural enemies here.” 

To control the cane, stalks must be bulldozed, then shredded and, finally, pesticides must be applied to keep the plant from coming back, Russell said. 


Fire near Lake Isabella damages 10 homes

Monday July 22, 2002

LAKE ISABELLA— A 350-acre wildfire damaged or destroyed 10 homes Sunday afternoon and forced the evacuation of residents, officials said. 

Evacuations are underway in the area near Erskine Creek, near Lake Isabella, as the fire moves in a southeasterly direction, said Tomas Patlan, a spokesman with the Kern County Fire Department. It is not known how many homes are in the area and how many people are being evacuated, he said. 

About 75 firefighters and three helicopters are working to save homes in the area, he added. No injuries have been reported. 

The fire erupted about 2 p.m. and the cause is under investigation, he said. 

Authorities are warning residents to stay out of the area. 

Lake Isabella is about 150 miles northeast of Los Angeles and about 30 miles northeast of Bakersfield. 

In another blaze, firefighters contained a wildfire that burned 25 acres of brush and destroyed two structures in the hills northeast of San Diego, authorities said Sunday. 

The fire, which began Saturday, briefly threatened the popular Angel’s Landing Country Inn and Resort. 

Two structures, possibly trailers or mobile homes, were destroyed, said Chris Hess of the California Department of Forestry. 

No injuries were reported. 

At its peak, more than 250 firefighters worked to contain the blaze. 

The cause of the fire remained under investigation, Hess said. 


Plummeting stock market tests investors’ nerves

Monday July 22, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO – As the stock market’s losses piled up last year, brokerage executive Charles Schwab began appearing in television commercials urging individual investors to remain calm. But by early last week, he realized people aren’t heeding his advice. 

“You can start to see people get a sense of panic now,” Schwab said in an interview last week. “You see it in the market, you (hear) it in conversation, you see it in the writings to the letters to the editor. For some investors, it’s getting pretty desperate. Of course, that’s the time you just got to hold your cool.” 

Remaining levelheaded is getting tougher for individual investors caught in the maelstrom of accounting scandals, terrorism fears and economic queasiness that shoved last week’s stock market to its lowest levels in nearly four years. 

Logic says the market should be reaching a bottom, that Monday should yield great deals for investors with extra cash and the desire to buy blue-chip stocks deeply discounted by the waves of selling that have washed over Wall Street. 

But emotions might drive even more people out of the market as they ruminate over the losses reflected in their second-quarter investment statements and realize the damage got even worse during the last two weeks. 

All of the stock market’s bellwether indexes have been badly battered during the last two weeks. 

The Dow Jones Industrial Average, the most famous index of all, got hit the hardest, dropping by 1,360 points, or 14.5 percent, to fall to 8,019. Meanwhile, the Standard & Poor’s 500 index shed 141 points, or 14.3 percent, and the technology-driven Nasdaq composite index dropped by 129 points, or 8.9 percent. 

The rapid descent, combined with substantial erosion that had already occurred since the stock market’s March 2000 peak, is bound to cause a lot of soul searching among investors, said Tom Lydon, president of Global Trend Investments in Newport Beach. 

“There are going to be a lot of couples sitting across from each their dining room tables this weekend and one spouse is going to say to the other, ’That’s it. We’ve had it. Let’s get out of the market and take something off the table while we still can,”’ he said. 

This kind of behavior is known as “capitulation” — a phrase used in the stock market to describe a time when exasperated investors throw up their hands and sell all their holdings regardless of the economic circumstances. This phenomenon is the polar opposite of the giddiness — famously described by Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan as “irrational exuberance” — that propels markets to staggering highs. 

Historically, the moment of investor capitulation heralds the end of a bear market. That’s the good news. The bad news is no one really recognizes the moment of capitulation until it’s already occurred. 

“I’ve been thinking the market had capitulated for the last three weeks, but it just keeps capitulating,” said Richard Del Monte, an investment adviser in Danville. He said three more of his clients threw in the towel after Friday’s sell-off, telling him to sell all their stocks. 

Most money managers think this is a time savvy investors should be seeking out bargains in the market. “You might see opportunities out there that you won’t see again for years,” Lydon said. 

But don’t tread into the market turbulence unless you have a cast-iron stomach because investment professionals warn the market might plummet even further in the next few days. 

“To buy stocks now, you have to be like the people who traveled across the country during the Gold Rush of 1849,” Del Monte said. “It takes a lot of courage.” 

Canan Korustan of Alamo is already on the prowl for bargains. During Friday’s sell-off, she picked up stock in General Electric and discount retailer Target. If the market falls further Monday, she is eyeing investments in drug company Pfizer Inc. and perhaps a cable company. 

By buying now, she hopes to offset some of her losses on past investments in high-tech companies. The value of her holdings in one-time high-fliers like BroadVision Inc. and Exodus Communications have fallen from $20,000 at the market’s peak to $200 today. 

Korustan, 46, is trying not to glance back as she forges ahead. 

“I haven’t even looked at my stock portfolio in the last three weeks because every time I do I just get kind of nervous and upset,” she said. “I start thinking I was stupid for not getting out a long time ago.”


West Coast ports connected to every aspect of U.S. business

Monday July 22, 2002

LOS ANGELES – Acres of brown, blue, red and yellow 40-foot containers fill the shipyards. They run as far as the eye can see, stacked three high, forming long steel corridors down the length of the docks. 

Their contents include nearly everything a consumer could imagine — furniture, clothing, toys, tractors, computers, waste paper, pet food. 

Some goods are on their way to low-cost manufacturers in Asia, such as 2,389 cubic feet of raw cotton destined for Jakarta. 

Others are inbound to shops in nearly every town across America, such as the boxes of butane lighter fluid just arrived from China. 

The profound scale of the operation leaves no doubt that a labor disruption during ongoing contract talks between carriers and longshoremen would reverberate in every corner of the U.S. economy. 

“The effect could be chaotic,” said Monroe Milstein, founder and chief executive of the Burlington Coat Factory Warehouse. 

The New Jersey-based chain of 294 department stores receives about 60 percent of its product through West Coast ports. 

The contract between carriers and West Coast longshoremen expired July 1. Since then, the Pacific Maritime Association and the International Longshore and Warehouse Union have been extending the contract on a 24-hour basis at each negotiating session. So far, the union has disavowed any intent to stage a slowdown, and it has not yet taken a strike vote among its members. 

The PMA has argued that West Coast ports are becoming bottlenecks in the supply chain of goods from Asia because the union has spurned technological improvements in an effort to save about 2,100 clerk jobs. The ILWU says it’s not against technology, but the new jobs must stay within the union. 

Together, goods crossing the docks at the combined Los Angeles and Long Beach ports — the third-largest complex in the world — and at smaller West Coast ports from San Diego to Seattle, represent nearly 8 percent of the nation’s gross domestic product. 

Some 4 million jobs around the country rely on the smooth flow of goods through those ports. 

West Coast ports have helped sustain the national economy by funneling billions of dollars worth of furniture, automobiles and automobile parts into the country — the key ingredients of the consumer spending binge that kept the recession mild — said Larry Keller, executive director of the Port of Los Angeles. 

The ports also are the gateway to Asia for businesses across the country. 

A large percentage of Asian goods destined for the eastern United States come through the West because it’s often cheaper to put them on cross-country trucks or trains than to send them on longer routes through the Suez Canal and across the Atlantic Ocean. 

The top imports by dollar value through the Port of Los Angeles last year were apparel, toys, computers and office machines, and furniture. The leading exports were resin, raw cotton, waste paper, scrap metal and pet and animal food. 

A work stoppage on the West Coast wouldn’t create much damage if it lasted less than two weeks, Milstein said. But anything beyond that would disrupt his company’s supply of clothes, handbags, belts, perfumes, shoes, furniture and other merchandise coming from Asia, he said. 

“Most everything today comes through West Coast ports,” he said. “Twenty years ago at least half of it was made in the United States.” 

Each year, about 5,500 vessels move through the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, some more than 1,000 feet long. Each holds several thousand containers, or “cans,” which are unloaded by 105-foot high cranes that permanently hover above the ships’ berths on the docks. 

Some 34,000 trucks line up each day to deliver exports and haul away the incoming merchandise. 

The Port of Los Angeles on its own sprawls over 3,800 acres of water and another 3,700 acres of land. Eighty shipping lines moved $113.9 billion worth of goods through the facility in 2001 — 35 percent of the nation’s container traffic. 

For business owners like Charlie Woo, founder and chief executive of Megatoys, the port is an irreplaceable life line to his suppliers in China, offering the fastest and cheapest travel time for his goods. 

“The port has made my business competitive in L.A. Without it I wouldn’t be able to survive in this industry,” said Woo. 

Megatoys has found its niche selling toys to small retailers that giant toy companies such as Mattel don’t serve. In 13 years, Woo has built a $25 million-a-year import business that employs 70 people. 

The firm imports dolls, radio-controlled cars and other battery toys from manufacturers in China’s special Shenzhen economic zone. 

The merchandise is loaded into 40-foot containers, which hold several thousand toys each. The containers travel by truck to the south China port of Yantian, and 12 days later they arrive in Los Angeles. Door-to-door delivery costs him $1,500 per container, Woo said. 

Last month Woo brought in an extra $1 million of inventory to cushion his business during any labor disruption, he said. 

“I have no other contingency plans because they would not be economical,” he said.


Critics: New essay could hurt some minorities

Michelle Locke
Monday July 22, 2002

The decision to add a written essay to the widely taken SAT college entrance exam has raised new questions. 

Can someone from a home where another language is spoken whip out polished prose in English in 25 minutes? If not, does that mean he or she doesn’t deserve to go to a competitive college? 

“The time limit is particularly difficult for kids who have to translate in their head,” says Robert Schaeffer of Fair Test, a Massachusetts-based group that advocates less reliance on standardized tests. In the real world of college, he argues, “if you write slowly or need a dictionary or have to stay up all night, you can do it.” 

On the other hand, the writing test “gets at real behavior,” and the ability to speak, read and write in English is key to undergraduate success, says Wayne Camara, vice president for research at the College Board, the New York-based nonprofit that owns the SAT. 

The SAT changes were prompted when University of California President Richard C. Atkinson proposed dropping the SAT. With 150,000 undergrads, UC is the test’s biggest user. 

UC faculty proved reluctant to go test-free, suggesting development of a new exam, an ambitious plan that never really flowered. Meanwhile, the College Board and Iowa-based ACT, Inc., makers of the rival ACT entrance exam, made changes. 

ACT is adding an essay for California students only; its officials are still working on the format. 

The point is not to keep English-learners out of college, but to measure their ability to write, says ACT spokesman Ken Gullette. “They will need the skills, so to measure the skills and to give them information to help them improve their skills is a good thing.” 

The SAT makeover, which included dropping the often-criticized analogy section and making math questions tougher, was heralded by Atkinson as “a transforming event in the nature of education.” 

But at the Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund, executive director Margaret Fung has heard from several concerned parents and students. 

“It’s clear that Asian families want to be sure their children speak English. It just seems as if that (essay requirement) may put people at a disadvantage,” she says. 

At the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, officials say it’s too soon to know if the new requirement will be a problem, “but at a minimum we know the essay will not improve the situation,” says attorney Victor Viramontes. “The older version of the SAT discriminates against English-learners and on its face the changes do not address the problem.” 

A 2001 College Board report found that students whose first language was not English had a mean score of 455 on the SAT verbal test, compared to a mean score of 517 for those who spoke English first. 

The report also found that students from Hispanic or Asian backgrounds in general had lower verbal scores than white students. 

The essay requirement isn’t a change for UC-bound students. UC already requires the SAT II writing test, which also includes an essay, a requirement that likely will be dropped now. 

The SAT is a “reasoning test” that tries to measure overall academic ability. The SAT IIs are “subject tests,” that try to assess what students have learned in the classroom. UC requires three SAT IIs, writing, math and a third to be chosen from a variety of subjects. 

Patrick Hayashi, associate president of UC, says making the essay a national requirement, along with the other SAT changes, has “the potential of actually helping nonnative speakers because I think it will encourage the development of better writing classes.” 

As for the time-limit complaint, “I think you have plenty of time to write that essay,” he says. 

The SAT IIs have also been criticized, with complaints focusing on the Chinese and Spanish language tests, which are among the options students can choose for the third test. Critics say students from homes where those languages are spoken ace the tests even though they didn’t study the languages in high school. 

SAT II scores count twice as much as regular SAT scores at UC. But UC officials note that any one SAT II score makes up only 25 percent of the total test battery and also point out that mastering a second language is an academic skill. 

UC research shows the language tests don’t have a big impact on the ethnic makeup of students admitted — a hot-button issue at UC, where race-based admissions have been banned since 1998. 

The number of black and Hispanic students dropped sharply immediately after the ban, especially at highly competitive Berkeley and UCLA. Since then, the numbers have increased, although Berkeley still admits far fewer black students. 

Meanwhile, Asian-Americans, who did not get affirmative action, comprise the largest single group at four of UC’s eight undergraduate campuses; at one of those, UC Irvine, they are the majority at 55 percent of the student body. Statewide, Asian-Americans make up about 11 percent of the population. 

Berkeley ethnic studies professor Ling-Chi Wang says he has heard from some who worry that the emphasis on writing is a way to boost diversity by curbing admission of Asian-Americans. 

UC and testing officials deny that. 

Wang, meanwhile, says he is not troubled by the issue, because “I personally strongly support the notion of diversity,” and because he expects Asian-Americans will meet the new challenge. 

Some think it’s a bad idea to put too much faith in testing, revamped or not. 

At Bates College, a small liberal arts college in Maine where applicants aren’t required to submit test scores, students who don’t submit scores end up having slightly higher grade point averages. 

“Do the tests screen out more students who would be successful in college than they help you find? Bates’ answer to that question is a clear, ringing, ’Yes,”’ says Bill Hiss, the college’s vice president for external and alumni affairs. 

Hiss recalls the case of an applicant with a very low SAT verbal score of 400. The student, a Vietnamese immigrant who was valedictorian of her high school class, was accepted, graduated Phi Beta Kappa and magna cum laude in biology, took a year off to found a mentoring program for immigrant students and went on to medical school. 

UC has switched to “comprehensive review” admissions which means they can consider hardships a student has overcome, so it’s possible they, too, would have admitted that student. 

Still, Hiss asks, “Is a controlled writing sample going to help Latino and international and immigrant kids? For most of them it won’t. A writing sample is going to help youngsters who are at the best suburban high schools and prep schools.”


Honors class prompts resignation, ‘tracking’ debate

Jessica Brice
Monday July 22, 2002

SACRAMENTO – A Gilroy high school’s move toward “academic tracking” that prompted the surprise resignation of the school’s top officials has stirred the debate among educators who say tracking unfairly excludes low-income and minority students. 

So-called academic tracking is a classification system in which students are placed in groups based on their academic ability, with the brightest kids taking separate classes or receiving more challenging coursework. 

Historically, students were placed in high or low “tracks” in elementary school and stayed in those same groups throughout their educational careers. Lower tracks often focused on vocational training rather than intense academic work. 

Although tracking has evolved into many different forms, it still exists around the country today, according to Sylvia Seidel, who runs a professional school development program for the National Education Association in Washington, D.C. 

While schools rarely categorize kids as high- and low-performing any more, many districts do offer continuous honors courses starting in elementary school and running through high school. 

“Tracking is still one of the most highly debated issues,” Seidel said. “There are vestiges of it everywhere, but the trend is moving away from tracking.” 

Most educators agree that students learn best when course work is geared toward individual ability, but critics worry that some students won’t have equal access to the classes if they are deemed as low achieving early on. 

In California, many districts say they are trying to focus on a tough curriculum for all kids, not just the brightest few. 

So when the board of the Gilroy Unified School District announced last week that it would implement a pilot honors program that includes separate classes for some of its ninth-graders, school principal Wendy Gudalewicz promptly resigned, calling the decision “morally and educationally wrong.” 

“At our high school, we’ve made dramatic gains. We’ve doubled the number of students going to college,” Gudalewicz said. “We’ve met (state testing) targets, and all the subgroups have met the targets. When that happens, why put something in place that is going to turn us backward?” 

Gudalewicz, along with assistant principals Cec Bell and Rosa Nieto, resigned to protest the decision, citing fears the district is reinstating academic tracking. 

The ninth-grade pilot program will close the gap in the district’s honors programs, giving priority to kids who took honors classes in eighth-grade and helping pave the way for Advanced Placement classes in 11th- and 12th-grade. 

Gudalewicz maintains that low-income or minority kids who didn’t get into honors classes early on would have trouble breaking into them in high school. 

The program, which will start this fall, was approved after a group of parents turned in a petition with more than 200 signatures and packed school board meetings pushing for the change. 

Jackie Caldwell, who is sending her 14-year-old son, Austin, to a private school rather than Gilroy High so he would have more challenging classes, said tracking is not about race. 

“As an African-American, I support the program,” said Caldwell, who is a member of the parent group that turned in the petition. “Both my husband and I were tracked in the 60s and 70s, and we do not see this a race issue.” 

Caldwell, who attended California public schools all her life, says the move away from tracking hurts high-performing students. 

“We have a daughter in junior high who is also a high achieving student,” Caldwell said. “We’re waiting to see if the curriculum is going to be changed before deciding if she goes (to Gilroy High.) They would have to have an honors program if she did.” 

Gilroy Superintendent Edwin Diaz said that although he was disappointed with Gudalewicz’s resignation, the classes are needed to bring Gilroy High students up to speed. 

“This isn’t such a huge leap,” Diaz said. “The typical model in Santa Clara County and the state is to have some sort of accelerated class.” 

Gilroy, which is south of San Jose, is a rural area that is quickly turning into a bedroom community for Silicon Valley workers. By 2000, Gilroy’s population had grown by 29 percent compared to a decade before. 

At the same time, Gilroy has also seen a rise in low-income and minority residents. More than half of Gilroy residents are Hispanic. 

Diaz said he’s concerned that some parents will choose to pull their kids out of public schools unless the schools offers classes for higher-achieving students. 

“If we’re not able to meet the needs of the whole spectrum of kids, then the public education system is falling apart,” Diaz said. “We’ve spent the last two years improving the achievement of students below grade level. We also have to be mindful and diligent to students that are already performing well.” 

But many school districts, like Sacramento City Unified School District, which groups kids of all levels together in a single class, maintain that students can benefit from a heterogeneous learning environment. 

Lee Yang, assistant principal at Pacific Elementary School, said classes at the school have an equal mix of high- and low-performing students. The high-performing students get extra work tacked onto their homework assignments, while students who have difficulty with the work get extra help from classroom tutors. 

“It’s beneficial to both groups,” Yang said. “Lower-end students get more tutoring and they also get help from kids who are doing well in the class. At the same time, it gives the higher-end kids a chance to apply what they’ve learned.” 

Diaz said Gilroy’s pilot program will benefit lower-achieving students, allowing teachers to devote more time to help them reach their potential. He said that people can sometimes overlook the benefits because the discussion often is centered around “issues relating to access and race and privilege” 

“I made it very clear that if we do end up with these classes, they will be open to everyone,” he said.


Bay Area blamed for San Joaquin Valley pollution

Monday July 22, 2002

By Brian Melley 

The Associated Press 

 

ALTAMONT PASS – The seemingly benevolent breezes that power giant windmills on these hills also carry pollution inland to one of America’s smoggiest regions, fueling a battle between rich and poor. 

At the center of the dispute is something central to California: the automobile. 

Lawsuits and legislation are pending that would require San Francisco area cars to undergo the same stiffer auto emissions tests required in every other urban area of California. 

“You have the greenest, wealthiest area dumping pollution into one of the poorest areas,” said Bruce Nilles, a former Earthjustice lawyer who has worked toward improving air quality in the valley. 

The Bay Area, which sends significant pollution as far as the Sierra Nevada foothills, has escaped the requirement because of an exemption written into state law by a former lawmaker from the coastal region. 

It doesn’t take sophisticated air monitoring equipment to witness the pollution. 

Nate Moehlman, an engineer and private pilot from Fresno, said that when he flies over the valley, he can follow a path of “gunk” all the way from the Bay Area to Bakersfield. 

Ocean breezes blow east, through the Carquinez Straits to Sacramento and points north, and through the Altamont Pass south to the mountains that rim the valley’s southern border. Currents swirl in an eddy of concentrated pollution east and south of Fresno, which has some the highest smog levels in the nation. 

The debate has illuminated the distrust and even contempt that has existed for decades between the industrial farm region and the city by the bay. 

Valley folk have sensed a holier-than-thou attitude among Bay Area lawmakers and environmentalists they believe are forcing a liberal agenda on hard-working families who farm the nation’s most productive land. 

To Bay Area denizens, the Central Valley is the hot, dusty, backward plain that must be endured on the drive to Lake Tahoe or Yosemite National Park. 

When Assemblyman Dennis Cardoza, D-Atwater, filed a bill this year require Bay Area residents to pass the stiffer emissions test, Assemblywoman Carole Migden, D-San Francisco, blamed part of the problem on tire fires and junk heaps in the valley. 

The Fresno Bee responded with an editorial headlined “Bay Area airhead.” 

Migden said the legislation is punitive, not supported by science and is motivated by “an irresistible impulse to pick on the Bay Area.” 

Still, the state Air Resources Board has found that the Bay Area has had an “overwhelming” impact on inland pollution — 27 percent of the smog in Stockton came from the Bay Area. In the southern end of the valley, where air pollution is worse, the figure drops to slightly less than 10 percent. 

Air pollution control districts in the Central Valley haven’t challenged a state exemption for agriculture that has allowed farms to remain largely unregulated for years. But they have sued the state board to reverse the Bay Area’s smog exemption, which was written during a brief period when the Bay Area met federal Clean Air Act standards for smog. 

The enhanced Smog Check II checks required for every other metropolitan area in California cost most motorists about $10, but much more for repairs if the cars fail to meet the standard. 

Ending the exemption would eliminate an estimated 27 tons of pollutants which contribute to smog downwind, said Ellen Garvey, air pollution control officer for the Bay Area Air Quality Management District. 

“It doesn’t do anything to help us but it does help them,” Garvey said. “I think we ultimately want to do the right thing for clean air and we want to do the right thing for our neighbors.” 

A study should be complete by the end of the month on how much of those smog-forming emissions are contributing to inland pollution. 

Garvey said her agency is trying to determine what is cost effective. The enhanced smog check would cost about $5,500 to remove each ton of pollution-forming gases. The same goal could be achieved for $900 a ton if diesel-burning boats on the bay were equipped with cleaner burning engines. 

The legislation passed overwhelmingly in the Assembly, 57-4, in May. It stands a good chance of passage in the upper house. Senate President Pro Tem John Burton, D-San Francisco, said he might make some changes to the legislation but he will not block it. 

“It’s an issue of fundamental equity,” said Mike Lynch, chief of staff for Rep. Gary Condit, D-Ceres, who fought for years to bring the Bay Area into compliance. “They think they’re special and they think everyone should give them a break because they’re special. Unfortunately, the break comes at the expense of our health and our jobs.” 

Even if the legislation is passed, it is only expected to make a small dent — less than 10 percent — in the valley’s pollution problems. The San Joaquin Valley has failed for years to meet federal standards and needs to remove about 300 tons of pollution, a third of its daily total.


DNA evidence links suspected killer to murdered girl

Monday July 22, 2002

By Chelsea J. Carter 

The Associated Press 

 

STANTON – DNA evidence found on the body of 5-year-old Samantha Runnion matches that of the man arrested in her killing, The Associated Press learned Saturday. 

A source close to the investigation, who declined to be identified, confirmed a report in the Los Angeles Times Saturday that DNA from the girl’s body matched that of Alejandro Avila. 

The source would not elaborate on the type of genetic material that was used for the match. 

Jim Amormino, a spokesman with the Orange County Sheriff’s Department, would not specifically confirm or deny the report, but did say authorities were “100 percent sure we have the right man.” 

“Forensic testing has confirmed our initial suspicion. DNA is a component of forensic testing,” he said. 

Avila, 27, was arrested Friday for investigation of kidnapping and killing Samantha. He has denied the charges and claims he was at a shopping mall on Monday evening when the girl was abducted. His sister, 22-year-old Elvira Avila, told the Orange County Register that he unexpectedly missed a family dinner Monday night, when Samantha was kidnapped. 

The district attorney’s office was expected to file formal charges by Tuesday. 

Samantha was playing with a 5-year-old friend just yards from her home when a man claiming to look for a lost puppy carried her away, kicking and screaming. 

The DNA evidence helped seal a rapid investigation following the discovery of Samantha’s body on Tuesday about 10 miles from Avila’s home. 

A tip naming Avila came into the Sheriff’s Department on Wednesday, and by that evening he was under surveillance, Amormino said. 

Friday’s arrest did not end the emotional turmoil of Southern California parents and children who have taken in Samantha as one of their own. 

Hushed mourners gathered Saturday at an impromptu memorial in the courtyard of the townhome complex where Samantha lived. 

Samantha’s mother ended nearly four days of seclusion to thank the gathered crowd for the support. 

“We will have a service as soon as we can. It has to be perfect. I’m sure you can understand,” she said between tears. “So thank you. It really has been helpful.” 

Tables overflowing with flowers, balloons, cards and stuffed animals have become a magnet for many in the community trying to cope with the fear and frustration brought by the little girl’s murder. An estimated 1,000 people had visited in the past day. 

“If there’s one (killer), there will be another,” said Kathleen Siliuta, 30, who brought her 6-year-old daughter, Alexis. 

Juan Rivera, 36, of Stanton, said his visit was a life lesson for his 7-year-old daughter, Arias. 

“I wanted to bring her to see you’ve got to be careful,” he said. 

“I have to scream and run” if attacked, Arias said. 

Laurance Montgomery, 53, passed out flyers of his daughter, Daniela, who was 14 when she disappeared from her Riverside home ten months ago. 

He hoped the attention to missing children from Samantha’s case might help generate leads to his daughter’s disappearance. 

“Unfortunately, it’s not a good time for the Runnion family or the rest of the community,” he said. 

Several other child murders in Southern California remain unsolved. 

Jahi Turner, 2, came to San Diego from Frederick, Md. just days before his April 25 disappearance from a playground in San Diego’s Balboa Park. Turner, who is still missing, was left alone by his stepfather, Teiray Jones, who told police the boy disappeared when he left to buy a soda. 

Victoria Angelica Ramirez, 10, of the Central California agricultural town of Hanford, vanished at a swap meet in nearby Visalia in 1994. Witnesses said she had argued with her mother and ran off. Her body was later found 30 miles away in an irrigation canal. The case remains unsolved. 

Riverside County authorities have sought a suspect in the kidnapping and killing of Anthony Martinez since April 1997. Martinez was abducted as he played in the front of his home. His body was found in a shallow grave two weeks later near Palm Springs.  

They believe the case is unrelated.


Roadshow pulls into town

By Brian Kluepfel, Special to the Daily Planet
Thursday July 18, 2002

Doctors Without Borders 

 

“Today, I was diagnosed with tuberculosis. I will have to stay in the hospital six months in order to be cured. Since I’ve been diagnosed fairly early, the chances of my recovery are good,” said a role player in a game put on by health organization Doctors Without Borders. 

The role-player’s anticipated recovery cannot be shared by many who get what is sometimes referred to as “the White Plague.” Every minute, four people around the globe die from this treatable disease, according to the international health care group. 

The volunteer organization was in Berkeley this week as part of a 30-city, yearlong tour of Access Expo, an exhibit that spotlights a lack of medical access in the developing world.  

Each year up to 14 million people die from treatable, infectious diseases, organizers said. 

The aim of the Access Expo is to collect one million signatures to send to President George W. Bush, and encourage pharmaceutical companies to consider health care before profits. Petitions, due in the Spring of 2003, will also go to the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America. People visiting the Access Expos’ 48-foot truck this week are asked to deposit signed postcards in pill-box shaped bins. 

The tour of the truck starts with participants spinning the “Wheel of Misfortune,” which determines the disease the participant must feign. One person’s spin comes up green.  

He is given a plastic laminated green card detailing his symptoms: “I live in Uzbekistan and have a continual cough, night sweats, and experience dizzy spells.” 

The participant enters the exhibit to learn about the illness. He reads about Lida from the Republic of Georgia who now has a multidrug resistant form of TB (many persons like Lida stop taking pills before the treatment is complete, resulting in these dangerous strains).  

The participant passes by a bank of eerily ticking clocks that show the number of people who die of worldwide maladies each minute.  

Then it’s time for the participant’s consultation.  

At a table at the rear of the truck, he describes his symptoms to Annie Whitehouse, a volunteer nurse with Doctors Without Borders. Whitehouse has spent the last year in the Republic of Abkhazia, which broke off from Georgia in the ’90s and is feeling the effect of the breakup of the former Soviet Union and years of civil war.  

Annie tells the participant that his prognosis is good if he keeps taking the pills. However, there is a catch. He has to stay in the hospital for six months. (The TB bacilli is spread most often through coughing or sneezing.) And the hospital is 15 miles away. 

“We’re dealing with medicines where the length of treatment is too long... what happens usually, is that they start the treatment, and then they stop it,” Whitehouse said. 

Brigg Reilley, an epidemiologist from Los Angeles, explained, “The problem we’re looking at with malaria and tuberculosis is that the main drugs are decades old – no new TB drugs have been developed in 30 years. Drug companies are going where the money is... drugs like Viagra and Rogaine. As a result, we’re worse off than we were in infectious diseases 10 years ago.”  

This is what the organization calls the “10/90 disequilibrium.” Doctors Without Borders statistics show that only 10 percent of global health research is devoted to conditions that account for 90 percent of global disease.  

Maria Vargas, a 17-year old senior at Ukiah High School, hopes to become a pediatrician. She is on campus visiting the UC Berkeley School of Medicine, and the exhibit opened this prospective doctor’s eyes. 

“I heard of this disease before but I never knew how bad it was,” she said. “We have to get the pharmaceutical companies aware that we need new medicines for these people.”


It’s not over yet

Sheila Newbery
Thursday July 18, 2002

To the Editor: 

At time when Americans have just caught sight of the tip of the iceberg of corporate malfeasance on Wall Street, it's a bracing exercise to pry our eyes from the balance sheet and glance at what's happening in the far reaches of our global empire where, when people lose out to corrupt corporate management, they pay not merely with their life savings, but with their very lives. 

Remember that at the Bhopal insecticide plant run by Union Carbide in the 1980s, emergency alert systems were deliberately turned off as part of cost-cutting measures meant to protect the bottom line. 

Nearly eighteen years later, the death toll from the largest industrial catastrophe in history stands at 20,000. And it is not over yet. 

Now, under pressure from the Union Carbide Corporation, and its parent, the Dow Chemical Corporation, the Indian government is seeking to use part of the Bhopal disaster victim reparations fund to clean up the contaminated soil and water of the region – a financial burden that ought to be borne not by the surviving, disease-ridden victims, but by Union Carbide and Dow. Moreover, as a sweetener to its Hindu voter base, the government wishes to stretch the limited reparations fund to include several districts, populated predominately by Hindus, which are thought never to have been exposed to the toxic clouds. 

Finally, and in a spirit wholly subservient to Wall Street hubris, it seems clear that the Indian authorities will succeed in diluting or dismissing the culpable homicide charges against Warren Anderson, former CEO of Union Carbide. 

What started as a case of sensational corporate negligence far removed from the American public's eye has evolved into a case of election manipulation and government corruption encouraged by unbridled corporate power – a destructive force that Americans have only just begun to examine critically.  

 

Sheila Newbery 

Berkeley 


Improvisation troupe makes fun out of current events

By Robert Hall, Special to the Daily Planet
Thursday July 18, 2002

‘Ripped from the News’ 

 

We’re in Vietnam in the 1960s, as a tough U.S. marine bends over the trembling local girl he’s about to ravish. “I’m an American,” he growls, leaning ominously nearer, “and this is what we do.” The line is about as politically incorrect as you can get these days—no one is supposed to poke fun at American imperialism—but as the climax of a wild and woolly satire, it brought down the house at the Magic Theater last weekend. 

Want to see this far-out, funny show for yourself? 

Sorry, you can’t. It will never be performed again. 

So why read about a play you can’t see? Because you can see the actors who created it, and that’s what counts. Called “True Fiction Magazine,” they’re a talented local troupe that invents a completely different show each night out of scraps of paper. 

The results are mixed, dud moments alternating with explosions of wit, but if you’re willing to ride out the dead spots, you’ll have a pretty good time. 

“True Fiction Magazine” has been around for fifteen years. Most improv groups specialize in skits, five or 10 minutes at most, but “Magazine” aims for sustained, evening-long narratives. It takes nerve to play this tricky game, but the troupe hits the target often, scoring bull’s-eyes along the way. 

In the show I saw, evil corporate execs kidnapped children and dogs to keep unruly employees in line. That’s just one sample of the off-beat flavor. 

“Magazine” calls its latest outing “Ripped from the News,” for reasons that become obvious once you enter the theater. There you’re greeted by a pile of newspapers, from which you’re invited to tear out a story. These cuttings are then tacked up around the play space, and the actors improvise from them. 

The results? On opening night the stories featured man-made viruses, walking fish, rapacious sea gulls and corporate greed.  

Impossible to meld these into a coherent narrative? “True Fiction Magazine” did it, sort of, by shooting for fun rather than sense, with predictably wacky results. Conjuring a homicidal mom, a fanatic EPA watchdog, a macho pilot, and a dysfunctional brat, they bounced from an Asian street market to a World Com board room to a Kabul-bound plane loaded with bubonic plague. 

They’ve got stopovers in a troubled household where all the servants were named Matilda. 

The effect was mind-bogglingly surreal. Lines like, “I’ve overstepped my intelligence,” tripped over lines like, “Someone has stolen Fluffy,” and, “If I don’t die inside a week, you’re in big trouble.” There were improvised songs, too: “The Walking Fish Blues,” and one that rhymed “Matilda” with “killed ya.” 

The five players, Paul Killam, Craig Neibaur, Diane Rachel, Regina Saisi and Barbara Scott are bright and skilled, and they work together well, giving one another time to slip in and out of every opportunity in the loopy narrative. Joshua Raoul Brody’s mocking music enhances the silliness, and Mark Rachel dims, brightens and tints the lighting effectively. Yet they, and their creation, were a little too polite. I longed for the manic invention of someone like Robin Williams. “True Fiction Magazine” inspired giggles and the occasional bellylaugh, but its material wore thin, and its careful method didn’t take enough chances, so that instead of being shot into the stratosphere, we circled pleasantly before landing with a gentle bounce. 

That’s not bad, and “True Fiction” is a likeable troupe, but I wanted them to lift me out of my seat. That isn’t to say their next one-of-a-kind fabrication won’t fly higher, and I would be unfair if I didn’t report a conversation with a Magic Theater V.I.P., who shall remain nameless. He’d seen “Ripped from the News” a couple of times already. “One night they were good,” he reported, “but the next night they were brilliant.” 

Maybe that’s the way it is with improv: you take your chances, and in the case of “True Fiction Magazine,” the choice between good and brilliant is better than lots of theaters offer. 


Arts Calendar

Staff
Thursday July 18, 2002

 

July 25 

Midsummer Motzart  

Festival Orchestra 

8 p.m. 

First Congregational Church 

2345 Channing Way 

Divertimento in D, Piano concerto #17, Symphony #38 “Prague” 

(415) 292-9624 for tickets 

$25-50 

Saturday, August 3 

Bata Ketu 

8 p.m.  

Alice Arts Center,  

1428 Alice St. 

Oakland. 

Interplay of Cuban and Brazilian  

music and dance  

www.lapena.org 

$20 

 

“Red Rivers Run Through Us”  

Until Aug. 11,  

Wed. - Sun.  

Noon to 5 p.m. 

Berkeley Art Center,  

1275 Walnut St. 

Art and writing from Maxine Hong Kingston's veterans' writing group 

Reception, 2 to 4 p.m.  

644-6893 

 

From the Attic: Preserving  

and Sharing our Past 

Until July 26, Thur.-Sat. 1 to 4 p.m. 

Veterans Memorial Building 

1931 Center St. 

Exhibit shows the 'inside' of museum work 

848-0181 

Free 

 

The Creation of People’s Park 

Through Aug. 31, Mon.-Thur. 9 to 9 p.m., Fri. 9 to 5 p.m., Sat. 1 to 5 p.m. Sun. 3 to 7 p.m. 

The Free Movement Speech Cafe  

UC Berkeley campus 

A photo exhibition, curated  

by Harold Adler 

hjadler@yahoo.com 

Free 

 

Jan Wurm: Paintings and Drawings 

Mon. and Fri. 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tues.-Thurs. 8:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. 

Flora Hewlett Library at the Graduate Theological Union 

2400 Ridge Road 

649-1417 

Saturday, July 20 

“First Anniversary  

Group Show”  

July 18 to Aug. 17 

Ardency Gallery, Aki Lot, 8th Street 

Reception, 5 to 8 p.m. 

13 local artists display work ranging from sculpture to mixed media 

836-0831 

 

Antony and Cleopatra 

Directed by Joy Meads 

Through July 20,  

Thurs.-Fri. 8 p.m. 

La Vals Subterranean Theater  

1834 Euclid 

234-6046 for reservations 

$14 general, $10 student 

 

 

Grease 

Through Aug. 10, Sunday matinees  

July 21,28 Aug. 4 

Contra Costa Civic Theater,  

951 Pomona Ave. El Cerrito 

Directed by Andrew Gabel 

524-9132 for reservations 

$17 general, $10 for under 16 and under 

 

Don Pasquale Opera 

July 17, 19 at 8 p.m.  

July 21 at 2 p.m. 

Dean Lesher Regional Center for the Arts, Walnut Creek 

From the Festival Opera  

Association, a comedy by  

Gaetano Donizetti about an arranged marriage 

www.festivalopera.com 

 

Benefactors 

July 18 to Aug. 18, Wed.-Sat. 8 p.m. Sun. 2 and 7 p.m. 

Previews: July 12-14 and 17 

Michael Frayn's comedy of two neighboring couple's interactions 

Aurora Theatre Company  

2081 Addison St. 

843-4822, www.auroratheater.org  

for reservations. $26 - $35  

 

The Shape of Things 

Sept. 13 to Oct. 20 

Aurora Theatre Company,  

2081 Addison St. 

Neil LaBute's love story  

about two students 

843-4822, www.auroratheater.org for reservations 

$26 - $35  

 

 

 

The Heidi Chronicles 

Through Aug. 10 Fri. and Sat. 8 p.m. 

Live Oak Theater, 1301 Shattuck 

Actors Ensemble of Berkeley present Wendy Wasserstein’s play about change. 

528-5620 

$10 

 

A Thousand and One Arabian Nights 

Through Sept. 28, Fri.-Sun. 8 p.m. Sun. 4 p.m. 

Forest Meadows Outdoor Amphitheater, Grand Avenue at the Dominican University, San Raphael 

Marin Shakespeare Company’s presents this classic story with original Arabic music. 

(415) 499-4488 for tickets 

$12, youth; $20 senior; $22 general 

 

Alarms and Excursions 

Nov. 15 to Dec. 22 

Aurora Theatre Company,  

2081 Addison St. 

Michael Frayn's comedy about the irony of modern technology 

843-4822, www.auroratheater.org for reservations 

$26 - $35  

 

 

 

 

Poetry Diversified 

First and third Tuesdays,  

7:30 to 9 p.m. 

World Ground Cafe,  

3726 Mac Arthur Blvd., Oakland 

Open mic and featured readers 

 

Boas Writing Group 

7:30 p.m. 

Cody's, 2454 Telegraph Ave. 

Stefani Barber, Jean Lieske  

and many more 

845-7852 

$2 

 

Open Mike and Featured Poet 

7 to 9 P.M. First Thursdays and second Wednesdays each month  

Albany Library 1247 Marin Ave 

Thursday, July 11: Poets Tenesha Smith-Douglas and Judith Annenbaum. 

Second Wednesdays are a monthly Poetry Writing Workshop, led by Alison Seevak.  

526-3720 Ext. 19 

Free 


Out & About Calendar

Staff
Thursday July 18, 2002


Thursday, July 18

 

Intro to Accessible  

Software and Hardware  

3 to 4:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Public Library - Central Branch 

Electronic Classroom (3rd Floor) 2090 Kittredge Ave.  

Non-profit training organization for software and hardware useful to seniors and disabled people in Berkeley. 

981-6121 for reservations 

Free 

 

art.Sites Paris 

7:30 p.m.  

Easy Going Travel Shop & Bookstore, 1385 Shattuck Ave.  

Slide show by Sidra Stich offers overview of Paris' exciting innovative changes, new museums, new art and media centers, parks etc. 

843-3533 

Free 

 

Mystique of the Wilderness 

7 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Phil Arnot presents slides from over 50 years of exploring such places as Alaska, New Zealand, the Sierra and the Rockies. 

527-4140 

Free 

 

"Green Building" Workshop 

6 to 8 p.m.  

Building Education Center, 812 Page Street 

With speaker Greg VanMechelen, Architect, VanMechelen Architects 

614-1699 or lclarke@stopwaste.org 

Free 

 

Simplicity Forum 

7 to 8:30 p.m.  

Claremont Branch Library, 2940 Benvenue Ave.  

Topic is the Cost of various life choices to the Planet well as to our Happiness, Pocketbook and Community. 

549-3509, or www.simpleliving.net. 

Free 

 

Introduction to Accessible  

Software and Hardware  

3:00 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Public Library Electronic Classroom, 2090 Kittredge Street 

RSVP to 981-6121 

 


Friday, July 19

 

Berkeley Women in Black 

Noon to 1 p.m. 

Telegraph and Bancroft 

In solidarity with Israeli and Palestinian Women in Black to urge an end to the occupation  

548-6310, wibberkeley.org 

 


Saturday, July 20

 

Public Meeting to Plan a New  

National Park in Richmond 

1:30 p.m. 

Oakland Museum, Lecture Hall, 1000 Oak St. (at Lake Merritt BART) 

Meeting to gather input for National Park Service to prepare plans that will guide development of historic WWII sites in Richmond. 

817-1517 

Free 

 

Puppet Shows 

1:30 to 2:30 p.m. 

Hall of Health, 2230 Shattuck Ave. (lower level) 

The Kids on the Block educational puppet troupe present a show about accepting and understanding physical, mental, medical and cultural differences. 

$2 donation, children under 3 free 

 

Emergency Preparedness  

Classes in Berkeley 

Earthquake Retrofitting: Learn how to strengthen your wood frame home. 

10 a.m. to 5 p.m. 

812 Page Street 

981-5605 

Free 

 

Connoisseurs' Marketplace 

(through July 21) 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. 

Santa Cruz Ave. Menlo Park (between El Camino Real and Johnson St. 

16th annual mid-summer festival of the arts featuring music, artisans, celebrity chefs, international cuisine, kids' fun zone and more. 

(650) 325-2818 

Free 

 

Berkeley Alliance of Neighborhood Associations (BANA)  

9:30 to ll a.m.  

Fireside room, Live Oak Park l30l Shattuck Avenue 

City wide neighborhood meeting on local issues. 

Mtbrcb@pacbell.net 

 


Sunday, July 21

 

Top of the Bay Family Days 

1 to 3 p.m. 

Lawrence Hall of Science, Centennial Drive, above UC campus 

Enjoy an afternoon outdoor concert in our family picnic area as well as art and science activities and hands-on exhibits inside LHS. 

643-5961 

$8 adults 

 


Monday, July 22

 

An evening of song & resistance 

7 p.m.  

AK Warehouse, 674-A 23rd St. Oakland 

With music from Samsara, James Tracy and David Rovics 

208-1700, or akpres@akpress.org 

$5 donation 

 


Tuesday, July 23

 

Myanmar (formerly Burma):  

"The Golden Land" 

7:30 p.m.  

Easy Going Travel Shop & Bookstore, 1385 Shattuck Ave.  

Ricky Fishman gives a slide presentation/talk about this isolated and remote land. 

843-3533 

Free 

 

Q & A with a  

Personal/Business Coach 

noon to 1 p.m. 

YWCA Turning Point Career Center, 2600 Bancroft Way 

For those interested in professional coaching careers, speak with a pro. 

848-6370 

$3 

 


Wednesday, July 24

 

Berkeley Gray Panthers  

General Meeting 

1:30 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center, 1901 Hearst St. 

Pharmacist Fred Mayer prescriptions and their costs, etc. 

548-9696  

Free 

 

Getting Help When You Need It 

7:30 to 9 p.m.  

Summit North Pavilion, Cafeteria Annex A 

350 Hawthorne Ave. Oakland 

Free interactive workshop to help caregivers obtain free assistance, deal with paid in-home help, and create plans to care for loved ones. 

869-6737 

Free 

 

"Green Building" Workshop 

6:30 to 8 p.m. 

Berkeley Public Library, Meeting Room A, 2090 Kittredge 

Henry Siegel, Architect, on how to use building materials that are healthier for your family and the environment.  

614-1699 

 


Thursday, July 25

 

Combat Medic: World War II 

7:30 p.m.  

Easy Going Travel Shop & Bookstore, 1385 Shattuck Ave.  

Memoir presentation by San Francisco physician John Kerner, describing experiences as a combat medic in World War II.  

843-3533 

 

California Landscapes:  

A Geologist's Perspective 

7 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

John Karachewski presents an educational slide show on such amazing places as the Sierra Nevada, Coast Ranges the Great Valley and Cascades 

For more information: (510) 527- 4140. 

Free 

 


Saturday, July 27

 

Test Ride Kestrel Bicycles 

11 a.m.-1 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Pristine Sandusky of Kestrel, a premier manufacturer of high-end, carbon-fiber road and mountain bikes, introduces their latest design. 

For more information: (510) 527-4140 

Free 

 

Graywater Workshop  

10 a.m. to 1 p.m. 

Ecology Center, 2530 San Pablo Ave 

Learn the ins and outs of reusing water with the Guerrilla Graywater Girls 

548-2220 x233  

$10 members, $15 non ( no one turned away for lack of funds) 

 

Santa Fe Right of Way Path Walk 

10 a.m. 

Meet at the Ohlone Greenway at Cedar St, in Cedar Rose Park. 

A new path opportunity, recently funded by the City Council. 

649-9874, 

http://www.internettime.com/path 

 

"Neon: The Living Flame" 

7:00 p.m.  

Alameda Museum, 2324 Alameda Ave.  

The Alameda Museum presents Michael Crowe, author, and neon artist Karl Hauser 

lecture by Michael Crowe 

748-0796 or 841-8489.  

Members free, non-members $5  

 

Grand Summer Rummage Sale 

9 a.m. to 4 p.m 

Berkeley Fellowship of Unitarian Universalists, Cedar and Bonita Streets 

A benefit for ANSWER- Act Now to Stop War and End Racism. Donations and volunteers are needed 

(415) 821-6545. 

 


Sunday, July 28

 

Hands-on Bicycle Repair  

11 a.m.-12 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Learn from an REI bike technician basic repairs such as brake adjustments and fixing a flat. 

For more information: (510) 527-4140 

Free 

 


Tuesday, July 30

 

The Birdhouse Chronicles:  

Surviving the Joys of Country Life 

7:30 p.m.  

Easy Going Travel Shop & Bookstore, 1385 Shattuck Ave.  

Reading and discussion of Cathleen Miller's personal account of moving from San Francisco to Amish Pennsylvania to restore an old house. 

843-3533 

Free 

 


Wednesday, July 31

 

Twilight Tours at UC Botanical Gardens 

through Aug. 28 5:30 p.m.  

200 Centennial Drive, Berkeley, CA.  

Tour the garden at twilight with an expert horticulturist every Wednesday. 

643-2755  

Free with garden admission.  

 

Mountain Adventure Seminars:  

Introduction to Rock Climbing 

7 p.m.-9 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

An introduction to rock climbing including knot tying, belaying and movement. 

For more information: (209) 753-6556 

$115 REI members; $125 non-members 

 


Thursday, August 1

 

Public Meeting to Plan New  

National Historic Park in Richmond 

1:30 p.m. 

Richmond Senior Center,  

2525 Macdonald Ave. 

Meeting to gather input for National Park Service to prepare plans that will guide development of historic WWII sites in Richmond. 

817-1517


Mountain View puts an end to Lions’ season

By Jared Green, Daily Planet Staff
Thursday July 18, 2002

Depleted Berkeley/Albany lineup can’t solve
Mountain View pitchers in state tournament
 

 

The Berkeley/Albany Lions’ season ended Wednesday night in a 3-1 loss to Mountain View in the Babe Ruth state tournament in San Leandro. 

The Lions, playing with a weakened lineup due to several key absences, managed to scratch across just one unearned run in the sixth inning as Mountain View’s Brian Johnson and Todd Frassotti combined to allow just three hits in the game. 

Berkeley/Albany’s best chance came right out of the gate, as a walk and two singles loaded the bases with one out in the top of the first inning. But Benny Goldenberg struck out and Joe Storno grounded out to end the inning without a run crossing the plate. 

“They did a pretty good job pitching against us today,” Berkeley manager Joe Pinguelo said. “We weren’t able to hit them very well. When we didn’t produce in the first inning, that really hurt us.” 

While the Lions were doing nothing with a lot of baserunners, Mountain View was efficient in the first three innings, taking advantage of three walks by Lions starter Randy Renn. Matt Martinez led off the first with a free pass, advanced to third on two groundouts and scored on an opposite field flare by Matt Means. 

Mountain View scored the deciding runs in the third. After two quick outs, Renn lost the plate and walked two batters. Means followed with another single, this one a line drive just over the leap of second baseman Derek Yow, scoring Jack Chapman from second.  

Bryan Beres’ single to center scored Johnson, although Berkeley/Albany centerfielder Chase Moore gunned down Means at the plate for the third out. Renn didn’t allow another hit in the game, but the three runs stood up. 

Moore led off with a double to start the next inning, but was called out for leaving early while tagging up on a flyball despite the protests of the Lions coaching staff. 

Franklin led off the sixth with his third straight walk and went to second on a wild pitch before scoring on an error by Mountain View shortstop Will Norton. The Lions had two men on with two outs, but Storno grounded out to second base. 

Three missing starters depleted the Berkeley/Albany bench, forcing Pinguelo to put every available player in the lineup. The result was an 0-for-13 day by the last five batters in the Lions order, which effectively snuffed any chance of an extended rally. 

“I definitely think that if we had our full roster here, we would have won this game,” said Pinguelo, who had to work the phones all afternoon just to get a full lineup. “It’s tough when you only have nine ballplayers show up.” 

Ricky Arias extended a ray of hope with a leadoff walk in the seventh, but Frassetti struck out the next three batters to end the game. 

Regardless of the disappointing finish, Pinguelo said he was satisfied with the summer season. The Lions advanced to the state tournament for the third straight year and were just two wins away from the championship game. 

“It’s been a fantastic season,” he said. “To get back to the state championships and come in in the top four, it’s nice to see for the kids.”


10 years later, firehouse OK’d

By Kurtis Alexander, Daily Planet Staff
Thursday July 18, 2002

Ten years after Berkeley voters supported a $55 million bond to improve fire protection, City Council approved a long-awaited plan for a fire station in the Berkeley hills. The unanimous decision came Tuesday night. 

“We’ve had four fires already in the month of June that could have been major problems in the hills, and we haven’t seen the worst of it yet,” said Berkeley Mayor Shirely Dean. “We need to keep the fire station project moving forward.” 

The station’s approval came after city leaders shot down arguments from residents who claimed the proposed firehouse does not live up to terms specified in the voter-approved 1992 Measure G bond. 

Critics have charged that the new station does not embrace the promised partnership with neighboring jurisdictions that includes, among other things, sharing costs.  

Additionally, some have argued that the new firehouse does not adequately address its goal of combating wildland fire threats, and instead merely replaces a nearby neighborhood station that has been left in disrepair. 

“We voted for what was promised in Measure G and that is not what is planned,” said Berkeley resident Cindy Fulton at Tuesday’s council meeting. She claimed the city’s actions were a case of “bait and switch.” 

But safety concerns lingering from the devastating hills fire of 1991 won out, and Tuesday night, City Council dismissed two legal appeals to the proposed fire station and certified the long-debated environmental impact report. 

City officials are still deciding whether they need approval from a county judge before moving forward with the project, given that changes have been made to the plan since voters approved it in 1992. 

“I believe that nothing significant was changed,” Dean said. 

The new fire station is blueprinted to be a two-story building cut into the hillside at 3000 Shasta Road and encompass 6,800 square feet of space for four fire vehicles. The city is expected to house a year-round city fire crew at the facility and host summer firefighters from the East Bay Regional Park District. 

City fire officials did not return repeated phone calls to discuss the station’s firefighting capacity. Chief Reginald Garcia, at Tuesday night’s council meeting, though, said the proposed station “represents a significant increase and improvement in fire protection in the hills area.” 

The chief’s plea to approve the station was backed by city planners who said in a staff report that “there is no basis to the appeal [of the project].” 

Specifically, at Tuesday’s meeting, protest to the project was packaged as an appeal of two city use permits, a building variance and the project’s environmental impact report. 

Noise, loss of scenery and an incomplete study of alternative projects were cited as problems, in an appeal filed by Berkeley resident Peter Cukor. 

The second appeal of the project challenged the project’s landscaping and requested that only native plants be used to dress up the site. The city agreed to the request. 

City leaders have also scheduled a public hearing July 23 regarding the amendment of a tree ordinance, which would allow relocation of a live oak tree from the building site. 

The city’s fire department would not say when it hopes to start construction of the new fire station. 

 


Racial data impacts public policy

Tom Bates
Thursday July 18, 2002

To the Editor: 

The Racial Privacy Initiative is very much alive and is one to watch. The initiative cleverly wraps itself in the banner of individual rights and protecting personal privacy. But it is not at all about rights. It’s about denial: denial that racial inequalities continue to persist in our society. If passed, the initiative will amend the California Constitution to prohibit the state government from collecting information on the race and ethnicity of people needing or receiving government services. 

The major reason for the government to collect racial data is to allow us to evaluate the effects of special policies and actions taken by the government and the private sector. For example, physicians and epidemiologists have demonstrated that collecting data about race and ethnicity is of great importance in improving public health measures. The social and economic health of our citizens is no less important, and indeed, directly impacts physical health. 

Racial data are essential to assure that bank loans and mortgages are made in accordance with nondiscrimination laws, and to see where our educational delivery may be falling short. We need to collect racial data to assure that everyone is being treated in a fair and equitable way. Why would we not want to have this information? We all benefit when public health programs target specific ethnic groups with appropriate health education, based on their experiences and needs. We all benefit when public contract money is distributed in a fair and racially nondiscriminatory way. We all benefit when our friends and neighbors are treated ethically by lending institutions. We need to continue to know if our policies and actions are increasing or decreasing the health and well-being of different racial groups. Our obligation to know is directly linked to the 14th Amendment, which guarantees “equal protection” of all citizens. 

I’ve had to ask myself why the Racial Privacy Initiative would be placed on the ballot. Even if the sponsors and supporters of this initiative have the best motives (which they assert is to try to reduce racial inequality) the effect of its passage would mean that we will not be able to identify racially discriminatory practices. By making it illegal for racial data to be collected, the Initiative would deprive policy makers and the public of the only way we can follow compliance with long-standing nondiscrimination laws. If we don’t gather information we won’t know, and if we don’t know, as a society we certainly won’t be able to act. 

 

Tom Bates 

former state Assemblyman


Concert receipts increase with ticket prices

By Nekesa Mumbi Moody, The Associated Press
Thursday July 18, 2002

NEW YORK — Concert grosses for the first half of the year were up 17 percent, but so were ticket prices — the average cost of a ticket for top tours was about $51, compared to $47 last year, according to an industry report. 

Attendance at concerts was down for a second straight year, according to the survey released Friday by Pollstar, a weekly trade publication. 

The survey of the top 50 tours, including those by Paul McCartney, ’N Sync, the Dave Matthews Band and Creed, showed that from January to June, the top tours recorded about $538 million in sales, compared to last year’s $508 million. 

The record for that period was in 2000, when $579 million worth of tickets were sold. 

But the survey also showed that the top 50 concerts combined sold about 10.6 million tickets, down 300,000, or 3 percent, from last year. In 2000, 12.9 million tickets were sold in the first half of the year. 

“When you’ve lost essentially 2 million ticket buyers in the space of a couple of years, you have to wonder where those people went and what it will take to bring them back,” Gary Bongiovanni of Pollstar said Monday. 

The top-grossing tour was Paul McCartney’s, which grossed about $53 million. That was followed by Billy Joel and Elton John; the Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young reunion tour; ’N Sync; and the Dave Matthews Band.


Angels edge ahead of A’s with 10-4 victory

By Greg Beacham, The Associated Press
Thursday July 18, 2002

OAKLAND – Garret Anderson homered and doubled, and light-hitting Jorge Fabregas drove in the go-ahead run Wednesday night as the Anaheim Angels edged back ahead of Oakland in the AL West standings, beating the Athletics 10-4. 

David Eckstein hit a three-run homer and reached base five times for the Angels, who jumped all over Tim Hudson for a rare victory over their upstate rivals. Anaheim has won just four of its last 19 meetings with the A’s. 

In the first of two games at the Coliseum, Anaheim (55-38) moved in front of the A’s (55-40) for second place in the tight division race. The Angels also got a good start to a string of 11 straight games against Oakland and Seattle. 

Anaheim’s lengthy injury list got longer with the pregame addition of catcher Bengie Molina, who went on the disabled list with a strained hamstring. Fabregas, who entered the game hitting .206, went 1-for-4 in Molina’s place, but he got the game’s key hit against Hudson (7-8) in the sixth. 

Miguel Tejada, Jermaine Dye and John Mabry homered for the A’s, who might have been feeling the effects of a 3 a.m. arrival in Oakland on Wednesday following a cross-country flight from Tampa Bay. The A’s, who went 5-1 on their road trip, lost for just the third time in 11 games. 

The Angels rallied from a 3-2 deficit by batting around in a three-run sixth. Scott Spiezio, who had three hits and three runs scored, had an RBI double before Fabregas put Anaheim ahead with a single up the middle off Hudson, who allowed eight hits and walked three in 5 1-3 lackluster innings. 

It was a distubring turn for Hudson, who was back in the dismal form he showed during an eight-game winless skid in May and June. He had won four of his previous six starts, allowing just one run in his last three. 

Anaheim added four more while batting around again in the eighth. Eckstein, the Angels’ diminutive leadoff hitter, cracked his fifth homer of the season over the left-field fence against reliever Mike Venafro. 

Former A’s starter Kevin Appier (8-7) allowed seven hits and four walks over six shaky innings, but he kept the A’s off the scoreboard except on their two homers. 

Anderson put the Angels up 2-0 in the first after Hudson threw high and tight with a 2-2 pitch. Anderson glared at Hudson, dusted himself off and launched the next pitch past the right-field pole. It was his 18th homer. 

Notes: OF Darin Erstad didn’t start, but he was available to pinch-hit for Anaheim. Erstad, who’s in an 0-for-17 slump, had a blood blister drained from the top of his left foot on Tuesday. ... Attendance at the Coliseum, helped by $1 hot dogs, was a surprisingly robust 38,547. ... Eric Chavez went hitless in four at-bats. He’s in the middle of an 0-for-25 skid — the worst of his career. ... Angels closer Troy Percival and relievers Dennis Cook and Al Levine also are injured.


Claremont gets ‘landmark’ status

By Kurtis Alexander, Daily Planet Staff
Thursday July 18, 2002

Neighbors show mixed reactions 

 

Berkeley residents showed strong, varied reactions to protection measures put in place Tuesday to preserve the historical facade of the Claremont Resort and Spa. 

Surrounded on three sides by the city of Berkeley, but sitting on a finger of Oakland, the Claremont was granted “landmark” status by Oakland City Council for its stately, 85-year-old physical structure. The designation puts extensive restrictions on the changes that can be made to it. 

While the “landmark” designation was widely celebrated, many neighbors were disappointed that Oakland leaders failed to grant the same protection to the resort’s 15-acre grounds.  

Critics fear that the resort owner, Palm Spring-based KSL Resorts Corp., could build additional facilities on the property and ruin the Claremont’s historical integrity. 

“Buildings on the grounds could drastically affect views, ambiance and open sight lines,” neighbor Wendy Markel said. 

Neighbor Ellen Peterson noted that the hotel has expressed interest in building a three-story parking garage and condominiums on the site. 

In lieu of granting “landmark” status to the property, Oakland’s City Council strengthened the zoning standards in an attempt to prevent overdevelopment.  

“Our measures give a much higher level of protection for the grounds than if they were not there,” said Oakland Councilmember Jane Brunner, who represents north Oakland. 

Anything built on the Claremont property is required to be “in harmony” with the main building, she said. 

“My preference would have been to landmark the entire grounds or at least a part of it but I wasn’t going to get that [support from other councilmembers],” Brunner said. “As it stands, it gives the hotel the right to manage it’s property but still gives the community certain protections.” 

Claremont officials applauded council’s action. The hotel had been on record for supporting neighborhood calls to grant “landmark” status to their building, but not the grounds. 

“We’re very pleased with the decision taken by the Oakland City Council,” the resort said in a written statement. 

Neighbors, formally organized as the Berkeley Oakland Neighbors of the Claremont, had gathered 900 signatures on a petition calling for “landmark” designation for both the hotel and the grounds. 

For this reason, Berkeley Councilmember Kriss Worthington was critical of Oakland’s decision. 

“I’m glad the building was landmarked, but I don’t think the grounds decision respects the concerns of the community or the magnificence of the property,” he said. 

“Oakland’s decision tells KSL that the Oakland City Council will blink,” Worthington said. “A one block difference in the Claremont’s location would have made a big difference [in the outcome of the ‘landmark’ decision].” 


Increase in mass transit ridership could boost newspaper readership

Rose M. Green
Thursday July 18, 2002

To the Editor: 

First, accept my compliments for the great improvement you’ve made in the paper. One thing in particular impresses me and that is your sticking to the “Letters to the Editor” rule that only 350 words or less are acceptable. Though I complained to your predecessor, I never saw any change. You now have room for three and often more letters on the page. Thank you. 

Second, I think the Daily Planet and other publications eager to increase their circulation should support mass transit. People driving in cars don’t read; they listen to the radio. 

It’s so obvious that AC Transit and BART riders are your best bet for more readership, I’ve often wondered why newspapers and magazines don’t see it. As a nondriver myself, I never board a bus or train without something to read. 

Keep up the good work. 

 

Rose M. Green 

Berkeley


Classical guitar duo to perform at Freight & Salvage

By Ian Stewart, Special to the Daily Planet
Thursday July 18, 2002

Sure, summer is here. And even though the fog sometimes plays havoc with the concept of the perfect, dreamy summer dusk – you know the kind where you can sit on a porch and lazily watch the sun set, batting away flies and listening to deep, melodic tunes – the concept of dreamy isn't lost to musicians Paolo Giordano and Michael Manring. Their music, which swirls like a firefly out of reach, sets the perfect tone for a twilight of gazing, reflection and pure dreaminess, even if there is fog. To promote their new CD "Kids in a Toyshop (Step Musique)," Italian acoustic guitarist Paolo Giordano and Oakland bassist Michael Manring are playing a show at Berkeley's Freight & Salvage Coffeehouse this evening. 

On the CD, Giordano plays acoustic and slide guitar and performs the vocals, while Manring is strictly bass. Though the album also features Jacqueline Perkins on vocals and Alex Acuna on percussion, tonight just Giordano and Manring will be playing– though that should satisfy pretty much anyone interested in a night of astonishing, ambient music. 

Giordano and Manring have a long history of producing absorbing music, both together and separately with various solo efforts. This may be the second CD collaboration between them but it sounds like they've been playing together for years, and they have– for nearly a decade. This is their second United States tour. 

Their musical resumes cover a huge swath of varying musical styles and distinct musicians. Giordano, mostly known for classical guitar, has worked with guitarists such as Pierre Bensusan, Peter Finger, Alex De Grassim, Michael Hedges and Lucio Dalla. He also has worked with singer Patti Cathcart, from the duo known as Tuck & Patti. 

Manring, on the other hand, known for his unorthodox tunings, techniques and methodologies, has worked with the Yo Miles group, New Age keyboardist Suzanne Ciani, Henry Kaiser, John Gorka, and with the late Michael Hedges, with whom he had a fifteen-year collaboration. He has recorded with the experimental post-metal trio, Attention Deficit, which features Tim Alexander of Primus and Alex Skolnick of Testament. Manring also plays with the Seattle punk-jazz trio Sadhappy and has published four solo albums through Windham Hill records, where he was the house bassist. He has two gold records, Grammy and Bammie nominations and is a Berkeley School of Music Distinguished Alumni Award winner. He has also been featured on a recent PBS documentary, "The Artist's Profile: Michael Manring." 


Council candidate urges ‘transparency’

By David Scharfenberg, Daily Planet staff
Thursday July 18, 2002

This story is part of a series that will profile city election candidates. 

 

For Anne Wagley, City Council candidate in District 8, it’s all about process. 

“I’m very concerned with fair process and transparency,” said Wagley. “I would like to make sure that when a decision is made, everyone who had an interest felt they were heard.” 

Wagley’s supporters say it is her commitment to process, and her ability to listen, that attracts them to her candidacy. 

“She’ll probably vote for projects I don’t like,” said Tim Hansen, who serves on the board of the Berkeley Architectural Heritage Association. “But she’ll be fair. And I think that’s all you can ask.” 

Supporters say that fairness and transparency will be a relief to neighbors who often feel left in the dark as development projects move through the system. 

“I am looking for candidates who are going to understand neighborhood points-of-view, and Anne has proven she cares,” said Landmarks Commission Chairperson Carrie Olson.  

Wagley, 46, currently heads the Peace and Justice Commission. She also serves on the board of a local human rights group and family foundation, the Dallas-based Partnership Foundation, that has funneled $300,000 in grants to East Bay organizations focused on social justice issues. 

Wagley faces three rivals in her bid for the District 8 seat – Planning Commissioner Gordon Wozniak, Zoning Adjustments Board Commissioner Andy Katz and Housing Advisory Commissioner Jay Vega. Incumbent Polly Armstrong will not run for re-election. 

The district, located in southeast Berkeley, has a tradition of producing moderate councilmembers like Armstrong. But progressive Chris Kavanagh nearly unseated Armstrong in 1996. Observers say the district is almost evenly split between moderate and progressive voters. 

“I know it’s not as easy a district for us as we always thought it was,” said moderate councilmember Betty Olds, who is backing Wozniak. 

In a district of both moderates and progressives, homeowners and renters, seniors and students, candidates have worked to place themselves in the middle, shunning the traditional “moderate” and “progressive” labels and arguing that the two sides must come together. 

Still, those traditional labels have begun to creep into the campaign. Wozniak said Wednesday that his base is in the moderate camp. Katz said that tenants’ rights will be a guiding theme for his candidacy. Vega could not be reached for comment. 

Wagley, who aligns herself with the upstart Berkeley Party, sought to place herself outside the fray. She will not seek endorsements from sitting City Councilmembers, in an attempt to distance herself from the notoriously divided body, she said. 

Progressive Councilmember Dona Spring, who has endorsed Katz, said Wagley could be effective at bridging the divide on the council. 

“I think she has the potential to work with people coming from different political views – spanning the political spectrum from progressive, liberal to moderate, conservative,” Spring said, adding that Katz could bring similar skills to the council. 

But Wagley said transparency and bridging the progressive-moderate gulf will not be her only issues. A recent wave of car break-ins in the neighborhood is also a concern, she said. 

“We think we’re fairly isolated here, but we’re not,” she said. 

Wagley said the police will probably have to remain focused on other neighborhoods with higher crime rates. But she suggested that residents look out for each other and refrain from leaving cell phones and loose change in their cars. 

Wozniak said he has also picked up on the issue, making the rounds in the neighborhood. He suggested that the police might temporarily beef up their presence in the area during the crime wave. 

All the candidates say traffic is an issue in the district. Wagley said she supports transit passes, or “Eco Passes,” for the employees of UC Berkeley and other large employers in the area to ease traffic. Katz, who helped negotiate an EcoPass deal for UC Berkeley students, and Wozniak also voiced support for the concept. 

Wagley, who worked as a financial analyst for Chemical Bank in the late 1970s and early 1980s, said she will also bring budget expertise to bear as the city faces a $3 million shortfall. 

But ultimately, she said, it will be about listening to neighbors. 

“I’m a very open, friendly person,” she said. “I’m approachable and I’m a good listener.”


News of the Weird

Staff
Thursday July 18, 2002

Brooklyn Bridge for sale? 

 

BROOKLYN, Iowa — Wanna buy the Brooklyn Bridge? 

Not the New York City landmark — but the one in Brooklyn, Iowa. 

Mayor Jim Rhinehart thinks the bridge over Little Bear Creek could be resold now that a $1.7 million replacement is on the way. 

“We’re trying to figure out what to do with that bridge,” said Rhinehart, mayor of the town of 1,367 people about 40 miles west of Iowa City. 

The narrow steel truss, built in 1927, could be used as a driveway, for example, or put in a park or recreation area. 

“I thought we should put it on the Internet,” said local businessman Alex Wehrle. “There aren’t too many Brooklyn Bridges for sale.” 

 

Canine not a qualified elector 

 

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — It’s back to the doghouse for one aspiring House candidate. 

State election officials refused to qualify Percy, a 5-year-old border collie mix, as a rival to Secretary of State Katherine Harris in her bid for Congress. 

Percy barked loudly when veteran elections official Ed Kast told the dog’s owner, Wayne Genthner, his dog didn’t meet the state’s elections requirements. 

“He’s a canine and therefore not a qualified elector,” Kast said. 

Genthner, a Republican, then decided he’d run himself as a write-in candidate. The 42-year-old charter boat captain said he was frustrated with highly financed, sterile campaigns that avoid meaningful debate. 

“People are almost disdainful of the political system as it is now,” Genthner said. “Percy exists to me as a binding none-of-the above ballot selection.” 

Percy and his volunteer campaign staff had been handing out flyers with slogans such as, “Never made a mess in the House! Never will!” and “PERCY! Putting the LICK back into Republican.” 

Harris, who drew worldwide attention in her role as Florida’s chief elections officer during the 2000 presidential recount, is a heavy favorite to win the race. 


Radical Delacour joins school board race

By David Scharfenberg, Daily Planet staff
Thursday July 18, 2002

Michael Delacour, a four-time candidate for mayor, has joined the school board race. And he’s got a radical message. 

“I run on a working-class program,” Delacour said, arguing that the schools need to stop “creating slaves for the corporate machine.” 

Delacour said, as a school board member, he would push for more working-class history in the schools. He would also provide education for students who might end up outside the system. 

“Let’s prepare them for being homeless,” he said. 

Delacour did not take a position on getting the district out of its financial mess – prefering to look beyond the numbers at the general direction of the school system. He also declined to take a position on converting Berkeley High School to a series of small schools by fall 2003.


CSU drafting tougher policies for smokers

The Associated Press
Thursday July 18, 2002

LONG BEACH — California State University’s board of trustees took its first step Wednesday toward adopting tougher policies for smokers at its 23 campuses. 

The trustees directed committee members to draft a policy that would give CSU presidents the authority to set smoking regulations, such as banning smoking within 20 feet of campus buildings, said CSU spokeswoman Clara Potes-Fellow. 

The 20-foot rule has been heavily lobbied by anti-smoking advocates and CSU students, who petitioned the trustees earlier this year to adopt stricter smoking policies. 

“It doesn’t mean each president will create a rule that says you can’t smoke 20 feet from the building. But it means they will have the authority to decide,” she said. “It could be a longer distance or a shorter distance.” 

The trustees are expected to adopt the policy at their September meeting. 

Under the policy, Potes-Fellow said CSU presidents could ban smoking altogether on campuses. 

“It’s an option they would have,” she said, adding that an outright ban was unlikely. 

Potes-Fellow also said campus presidents would be required to consult with faculty and staff before making any policy change because it would affect working conditions. 

“The campus presidents will have to work with the faculty, staff and students to come up with an acceptable policy,” she said. 

Smoking has been banned in California’s public buildings since 1994. CSU prohibits smoking within five feet of the entrances and exits of buildings, a limit set by state law. Some campuses have implemented even stricter guidelines, limiting smokers to 15 feet to 30 feet from campus buildings.


Politics fuels controversy in Pledge decision

By Linda Deutsch, The Associated Press
Thursday July 18, 2002

CORONADO — When a plane trailing a banner declaring “One Nation Under God” flew over the home of an appellate judge and demonstrators surrounded the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeal, the two jurists who sparked the reaction were surprised. 

“It’s the noisiest thing I’ve ever experienced,” said Circuit Judge Alfred T. Goodwin who, with his colleague, Circuit Judge Stephen Reinhardt, heard plenty of feedback about their Pledge of Allegiance decision at this week’s annual 9th Circuit conference. 

“I think it’s a bit excessive,” said Reinhardt, who was at his office last Saturday when he heard about crowds of demonstrators and a plane with a banner flying over his home. 

Reinhardt quipped that the controversy may be more heated because “It’s the middle of the summer and there are no scandals.” 

But he and Goodwin said that politics, notably the upcoming congressional elections, are fueling the controversy. 

“I can’t think of any decision where the entire Congress immediately rushes to condemn a decision by the court,” Reinhardt said. “It’s getting to be election time and this gives everyone in Congress a chance to prove they are patriotic.” 

Goodwin noted that, “The climate of public opinion is different after 9/11. There’s anxiety. There’s fear and it’s an even numbered year so you have a political reality.” 

Goodwin, who wrote the decision, said criticism also was exacerbated by misleading news reports. 

“The first sound bites that went out said the court had ruled the Pledge of Allegiance unconstitutional, which it didn’t,” said Goodwin. He said the only thing ruled unconstitutional was the phrase “one nation under God” being required during recitations in schools by school children. 

The lawsuit that brought the decision was filed by a California atheist, Michael Newdow, who did not want his second-grade daughter to be forced to listen to the pledge. the 2-1 decision held that the phrase amounts to a government endorsement of religion. The words “under God” were inserted by Congress in 1954 after a campaign by the Knights of Columbus, a Roman Catholic organization. 

The dissenting judge on the pledge decision, Ferdinand Fernandez, did not attend the gathering of the nation’s largest circuit court which drew hundreds of jurists. 

The 78-year-old Goodwin noted that when he learned the pledge, the phrase “under God” was not included and until the case was brought before the court, “I can’t recall giving it much thought.”


Energy regulators increase power price cap in West

The Associated Press
Thursday July 18, 2002

WASHINGTON — Federal energy regulators on Wednesday capped electricity prices in California and other western states at $250 per megawatt hour, beginning on Oct. 1. 

However, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission also put in place a process that could lower wholesale power prices when they top $92 per megawatt hour — if certain criteria are met. 

Power prices currently are capped at $92 per megawatt hour through September. 

A megawatt is enough to power about 750 homes. 

California power officials and political leaders had asked FERC to leave the lower limits in place. 

FERC said it would maintain a requirement that power generators make all their power available for sale, preventing them from withholding power as a way to force prices to rise. 

The commission also voted to overhaul the board of the California Independent System Operator, which manages most of the state’s electricity grid. 

FERC said the board is not independent. 

 


Apple announces big-screen iMac, MP3 player

By Peter Svensson, The Associated Press
Thursday July 18, 2002

NEW YORK — Apple Computer Inc. Wednesday announced Windows versions of the acclaimed iPod digital music players, moving Apple more firmly into the PC peripherals market. 

Chief executive Steven Jobs, speaking at the MacWorld Expo and Conference here, also unveiled a new iMac computer with a larger display. 

The iMac, available in two weeks, has a 17-inch flat-panel display and a DVD-burning drive. It will sell for $1999. 

The most expensive of the existing iMac models, which have 15-inch screens, had its price reduced by $100 to $1799. 

Jobs also announced $100 price cuts on the slim white iPod MP3 players, bringing the 5-gigabyte model to $299 and the 10-gigabyte model to $399. A 20-gigabyte model, holding approximately 4,000 songs, will be introduced in early August. 

Current iPod models are made to connect only to Apple’s Macintosh computers. Windows versions of all three models will be available at the end of August. 

On Tuesday, Cupertino, Calif.-based Apple reported disappointing second quarter sales, reflecting an industrywide slowdown. 

“We are investing, and we are going to innovate ourselves out of this downturn,” Jobs said in his keynote speech. 

At midday on the Nasdaq Stock Market, Apple shares were down $2.36, or 13 percent, at $15.50. 

Noting that most Web sites that once provided free file storage and e-mail now charge fees for some or all of their services, Jobs said Apple will start charging $99 a year for its iTools services in September. 

ITools, which includes e-mail, file storage and online photo albums, will be expanded with calendar, backup and antivirus functions, and its name will be changed to ”.mac,” Job said. 

“Where did we get this name? Well, Microsoft has .NET, which is about Internet services, and that’s what iTools is all about,” he said, referring to Microsoft’s program of tying Internet services to its software. 

Jobs also touted the new version its OS X operating system, called Version 10.2 Jaguar. It will go on sale Aug. 24 for $129. It has incremental improvements in several areas, including file organization and networking. 

Responding to media reports that users have been adopting OS X slowly since its introduction last year, Jobs said the transition from older operating systems was “going well.” 

He projected that 20 percent, or 5 million, of all Macintosh computers would be running OS X by the end of the year. 

The keynote speech opened with video testimonials by Windows users who had switched to Macintosh, echoing a current marketing campaign. 

“The response we’ve had to this campaign is off the chart,” Jobs said, noting that a Web site set up in connection with the campaign has been visited by 1 million Windows users since set up June 10. 


Regents object to including K-12 in master plan

By Michelle Locke, The Associated Press
Thursday July 18, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — University of California officials are reacting warily to an ambitious proposal to bring the entire state education system, from preschool to Ph.D.s, under the same organizational framework. 

Major concerns include a proposal to drop extra credit for honors courses and a plan to create a new commission responsible for approving all education programs. 

California’s public universities and community colleges now operate under principles set out in the 40-year-old Master Plan for Higher Education. 

The new project, started in 1999 and being carried out by a legislative committee, would extend that planning document to include the K-12 system. 

On Wednesday, UC regents meeting for their regular session in San Francisco raised a number of objections to a rough draft of the new plan released in May. 

“My main concern is that ... we don’t destroy the benefits that the current plan has given us,” said Regent John Davies. 

Calls by The Associated Press to the committee working on the report were not immediately returned Wednesday. 

The master plan was written to cope with the wave of college-aged Baby Boomers that added 600,000 students to the higher education system within a single decade. 

Legislators say bringing California’s troubled K-12 system under the plan will provide a coherent framework for improvement. Several other states have already streamlined their system. In Florida, for instance, all public education is under a single state board. 

UC officials agree higher education must collaborate with the K-12 system, but they have problems with some of the changes proposed in the draft report. 

Regents indicated they’d be unlikely to support a proposal to eliminate extra credit for advanced-placement classes. Many California public universities give five points for an “A” in such a course because it is more difficult than a regular class. 

Legislators say that’s unfair, since about 15 percent of the state’s public high schools didn’t offer advanced-placement courses in the 1999-2000 school year. Schools without the courses tended to be predominantly made up of minority and low-income students. 

In 1999, regents rejected a proposal to drop the extra credit from one point to half a point. 

Regardless of what the plan ultimately says on extra points, regents must approve any change to UC admissions policy, since the system is not required under state law to follow all policies passed by the Legislature. 

Another change that UC opposes is a plan to replace the California Postsecondary Education Commission with a new commission responsible for approving K-16 educational programs. UC officials say they’re worried that the new commission will be overwhelmed by the problems of the K-12 system. 

UC is proposing keeping the postsecondary commission and giving the new commission review rather than approval power over higher education. 

UC President Richard C. Atkinson said some of the draft report wording may be inadvertent. 

For instance, a section of the draft referring to transferring community college students says they can go to “any” CSU or UC campus. In fact, admission to the top campuses in UC’s nine-campus system is very competitive. 

UC has representatives working with the legislative committee on the new report, but regents said their comments don’t always make it into the final report. 

“Many of the conclusions that seem to be written into the report are not the result of the committees that met,” said Regent Judith Hopkinson. “There are hidden agendas here.” 


Killer of Stanton girl likely to strike again, FBI says

By Chelsea J. Carter, The Associated Press
Thursday July 18, 2002

STANTON— The body of a kidnapped 5-year-old girl was dumped in the open near a rural highway like a “calling card” warning that the killer intends to strike again, investigators said Wednesday. 

Samantha Runnion was believed to have been sexually assaulted and there were signs of trauma to her nude body but no clear cause of death, Orange County Sheriff Mike Carona told a press conference near the girl’s home. An autopsy was under way. 

“Don’t sleep, don’t eat, because we’re coming after you,” Carona warned the killer, saying he is likely both a serial rapist and serial killer. 

A sexual predator who kills is going to do it again, FBI agent Richard Garcia said. The body was found Tuesday, less than 24 hours after the kidnapping. 

“The way the body was found, the fact it was not buried, not hidden and such, and how it was left is almost like a calling card, like a challenge: ’I’m here and I’m coming back again.’ This is the reason why we’re saying this person is going to strike again,” he said. 

Samantha’s 27-year-old mother, Erin Runnion, who made an anguished plea for the return of her daughter a day earlier, stayed in seclusion after the body’s identification. 

The news spread fear in Stanton, a city of 38,000 southeast of Los Angeles. 

Tammie Fike, 31, clutched the hand of her 6-year-old son, Anthony, as she headed to a memorial to say a prayer for Samantha. “I’m scared to let him go out,” said Fike, who instructed her son to yell “fire” and to run if a stranger approached him. 

“I’m only allowed to talk to friends of my mom,” Anthony said. 

Brenda van Dam, whose daughter Danielle was abducted and killed in February in San Diego, said she spoke with Samantha’s mother to offer consolation. 

“They were both sweet, wonderful girls who loved life and their family,” van Dam said in a statement released to reporters. 

Garcia addressed the unknown killer directly during the televised news conference. 

“The individual is in fact watching us right now. I want to tell you ... we will find you and we will bring you to justice,” Garcia said. 

The kidnapper was described as Hispanic, but used Americanized language that indicated he was probably not foreign-born. He had slicked-back black hair and a thin black mustache and wore a powder blue button-down shirt at the time. 

Samantha’s abduction Monday evening was the nation’s fourth high-profile disappearance of a child this year. Her remains were identified by her grandmother through photos from the site where the body was found. 

The body was discovered Tuesday afternoon in neighboring Riverside County near two-lane Highway 74 on the edge of the Cleveland National Forest, about 50 miles from Stanton. The road is a heavily traveled route between the two counties. 

Two men spotted the body about 3 p.m. in a ravine near a hang-gliding launch site. 

“Because the body was found very quickly, we have a high expectation that there will be significant forensic evidence found at the scene and significant forensic evidence found on the body of Samantha Runnion,” the sheriff said. 

Samantha and friend Sarah Ahn, 5, were sitting on a wall playing a guessing game about 150 feet from Samantha’s home Monday evening when a man drove up in a two-door light green Honda or Acura after making a U-turn. The man got out and asked for help finding his puppy, then took off with the kicking and screaming girl. 

Samantha’s mother, a British Petroleum analyst in Long Beach, and stepfather, Ken Donnelly, who works at an investment firm, were at work and her grandmother, Virginia Runnion, was at home at the time. 

Samantha’s biological father, Derek Jackson of Sunderland, Mass., was contacted by authorities and ruled out as a suspect, Erin Runnion said Tuesday. 

Samantha, who was born in Massachusetts, would have turned 6 on July 26. She was an advanced student who had just finished first grade at a private elementary school. 

Her abduction follows the high-profile cases of 14-year-old Elizabeth Smart in Salt Lake City and 7-year-old Danielle van Dam and 2-year-old Jahi Turner in San Diego. Danielle’ body was found and a neighbor is on trial. Elizabeth and Jahi remain missing. 


Coliform bacteria detected in San Diego’s water provider

The Associated Press
Thursday July 18, 2002

SAN DIEGO — Tests detected the presence of coliform bacteria in the water supply of San Diego County’s main water provider, officials said Wednesday. 

Tests from three treated water pipelines detected coliform, an indicator of the possible presence of fecal or harmful E. coli bacteria. 

The tests did not find any E. coli in the water, leading authorities to suspect the results were error. Results from a second round of tests were expected by Thursday. 

A check of local hospitals and schools didn’t turn up an increase in gastrointestinal complaints that would be an indicator of E. coli contamination, said spokeswoman Donna Nenow. 

“The fact that there’s clean water on both ends and we’re showing a reflection of coliform bacteria in the middle doesn’t make a lot of sense,” Nenow said. 


Interim police chief lays out vision for the city

By David Scharfenberg, Daily Planet staff
Wednesday July 17, 2002

Roy Meisner, Berkeley’s new interim police chief, inherited a pile of paperwork when he took over for retired chief Dash Butler this weekend. But he seems more interested in what he calls “people work.” 

“We need to really get to know the community better,” said Meisner. “Part of that is getting out of your car and meeting people.” 

Meisner demurred when asked if he has designs on a permanent placement.  

But he suggested that he will throw his hat in the ring as the city begins a lengthy search for a new chief. 

Meisner said he has been on the go since 6:30 a.m. Saturday morning, visiting the department’s various divisions and discussing his vision of a community-oriented police force. 

He said the new emphasis on getting to know the community is particularly important given that the department has hired 120 new officers since 1995. 

“That’s tremendous turnover,” Meisner said. 

The interim chief, who has served on the force since 1972, said his community focus will also include a new emphasis on Berkeley Boosters, the department’s sports and outdoor activities program for city youth. 

Meisner said he will draw on a long tradition of community policing in Berkeley, dating back to the city’s first chief, August Vollner. 

“Most of law enforcement in the country is built on some of the principles formed here in Berkeley,” said Meisner. 

But community policing will not be Meisner’s only priority. The interim chief said he will also work to bump up enforcement in the traffic division, calling on officers to write more tickets for speeding and illegal turns. 

“I’ve asked our officers to start enforcing the law,” he said. “That’s how you prevent accidents.” 

Meisner said he will also place an emphasis on the larger mission of the police department: public safety and service. 

“Every organization has to stand for something,” he said.  


Thoughts on mayor’s intentions

Anne Marselis
Wednesday July 17, 2002

To the Editor: 

Mayor Dean is not running for mayor of Berkeley because she's been "termed out" at some other job. Mayor Dean is not running for reelection as mayor in order to "boot strap" her way to a "better job". Mayor Dean only wants to be a good, sensible mayor of a small city at the western edge of the United States.  

Mayor Dean doesn'tthink that her job is to run the whole world, but "just" to do a good job of being mayor. How novel. 

 

Anne Marselis 

secretary,  

Saint John's Neighbors


from one West Virginia miner


A memoir tells of forgotten black miners

Books

By Vicki Smith, The Associated Press
Wednesday July 17, 2002

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. — Bob Armstead was a gentle man in a rough profession. 

A black miner in decidedly white West Virginia, he toiled in a place where coal companies had recruited tens of thousands of blacks for jobs everyone else thought were too dangerous. 

For 40 years Armstead worked hard, staying underground as racism pushed others out. 

“Some said the black coal dust was a race equalizer,” he wrote. “They said we were all black because of the coal dust, so blacks and whites blended, and there was less prejudice in a coal mine. I really didn’t see it that way.” 

Armstead’s story, “Black Days, Black Dust,” released earlier this year by the University of Tennessee Press, has become the first published memoir of a black American coal miner. 

It’s a story of a quiet, hardworking, cheerful man. It’s also a 255-page primer on coal mining and a window into a nearly forgotten piece of history — those few decades when tens of thousands of blacks moved into the mountains to help make West Virginia’s mines among the most productive in the world. 

In 1880, only 25,886 blacks lived in West Virginia, a state with 592,537 whites. But as miners unionized and went on strike, mine owners recruited blacks by the trainload from the Deep South. 

By 1920, the state’s black population had grown to 86,345. Whites made up nearly 1.4 million. In southern coalfield counties, blacks accounted for more than 68 percent of the population in the 1930 census. 

Four generations of Armstead’s family were part of the great coal mine migration, moving from the iron district of Bessemer, Ala., to north-central West Virginia in 1924. 

Later, when other families moved on, the Armsteads stayed. 

Bob Armstead died in 1998 at the age of 71, but his voice survives on the pages of his book. 

 

“When our shift ended, white miners and black miners took their showers in separate facilities and went their separate ways. I wondered if the company prolonged segregation by having white and colored showers, or if the white men demanded it. Underground we were equal, dependent on each other and friendly. Once we hit the showers, a mental separation took place. We were black men and white men, no longer equal.” 

 

By 1947, when Armstead followed his father into Marion County’s mines, the number of black workers had already dwindled. Machines had begun to replace men, and among those left, white men were preferred. 

“There were people who actually recruited blacks. On this side of the mountain, some owner would have recruited. On the other, they wouldn’t. It’s a polka-dotted pattern,” said Ron Lewis, a history professor at West Virginia University. “But in the end, as a system, it worked as racial preference.” 

Blacks were nudged out, and those who remained were generally low-level laborers in the most dangerous areas of the mine. Often, both their union and their seniority failed to protect them. 

While Italians, Poles and Slovaks were overlooked because they struggled with English, black and Irish workers were frequently considered incapable of adapting. 

“All men who weren’t white native West Virginians faced losing their jobs,” Armstead wrote. 

When he was laid off, Armstead cooked and waited tables. He carried bags as a bellhop. He washed floors. He delivered newspapers. Along the way, he married twice and raised five children. 

He moved from town to town and job to job, but he always returned to the mines. 

Thousands of other black families left, abandoning assimilation in the hills for factory jobs in Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Chicago and Detroit. 

“They just moved on,” Lewis said, “and so they’re lost.” 

So, too, are their stories. 

 

“When those white fellows were out with their families or friends, they didn’t know me. ... I had to change my thinking that they were my ’mine buddies’ and reduce them to my ’former co-workers.’ That truth bothered me for a long time, but I got over it.” 

 

Writer Sharon Gardner believed Armstead’s experiences are worth telling. 

Gardner met Armstead in 1997 and drew his story out in bits, interviewing him three hours at a time every few weeks for 18 months. 

“I had just finished reading a memoir of a white coal miner from Pennsylvania’s anthracite region,” she said. “It was awful. There was a lot of cussing and swearing — the use of the F-word a great deal.” 

Armstead was special. 

“He was gentle and kind,” she said. “I knew it would be a contrast — a racial contrast and the contrast of a gentleman versus ... a rough individual.” 

Gardner, a former teacher and librarian living in Fairmont, W.Va., had been fascinated with coal since moving from her native Bedford, Pa., in 1996 and seeing “trains, as far as you could see.” 

“I wondered what they were doing, where they were going,” she recalled. 

Inspired, Gardner wrote a series of historical features for the local newspaper. 

Armstead read one about the Dakota coal camp and called to talk. He proposed a feature on his family, but after an hour, Gardner had bigger plans. Dozens of pages Armstead had already written soon led to interviews and research. 

In the mines, Armstead had bee`n a laborer, shoveling spilled coal and setting timber roof supports, before moving on to shuttle car driver, foreman and safety inspector. 

He passed on some jobs, too, repeatedly refusing to become the operator of a continuous mining machine. 

“Eight or 10 years ago, they wouldn’t have even offered me this job because I was black,” he wrote. “If I’d been ambitious and gone after the job, they wouldn’t have given it to me because I was black. So I wouldn’t do it now. Pride? Yes. But that’s how I felt.” 

By 1969, however, he’d decided to study for the test that eventually made him a foreman. At the time, he was one of only 10 blacks in a mine with 440 men. Later, at another mine, he became the lone black foreman to 600 men. 

Armstead retired in 1987, succumbing to lung cancer on Dec. 9, 1998. 

 

“Hate is not in my vocabulary. I can honestly say that I’ve never hated anyone. I sometimes felt resentment for things said or done to me, but I never let anyone see my resentment, and I rarely spoke of it. ... I knew from a young age that life was too precious to carry around the burden of hatred and bitterness, so I chose not to do it.” 


Out & About Calendar

Staff
Wednesday July 17, 2002


Wednesday, July 17

 

BEST, Berkeley Ecological and Safe Transportation coalition  

6 to 8 p.m.  

Berkeley Public Library, Kittredge at Shattuck, Meeting room A, 3rd floor. 

A newly-formed Berkeley-based group concerned with mass transit, land use, pedestrian and bicycle travel issues. Bring food to share, eating utensils to minimize waste.  

652-9462 

Free 

 

San Francisco Bay Crossings Study 

1 to 1:30 p.m. view displays, 1:30 to 4 p.m. public meeting 

Oakland City Council Chambers, City Hall 

One City Hall Plaza, 3rd Floor, Oakland 

Recommendations for Transbay travel in the next 25 years, new facilities/services, as well as funding methods. 

464-7787 

Free 

 

Friends of Calligraphy 

6:30 to 8:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Public Library - Central Branch 

2090 Kittredge St. Meeting Room B - Third Floor 

Meeting/demonstrations of calligraphy and lettering design by lettering professionals and FOC members. 

528-1709 

Free 

 

Doctors Without Borders 

(Through July 18) 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. 

UC Berkeley, Springer Gateway, West Entrance Crescent 

Interactive exhibit explaining medicines for people in developing countries; Film screenings 

www.doctorswithoutborders.org 

Free 

 


Thursday, July 18

 

Intro to Accessible  

Software and Hardware  

3 to 4:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Public Library - Central Branch 

Electronic Classroom (3rd Floor) 2090 Kittredge Ave.  

Non-profit training organization for software and hardware useful to seniors and disabled people in Berkeley. 

981-6121 for reservations 

Free 

 

art.Sites Paris 

7:30 p.m.  

Easy Going Travel Shop & Bookstore, 1385 Shattuck Ave.  

Slide show by Sidra Stich offers overview of Paris' exciting innovative changes, new museums, new art and media centers, parks etc. 

843-3533 

Free 

 

Mystique of the Wilderness 

7 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Phil Arnot presents slides from over 50 years of exploring such places as Alaska, New Zealand, the Sierra and the Rockies. 

527-4140 

Free 

 

"Green Building" Workshop 

6 to 8 p.m.  

Building Education Center, 812 Page Street 

With speaker Greg VanMechelen, Architect, VanMechelen Architects 

614-1699 or lclarke@stopwaste.org 

Free 

 

Simplicity Forum 

7 to 8:30 p.m.  

Claremont Branch Library, 2940 Benvenue Ave.  

Topic is the Cost of various life choices to the Planet well as to our Happiness, Pocketbook and Community. 

549-3509, or www.simpleliving.net. 

Free 

 

Introduction to Accessible  

Software and Hardware  

3:00 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Public Library Electronic Classroom, 2090 Kittredge Street 

RSVP to 981-6121 

 


Friday, July 19

 

Berkeley Women in Black 

Noon to 1 p.m. 

Telegraph and Bancroft 

In solidarity with Israeli and Palestinian Women in Black to urge an end to the occupation  

548-6310, wibberkeley.org 

 


Saturday, July 20

 

Public Meeting to Plan a New  

National Park in Richmond 

1:30 p.m. 

Oakland Museum, Lecture Hall, 1000 Oak St. (at Lake Merritt BART) 

Meeting to gather input for National Park Service to prepare plans that will guide development of historic WWII sites in Richmond. 

817-1517 

Free 

 

Puppet Shows 

1:30 to 2:30 p.m. 

Hall of Health, 2230 Shattuck Ave. (lower level) 

The Kids on the Block educational puppet troupe present a show about accepting and understanding physical, mental, medical and cultural differences. 

$2 donation, children under 3 free 

 

Emergency Preparedness  

Classes in Berkeley 

Earthquake Retrofitting: Learn how to strengthen your wood frame home. 

10 a.m. to 5 p.m. 

812 Page Street 

981-5605 

Free 

 

Connoisseurs' Marketplace 

(through July 21) 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. 

Santa Cruz Ave. Menlo Park (between El Camino Real and Johnson St. 

16th annual mid-summer festival of the arts featuring music, artisans, celebrity chefs, international cuisine, kids' fun zone and more. 

(650) 325-2818 

Free 

 

Berkeley Alliance of Neighborhood Associations (BANA)  

9:30 to ll a.m.  

Fireside room, Live Oak Park l30l Shattuck Avenue 

City wide neighborhood meeting on local issues. 

Mtbrcb@pacbell.net 

 


Sunday, July 21

 

Top of the Bay Family Days 

1 to 3 p.m. 

Lawrence Hall of Science, Centennial Drive, above UC campus 

Enjoy an afternoon outdoor concert in our family picnic area as well as art and science activities and hands-on exhibits inside LHS. 

643-5961 

$8 adults 

 


Monday, July 22

 

An evening of song & resistance 

7 p.m.  

AK Warehouse, 674-A 23rd St. Oakland 

With music from Samsara, James Tracy and David Rovics 

208-1700, or akpres@akpress.org 

$5 donation 

 

 


Tuesday, July 23

 

Myanmar (formerly Burma):  

"The Golden Land" 

7:30 p.m.  

Easy Going Travel Shop & Bookstore, 1385 Shattuck Ave.  

Ricky Fishman gives a slide presentation/talk about this isolated and remote land. 

843-3533 

Free 

 

Q & A with a  

Personal/Business Coach 

noon to 1 p.m. 

YWCA Turning Point Career Center, 2600 Bancroft Way 

For those interested in professional coaching careers, speak with a pro. 

848-6370 

$3 

 


Wednesday, July 24

 

Berkeley Gray Panthers  

General Meeting 

1:30 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center, 1901 Hearst St. 

Pharmacist Fred Mayer prescriptions and their costs, etc. 

548-9696  

Free 

 

Getting Help When You Need It 

7:30 to 9 p.m.  

Summit North Pavilion, Cafeteria Annex A 

350 Hawthorne Ave. Oakland 

Free interactive workshop to help caregivers obtain free assistance, deal with paid in-home help, and create plans to care for loved ones. 

869-6737 

Free 

 

"Green Building" Workshop 

6:30 to 8 p.m. 

Berkeley Public Library, Meeting Room A, 2090 Kittredge 

Henry Siegel, Architect, on how to use building materials that are healthier for your family and the environment.  

614-1699 

 


Thursday, July 25

 

Combat Medic: World War II 

7:30 p.m.  

Easy Going Travel Shop & Bookstore, 1385 Shattuck Ave.  

Memoir presentation by San Francisco physician John Kerner, describing experiences as a combat medic in World War II.  

843-3533 

 

California Landscapes:  

A Geologist's Perspective 

7 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

John Karachewski presents an educational slide show on such amazing places as the Sierra Nevada, Coast Ranges the Great Valley and Cascades 

For more information: (510) 527- 4140. 

Free 

 


Saturday, July 27

 

Test Ride Kestrel Bicycles 

11 a.m.-1 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Pristine Sandusky of Kestrel, a premier manufacturer of high-end, carbon-fiber road and mountain bikes, introduces their latest design. 

For more information: (510) 527-4140 

Free 

 

Graywater Workshop  

10 a.m. to 1 p.m. 

Ecology Center, 2530 San Pablo Ave 

Learn the ins and outs of reusing water with the Guerrilla Graywater Girls 

548-2220 x233  

$10 members, $15 non ( no one turned away for lack of funds) 

 

Santa Fe Right of Way Path Walk 

10 a.m. 

Meet at the Ohlone Greenway at Cedar St, in Cedar Rose Park. 

A new path opportunity, recently funded by the City Council. 

649-9874, 

http://www.internettime.com/path 

 

"Neon: The Living Flame" 

7:00 p.m.  

Alameda Museum, 2324 Alameda Ave.  

The Alameda Museum presents Michael Crowe, author, and neon artist Karl Hauser 

lecture by Michael Crowe 

748-0796 or 841-8489.  

Members free, non-members $5  

 

Grand Summer Rummage Sale 

9 a.m. to 4 p.m 

Berkeley Fellowship of Unitarian Universalists, Cedar and Bonita Streets 

A benefit for ANSWER- Act Now to Stop War and End Racism. Donations and volunteers are needed 

(415) 821-6545. 

 

 


Sunday, July 28

 

Hands-on Bicycle Repair  

11 a.m.-12 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Learn from an REI bike technician basic repairs such as brake adjustments and fixing a flat. 

For more information: (510) 527-4140 

Free 

 


Tuesday, July 30

 

The Birdhouse Chronicles:  

Surviving the Joys of Country Life 

7:30 p.m.  

Easy Going Travel Shop & Bookstore, 1385 Shattuck Ave.  

Reading and discussion of Cathleen Miller's personal account of moving from San Francisco to Amish Pennsylvania to restore an old house. 

843-3533 

Free 

 


Wednesday, July 31

 

Twilight Tours at UC Botanical Gardens 

through Aug. 28 5:30 p.m.  

200 Centennial Drive, Berkeley, CA.  

Tour the garden at twilight with an expert horticulturist every Wednesday. 

643-2755  

Free with garden admission.  

 

Mountain Adventure Seminars:  

Introduction to Rock Climbing 

7 p.m.-9 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

An introduction to rock climbing including knot tying, belaying and movement. 

For more information: (209) 753-6556 

$115 REI members; $125 non-members 

 


Thursday, August 1

 

Public Meeting to Plan New  

National Historic Park in Richmond 

1:30 p.m. 

Richmond Senior Center,  

2525 Macdonald Ave. 

Meeting to gather input for National Park Service to prepare plans that will guide development of historic WWII sites in Richmond. 

817-1517 

Free 

 

Nutrition Career Open House 

7 to 8:30 p.m. 

Institute of Educational Therapy, 706 Gilman St. 

Become a Nutrition Educator or Nutrition Consultant. 

558-1711 for reservations 

Free 


Lions slap around bumbling Capitol Valley

By Jared Green, Daily Planet Staff
Wednesday July 17, 2002

Pinguelo throws complete game as opponents make seven errors 

 

The Berkeley/Albany Lions took another step towards the championship game of the Babe Ruth state tournament with a 9-2 win over Capitol Valley on Tuesday night in San Leandro. 

Jeremiah Pinguelo threw a complete game for the Lions, giving up just two hits. Pinguelo’s only rough patch came in the third innings, when he loaded the bases on two walks and a hit batman, then walked home a run. 

“When I’m focused I do well, but when I lose it I start walking guys, and I start hitting guys,” said the Albany High graduate. “I guess I lost it in the third inning.” 

Pinguelo didn’t give up a hit until Josh Hamilton knocked a double to rightfield in the fourth inning. Capitol Valley scratched across one more run in the seventh when Lions catcher Jeremy LeBeau threw a high chopper over first baseman Joe Storno’s head, allowing Justin McKay to score from second.  

But by that time the Lions had the game well in hand. They scored three runs in both the first and second innings, slapping Hamilton all over the park. Benny Goldenberg led the way with two doubles, and catcher Jeremy LeBeau had two RBI on a single and double. Chase Moore scored three runs for the Lions. 

Hamilton didn’t get any help from his defense, as they committed seven errors in just six innings of field work. 

Capitol Valley committed three miscues in the fourth inning alone, nearly allowing the Lions to grab a 10-run lead that would have ended the game after five innings. With a man on first base and one out, McKay muffed a Chase Moore groundball, then third baseman Josh Broder threw wildly to first on Benny Goldenberg’s grounder, allowing a run to score. Joe Storno hit a sacrifice fly, then Ricky Arias’s easy flyball to leftfield was muffed by Matt Lopez. 

“When it’s this late in the season, these kids have been playing full-time for the last five months,” Berkeley/Albany manager Joe Pinguelo said. “They start to stay up late, party, and they get a little tired. You even see it in the pros late in the season.” 

The younger Pinguelo said he had a pretty good idea what to expect from Tuesday’s opponent. 

“I honestly didn’t expect the game to go more than five innings,” he said. “This game was over before it started.” 

But Pinguelo managed to throw all seven innings regardless, leaving the Lions’ pitching staff in good shape to get through the loser’s bracket with two more wins. Up first is a matchup with Mountain View tonight at 8 p.m. 

“With Jeremiah throwing a complete game, it gave everybody else a rest,” Joe Pinguelo said. “Everybody should be ready to go tomorrow.” 

Pinguelo said he will likely start Randy Renn against Mountain View, although the decision wasn’t final as he headed home Tuesday night. 

“I’ll have to go home and use all my managerial skills to figure out who to start,” he said with a smile. 

NOTES: Berkeley/Albany centerfielder Moore, a St. Mary’s High graduate, said he is close to signing a letter of intent to play at Fresno State next season, although he is still considering San Francisco City College. Moore was drafted by the Pittsburgh Pirates in the Major League Baseball Amateur Draft last month, but said he intends to attend college.


Berkeley High accreditation extended three more years

By David Scharfenberg, Daily Planet staff
Wednesday July 17, 2002

School had been told to make improvements School had been told to make improvements 

 

The Western Association of Schools and Colleges has extended Berkeley High School’s accreditation by three years, providing a long-awaited vote of confidence in district plans to reform the school. 

“It’s very good news,” said Superintendent Michele Lawrence. “I’m very proud of the entire staff and the community for their support.” 

WASC, a Burlingame-based regional accrediting group, identified 11 problem areas at the high school in 1999, ranging from student safety to the “achievement gap” separating white and black students, and warned that it might remove its seal of approval unless improvements were made. 

As recently as March 2001, WASC warned that the high school administration was making “spotty” progress toward reform. But in May, a five-member WASC team visited Berkeley High, reported several improvements and praised the staff for its commitment to reform.  

At the end of June the WASC Commission, composed of educators from California and Hawaii, extended Berkeley High’s accreditation by three years, the maximum extension allowed. The decision was not publicly available until this week, when WASC sent a letter to the district informing it of the commission’s ruling. 

The commission had the option of terminating accreditation or extending it for one, two or three years. Most Berkeley parents and educators said they were pleased with the three-year accreditation. But many said a shorter extension may have pressured the school to continue its intense reform efforts. 

“In my experience at the high school, unless you are working in a crisis mode, it seems like things get in a rut and don’t really happen,” said Irma Parker, coordinator of Berkeley High’s Parent Resource Center. 

School board President Shirley Issel said the district will not get complacent. 

“The next step has to be taken,” she said. “We have to do it for ourselves, not because people are waiving fingers at us.” 

“I want to believe that we have a committed administration and staff to make that happen,” said school board member Terry Doran. “Only time will tell.” 

English teacher Rick Ayers welcomed the three-year extension. He said the WASC process, while providing a “wake-up call” for the high school, had turned into a distraction for many instructors, soaking up valuable staff development time.  

With a three-year extension, he said, the school may be able to shift from planning reform to actually making significant change. 

“I think it’s time that we be given some time to try some things out,” Ayers said. 

The 11 areas identified by WASC include, among others, the achievement gap, student safety, the decision-making process, communication with the community, and staff development. 

The school has already taken steps in some areas – improving communication through an e-mail tree for district parents and putting new security measures in place in the spring, for example. 

But the WASC team that visited in May identified several lingering problem areas, including an incomplete staff development plan, a lack of assessments to judge high school programs and the achievement gap. 

Lawrence said she convened a group of teachers at the close of the school year, representing all the grades, to discuss a comprehensive, district-wide staff development plan. She said the plan, still in the works, will likely focus on literacy, math and “differentiated instruction” – tailoring teaching to the skill level of every student. 

The superintendent said a newly-created district position, manager of research and evaluation, should help with assessment efforts. 

Lawrence, while acknowledging that there is room for improvement, added that the district is “moving in the right direction” on the achievement gap. She cited efforts to get minority students into Advanced Placement classes and a widely-respected tutoring program, focused on writing skills, that serves students of all backgrounds. 

Still, parents and activists said the high school has a long way to go to close the achievement gap. 

“We all recognize that there has to be additional, on-going work on the achievement gap,” said Berkeley High Parent Teacher Student Association President Joan Edelstein. “That’s been a long-standing problem that must be addressed.” 

School board candidate Cynthia Papermaster said a key will be developing intervention plans for struggling students that get their parents involved. 

School board candidate Sean Dugar, who graduated from Berkeley High in June, criticized the district for cutting Rebound, an intervention program focused on black students, last year. He also warned that the move from a seven- to a six-period day at the high school, scheduled to take effect next year, could lead to harmful cuts in African American studies courses. 

The actual effects of the shift to a six-period day are unknown at this point, but administrators have warned that there will be some reductions in electives courses, like African American studies. 

Berkeley High administrators are on vacation and were unavailable for comment.  


All students should have a chance

Max Alfert
Wednesday July 17, 2002

To the Editor: 

The pro and con arguments about government financing of privately, mainly religious schools have revolved entirely around the constitutional aspects of this matter. But its practical aspects are even more important:  

Private schools charge a lot of money for tuition and they cherry-pick the students they admit. As a result, deficient or otherwise undesirable students will not be admitted.  

Moreover, poor parents will not be able to afford the price of admission, even when they believe that their children would benefit from a better education. 

Thus, the support of private education by the government will mostly benefit middle class and upper income families who already have the means to send their children to private schools; the children of poor families will remain to be excluded from a chance at a better education. 

 

Max Alfert 

Albany


Cal’s Hunt decides 30 years of track coaching is enough

Staff Report
Wednesday July 17, 2002

Cal head track & field coach Erv Hunt will move into an executive administrative role at the university, the Cal Athletic Department announced this week. 

Hunt coached Golden Bear athletes for 30 years. He will continue to assist the program with alumni and fundraising activities, along with new responsibilities within the athletic department. 

“I am excited about this opportunity,” Hunt said. “With my years of experience at Cal, I feel I can do more good at this point in my career in this new capacity than I can as a coach.  

“My time as head coach have been extremely rewarding. I’ve had people tell me to forget about wins and losses. They’ve told me that I’ve served the University and the Cal Track & Field program in the right way. I feel good about that and the success many of the teams and individuals I’ve coached have had.”  

“Erv Hunt is a person of exceptional integrity and great accomplishment, and he is uniquely qualified for this newly-created position,” said Cal Athletic Director Steve Gladstone. “Erv and I have been coaching colleagues and friends since he first arrived at Cal 30 years ago. In recent months, we have engaged in informal conversations about his future wishes and plans. It became quite apparent that the best interests of both Erv and the athletic department could be served by creating this position for him.”  

Gladstone said a national search for Hunt’s successor is already underway.  

In 1996, Hunt received his highest honor when he was named the United States’ head men’s track and field coach for the Atlanta Olympics. Under Hunt’s direction, the U.S. won 16 medals: 10 gold, four silver and two bronze. 

But Hunt’s coaching prowess was recognized on the international stage long before the 1996 Olympics. In 1986, he was tabbed an assistant coach for the U.S. at the Freedom Games in Moscow. This led to additional assistant assignments for the 1989 World Cup Games in Barcelona, Spain, for the 1992 Barcelona Olympics and for the 1993 World Championships in Stugardt, Germany. His first head coaching job with USA Track and Field came at the 1995 World University Games in Fukada, Japan.  

Hunt, 55, arrived on the Berkeley campus in 1972 as an assistant coach to head men’s track and field coach Dave Maggard. When Maggard was named athletic director in 1973, he promptly selected Hunt as his successor as he was so impressed with Hunt’s teaching ability, enthusiasm and stability. At the time of Hunt’s hiring as head coach at the age of 25, he was the youngest head coach ever to be named at the university. Prior to his reassignment, Hunt was the senior member of the school’s coaching staff.  

After 19 years at the helm of Cal’s men’s track and field program, Hunt accepted a new challenge in 1992, adding the title of Director of Track & Field to his job description in overseeing the merger of the school’s men’s and women’s programs.  

It has been a storybook 31 seasons for Hunt, who is the winningest men’s and women’s coach in Cal’s 102-year track and field history. The Fresno product boasts a men’s dual-meet record of 247-76 and a women’s mark of 94-40-1. His winning percentages are the best in Cal history.  

At the NCAA championships, Hunt has guided the Bear men to 13 Top 25 team finishes over the years, including eight Top 15 showings and three in the Top 10. In 1988, Cal experienced its greatest success under Hunt, tying for fifth in the country behind a victory from Kari Nisula in the discus and second-place performances from Atlee Mahorn in the 200 and Rod Jett in the 110-meter hurdles. On the women’s side, the Bears’ best result was a tie for 19th in 2000 behind Missy Vanek’s third in the heptathlon and Jennifer Joyce’s fourth in the hammer.  

During Hunt’s tenure, he has directed the progress of 90 All-Americans, including Joyce, Erin Belger (800) and Bubba McLean (pole vault) in 2002. His resume also includes coaching five NCAA individual champions and 51 conference champions.  

Since the 1976 Olympics, Hunt’s first at the helm at Cal, 23 athletes have earned spots on various Olympic teams.  

Hunt has a long-time reputation as one of the finest hurdling coaches in the nation and is a member of the USATF National Olympic Development coaching staff in this area. He also was named the 1981 NCAA District VIII Coach of the Year.  

Born and raised in Fresno, Hunt enjoyed an outstanding prep and collegiate career in his hometown. A three-sport standout at Edison High School, he was a wide receiver in football, played center in basketball and ran the hurdles in track. At Fresno Community College in 1967, Hunt clocked the nation’s fastest junior college time in the 120-yard high hurdles. He later transferred to Fresno State on a football scholarship and was inducted into the Bulldog Hall of Fame in 1997. In 2000, he was enshrined in the city of Fresno’s Hall of Fame.  

The Green Bay Packers drafted Hunt in the sixth round (145th pick overall) of the 1970 NFL Draft. He played two seasons of professional football until a back injury forced an early athletic retirement. After a brief teaching career in the Fresno area, Hunt began his historic coaching career at California.  

He and his wife, Jacquelyn, reside in El Sobrante and have two grown children, Jamie and Ericka.


Bringing together farms and urban neighborhoods

By Kurtis Alexander, Daily Planet Staff
Wednesday July 17, 2002

Over the last year, three alternatives to high-cost, natural-food supermarkets have surfaced in Berkeley. 

While these new food markets may not be as trendy as a chic and tidy whole foods store, but like the (what) they offer a colorful arrangement of organic and locally-grown produce. And the prices, locals say, aren’t as steep. 

“There’s a perception that this kind of food comes only at a high price,” said Joy Moore, a founder of the new food emporias. 

“We’ve tried to eliminate this barrier and make this nutritious food available to communities that don’t normally get it.” 

The new food markets come to three locations in south and west Berkeley: Eighth and Virginia avenues, Allston Way and Bonar Street and Oregon and Grant streets. 

Every Tuesday afternoon a diverse selection of fresh fruits and vegetables is spread across folding tables. The markets are the brainchild of the Berkeley-based Ecology Center, and evolved from a $40,000 state grant aimed to ensure adequate food supplies and boost nutrition. 

The organizers accept cash but encourage customers buy a $7 punch card to help pay the cost of bringing the food to these neighborhoods. 

“The primary food stores in these areas are liquor stores,” said Christine Cherdboonmuang, co-coordinator of the Ecology Center program, dubbed “Farm Fresh Choice.”  

“These are the lower income areas that statistically have higher rates of chronic disease and that’s why we’ve focused our attention here,” she said. 

This week neighbors and organizers gathered to celebrate the one-year anniversary of their flagship market in west Berkeley. 

“I come here just about every Tuesday. I can ride my bike here,” said Margo Schueler, who walked off with a big bag of organic beets. 

Cashier Julio Reynaldo Estevez said that accessibility was the goal of the program. Basing the markets at schools and childcare centers, where many people are bound to go, was an another way to make the market more convenient for neighbors, he said. 

Additional low-cost food markets are in the works for other parts of Berkeley, according to Martin Bourque, executive director of the Ecology Center. San Pablo Park and Malcom X elementary school are possible sites, he said. 

The secret behind the program’s unusually low prices is simple economics with a little goodwill thrown in. 

“We buy are produce wholesale and sell it at wholesale prices. We just don’t make any profit,” Cherdboonmuang said. All of the produce comes from growers at the Berkeley Farmers’ Market, so the local agricultural community benefits as well, she said.


Radioactivity causes more concerns

Mark McDonald
Wednesday July 17, 2002

To the Editor: 

The latest rant by Elmer Grossman (July 9), Lawrence Berkeley National Lab’s (LBNL) most enthusiastic cheerleader, is long on bluster and name-calling but short on accuracy. His beloved Tritium Facility was actually defunded by the National Institute for Health because the technology was dangerous and out-moded, worthwhile publishable research had ceased and the site had caused a Super-Fund eligible radioactive mess.  

Undaunted, Grossman is still spouting his old tirade about seven studies which has been debunked for some time. The five studies funded by the federal and state governments are laughable for their omissions and manipulations, and just quote LBNL numbers for emissions and recycling of tritium, a deadly hydrogen isotope which is directly linked to cancers like leukemia, infertility and other genetic mutations.  

The city funded Straume report notes higher levels of cancer in affected neighborhoods and the Franke study only looked at the Tritium Facility’s last two years of operation when tritium work was drastically reduced. This was because LBNL’s records for all previous activity was so bungled that probably we will never know what happened to huge quantities of unaccounted tritium that was delivered to the facility but not recycled. 

Presumably that went out the window with the rest which could explain the high contamination levels that started the whole controversy. Franke did say that the number of tritium monitors was grossly inadequate and what they had was not operating correctly. Also stated was that LBNL itself had 119 stacks dumping radioactive poisons into the Berkeley air, most of which are unmonitored. 

Grossman never mentions that the tritium stack is 25 feet from the fence of the Lawrence Hall of Science. We must be the only city in the world that sends their children to a radioactive museum. 

Grossman should be happy since the tritium facility never actually closed but has been converted to a chemical and rad-waste incineration/processing center. This has occurred without any permits or review as required by law because LBNL gave itself an exemption.  

The Committee to Minimize Toxic Waste (CMTW) did accuse LBNL’s representative of lying when she testified to the Berkeley Council that waste treatment/incineration would stop on April 1 (previously they had said early January). CMTW has lab documents dating back to last October containing plans to process rad-waste there for years and possibly indefinitely. 

Now the lab has begun hauling thousands of truckloads of hazardous and radioactive debris from their Bevatron, a huge demolition project and once again they have issued themselves an exemption so as to avoid the normal permit-review process, designed to protect the community.  

Although they are denying it now, LBNL was targeting landfills in Richmond and Livermore to receive the cancer-causing hazardous waste and radioactive debris they consider below regulatory concern. 

I am not aware of anyone calling Grossman a fascist but he does seem to have little patience for the American democratic process where the powerful have to answer to their victims. The nuclear establishment has a long court-proven history of lying to communities about radioactive pollution and the associated risks. Grossman yearns for the early days when they operated with little or no concern for the environment or the unlucky suckers who got caught up in their zany schemes.  

It’s taken a long time, but it is no longer acceptable to treat acne with x-rays, inhale radium for sexual prowess, inject innocents with plutonium or x-ray pregnant women. Grossman and his ilk who shill for LBNL’s unrestrained pollution of Berkeley are a menace to the public. Any reader who shares these concerns please call your city councilmember as LBNL’s overpaid lobbyists have been overly active lately. 

 

Mark McDonald  

Berkeley 

 


Free parking until Jan. on roads near Telegraph Avenue

By Mike Dinoffria, Special to the Daily Planet
Wednesday July 17, 2002

One hundred and sixty parking meters wearing green hoods could be doomed for the gallows if a six-month study concludes that the meters cost more than they earn. 

The Pilot Parking Program will determine whether the city’s parking enforcement staff, without the meters, is able to enforce the vehicle turnover necessary to keep Telegraph Avenue shops hopping. Constant repairs to the meters are suspected to cost more than the meters take in. 

Until mid-January there will be no charge for parking at metered spaces covered by green hoods near Telegraph Avenue on the following avenues: Bancroft, Druant, Piedmont and Dana Avenue.  

But time limits ranging from one half- hour to two hours will be enforced. Meter maids will chalk tires, and owners of vehicles clogging spots intended for high-turnover could face multiple citations in a day.  

The city charges $23 to vehicle owners who overstay. 

If the study finds that the city can effectively enforce parking limits, the city will recommend that the meters be removed, said Lt. Bruce Agnew of the Berkeley Police Department. City Council will decide. 

“The parking in the area is not meant for all day parking,” said Agnew, referring to the area servicing the Telegraph Avenue shopping area that is home to a number of shops and eateries. 

The parking problem has largely been the product of vandalism, city officials said.  

About 8,000 repairs were made to parking meters in the Telegraph area during a 12-month period and about 90 percent of those were due to vandalism, said Kathy Berger of the Telegraph Area Association, the community development organization that at the request of the city put together the project.  

“People were jamming the meters and parking for free all day, preventing the turnover needed for businesses,” said Agnew. Car owners have been leaving their cars in spots with broken meters, some of which were unofficially marked by citizens with paper and plastic bags, way beyond the time allotted. 

One of the hypothesizes of this study is that the cost of the constant repairs of the meters exceeds the potential revenue of the meters. If that is found to be true, it could mean the removal of the disabled meters.  

Local merchants said they do not know how the changes will affect their business yet, but some are optimistic. 

Helen Carr of the University Press Bookstore on Bancroft says that she appreciates the relief from the cumbersome process of handing out change to patrons who want to feed the meter, and said that “half the time the meters are broken anyway.” 

Some area merchants, on the other hand, are rolling their eyes about the study.  

One merchant said that the city would have been better off taking this action a few years ago, when the meters were decapitated by a vandal, and suspected that the unreliability of the meters is more likely the reason behind the city’s involvement in the project than its concern for the merchants. 


News of the Weird

Staff
Wednesday July 17, 2002

Nuclear worms
threaten aquatic life
 

 

GAMBRILLS, Md. — First, there was the northern snakehead from China. Now, another potentially harmful alien from Asia is rearing its ugly head: the Vietnamese nuclear worm. 

Anglers around the Chesapeake Bay are using the pink worms, which can stretch up to 5 feet long, as bait. The worms are fat, cheap and juicy, and need no refrigeration even in the heat of summer. 

“They’re no wonder worm,” said Mike Gripkey, company manager for Maryland’s major supplier, Mike’s Wholesale Bait in Gambrills. “But a guy comes into a bait shop and he can spend $7 for a dozen bloodworms or $7 for a big, fat nuke worm that’ll last a couple of days. The nuke worm is more meat for the buck.” 

Biologists fear that the nuclear worms, when dumped from bait buckets into the bay, could harm native aquatic life and humans. 

Preliminary tests conducted this spring by the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center indicate the worms and the material they are packed in contain three species of the bacterium Vibrio, one of which attacks oysters and causes serious illness in people. 

“These worms are spooky,” said Julie Thompson, a biologist for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. “I use surgical gloves every time I touch them, and I scrub up afterward.” 


West needs to conserve, recycle for more water

By Steve Lawrence, The Associated Press
Wednesday July 17, 2002

SOUTH LAKE TAHOE— Drought-stricken Western states need to look to water banking, conservation, desalinization and recycling as ways to help increase water supplies, an Interior Department official said Tuesday. 

“Obviously when the pie is bigger or we can reduce some of our needs it does help solve some of the conflicts” over water use, Kit Kimball told a group of Western legislators. 

Kimball, Interior Secretary Gale Norton’s representative to the Western states, said the Bureau of Reclamation “is ready and willing” to build more water projects in the West, but the fate of those projects is up to Congress and the citizens of those states. 

“We think there are other ways to increase water supplies as well,” she added. “We must look at water banking, underground storage and water conservation. I think this secretary understands we cannot continue to use water at the rate we do. ... We do have to apply some conservation principles.” 

Kimball, a former mining industry lobbyist who is based in Denver, said the department wants to cooperate with Western states in solving water problems.


AIDS organization honors U.S. Rep. Lee for service

Staff
Wednesday July 17, 2002

U.S. Rep. Barbara Lee has been honored with an international service award for her AIDS advocacy at the Barcelona International HIV/AIDS Conference in Spain. 

The Family Health International Institute for HIV/AIDS bestowed the honor upon Lee, D-Oakland, for championing the global fight against the devastating disease before Congress. 

"I am deeply humbled and also thrilled to receive this award,'' Lee said. "The people who really deserve this award are those who are on the front-line in the battle against HIV/AIDS.'' 

Lee was one of two honorees. The other was Paul Delay of the U.S. Agency for International Development. Honored agencies included the Ghana Police Service HIV/AIDS Programme, The Spiritia Foundation, Meatho Phum Ko'mah, and the Kenya Girl Guides Association. 


Report says charter schools fail to make improvements

By Lisa Snedeker, The Associated Press
Wednesday July 17, 2002

LAS VEGAS — The majority of the nation’s charter schools have failed to improve student achievement, a report released Wednesday by the American Federation of Teachers concludes. 

Proponents of the nation’s 2,119 charter schools immediately criticized the report, saying its data was flawed. 

The AFT report studied the decade-long movement of publicly funded schools that are operated by community-based groups, private business or groups of educators and parents. It concluded that policy-makers should not expand charter schools until more evidence of their effectiveness and viability is presented. 

“While some are successful and should be used as models, most charter schools don’t improve student achievement, aren’t innovative and are less accountable than the public schools,” AFT president Sandra Feldman said at the teachers union convention in Las Vegas. 

That’s not true in Nevada, said Jill Wells, principal of Reno’s I Can Do Anything Charter High School, the state’s first charter school established in 1998. 

“We’re held as accountable and we have the same tests as any other school in the Washoe County School District,” Wells said. “It’s a luxury to pick the curriculum you want to pick and to have an 18-1 student-teacher ratio, but we are incredibly accountable.” 

The report said Arizona, California, Florida, Michigan and Texas have open-ended charter school laws combined with minimal public oversight. 

“The basic promise of less regulation for more accountability has been broken,” Feldman said. 

Gary Larson, communications director for the California Network of Educational Charters, said the AFT report is flawed. 

Larson said there were 358 charter schools in California in October 2001 as opposed to the report’s 350. And he said only 33 charter schools had closed in the state since it adopted the charter school law in 1992, rather than the 45 the report stated.


Teacher pay jumps, beats out national advances

By Jessica Brice, The Associated Press
Wednesday July 17, 2002

State fell to16th when adjusted for cost of living  

 

SACRAMENTO — California teacher salaries jumped to the second highest in the nation but teachers still fare poorly because of the state’s high cost of living, according to a report released Tuesday. 

The American Federation of Teachers found the average California teacher makes around $52,480 a year compared to the nation’s average of $43,250. Only Connecticut teachers make more, with an average salary of $53,507. 

The nation’s lowest paid teachers are in South Dakota, the study found, with an average pay of $30,265. 

The national average inched up by about 3.4 percent over the previous year — the smallest increase in 40 years. California, on the other hand, saw increases of more than 10 percent — the highest increase in years. 

“We had been going along at 1 and 2 percent and sometimes zero growth for so long,” said Mary Bergan, president of the California Federation of Teachers, a union that represents more than 100,000 teachers and school employees in California. “In 1999 and 2000, after a long drought, we were able to get substantial salary increases in most of our districts.” 

Beginning teacher salaries also made advances, increasing 4.4 percent nationally and 9.6 percent in California from 1999 to 2001. The average beginning teacher in California makes $33,121, compared to the national average of $28,986. 

But the state’s high cost of living makes those numbers deceiving, teachers said. When the averages were adjusted to account for the cost of living, California fell to 16th place in the nation. 

Although California’s adjusted salaries were “still respectable,” Bergan said, teachers are bracing for tougher times as state budget problems will limit future gains teachers had hoped for. 

The federation also said teachers are being hurt by the rising cost of health care. The average teacher pays around 7 percent of his or her salary for health care. 

“The biggest battle we’re fighting right now is over health care costs,” Bergan said.By Jessica Brice  

The Associated Press 

 

SACRAMENTO — California teacher salaries jumped to the second highest in the nation but teachers still fare poorly because of the state’s high cost of living, according to a report released Tuesday. 

The American Federation of Teachers found the average California teacher makes around $52,480 a year compared to the nation’s average of $43,250. Only Connecticut teachers make more, with an average salary of $53,507. 

The nation’s lowest paid teachers are in South Dakota, the study found, with an average pay of $30,265. 

The national average inched up by about 3.4 percent over the previous year — the smallest increase in 40 years. California, on the other hand, saw increases of more than 10 percent — the highest increase in years. 

“We had been going along at 1 and 2 percent and sometimes zero growth for so long,” said Mary Bergan, president of the California Federation of Teachers, a union that represents more than 100,000 teachers and school employees in California. “In 1999 and 2000, after a long drought, we were able to get substantial salary increases in most of our districts.” 

Beginning teacher salaries also made advances, increasing 4.4 percent nationally and 9.6 percent in California from 1999 to 2001. The average beginning teacher in California makes $33,121, compared to the national average of $28,986. 

But the state’s high cost of living makes those numbers deceiving, teachers said. When the averages were adjusted to account for the cost of living, California fell to 16th place in the nation. 

Although California’s adjusted salaries were “still respectable,” Bergan said, teachers are bracing for tougher times as state budget problems will limit future gains teachers had hoped for. 

The federation also said teachers are being hurt by the rising cost of health care. The average teacher pays around 7 percent of his or her salary for health care. 

“The biggest battle we’re fighting right now is over health care costs,” Bergan said.


2 held in alleged extortion of nuclear plant 2 held in alleged extortion of nuclear plant

Staff
Wednesday July 17, 2002

FONTANA — Two men were arrested for allegedly trying to extort $92,000 from an Arizona nuclear power plant in exchange for $3 million worth of parts they were sent under a maintenance-related contract, authorities said. 

Kevin Mitlo, 20, of Azusa and Tony Mitchell, 31, of Duarte were jailed Friday in lieu of $2 million bail apiece, said San Bernardino County sheriff’s Sgt. Frank Gonzales. 

They were booked for investigation of extortion, grand theft and conspiracy, according to sheriff’s records. 

Representatives of the Palo Verde Nuclear Power Generating Station in Phoenix filed a complaint Thursday with the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Department, alleging that a Fontana company, All Machines Specialists, failed to return parts that were sent to the company under a contract. 

Mitlo and Mitchell were associated with the All Machines Specialists, but Gonzales could not say what roles they performed for the company. 

A sheriff’s press release said Mitlo misrpresented the company and secured a contract to provide only estimates for repair work on the parts. The statement said the parts are integral to the power plant but did not further identify them. 

When asked to return the parts, Mitlo and Mitchell told Palo Verde officials that they would only return the parts if the power plant paid $92,000 for maintenance work they claimed they performed, Gonzales said. 

After the complaint was forwarded to the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department, investigators determined that the work was never performed, Gonzales said. 

Sheriff’s deputies accompanied officials of Palo Verde to a meeting with Mitlo and Mitchell at the Three Sisters Truck Stop, where the two men were arrested. 


Intel Corp. to cut 4,000 jobs

By Matthew Fordahl, The Associated Press
Wednesday July 17, 2002

SAN JOSE — Intel Corp., which has managed to avoid mass layoffs during the technology downturn, said Tuesday it’s cutting 4,000 jobs as the chip-making giant posted disappointing second-quarter earnings. 

The world’s largest semiconductor company said continuing softness in demand for the chips that power personal computers prompted the 4.8 percent reduction in its work force. 

“We haven’t seen an economic recovery in our business yet,” said Andy Bryant, Intel’s chief financial officer. “We want to be cautious in our spending.” 

As was the case a year ago, when 5,000 jobs were cut, most of the reductions will be made through attrition, Bryant said in an interview. 

For the three months ended June 29, the company said it earned $446 million, or 7 cents a share, compared with profits of $196 million, or 3 cents a share, in the same period last year. 

Excluding acquisition-related costs, the company earned $620 million, or 9 cents a share, compared with earnings of $854 million, or 12 cents a share, last year. 

Sales were $6.32 billion, slightly lower than the $6.33 billion reported a year ago. 

Analysts were expecting second-quarter profits of 11 cents per share on sales of $6.35 billion, according to a survey by Thomson Financial/First Call. Intel said analyst estimates do not include a $106 million charge announced last month to close Intel Online Services, its Web hosting service. 

Intel had 83,000 employees worldwide at the end of the first quarter, down from 86,000 at the end of 2000. 

Unlike other high-tech firms over the past year, Intel escaped massive layoffs. Instead, the company did not fill vacant positions, slashed discretionary spending such as travel and delayed raises. 

Executives said past downturns had shown that companies could not cut and save their way through a recession and be prepared for an upturn at the other end. 

But in October, chief executive Craig Barrett told employees that the company’s headcount was 20,000 higher than it was in 1999 even though revenues remained roughly the same. 

“On the whole, it’s not as bad as it could have been,” said Douglas Lee, an analyst at Banc of America Securities. “Hopefully, the stock starts to stabilize at this point. (The second-quarter announcement) is not great but not a disaster.” 

Intel did not disclose where the cuts were to be made, said Eric Ross, an analyst at Investec. He said if they were from Intel’s core microprocessor business, it would be a sign of no confidence in a recovery. 

But, he added, the cuts would be appropriate in Intel’s flash memory and networking divisions, which are not expected to recover anytime soon. 

Earlier this month, Intel warned that it would not meet previous its previous sales forecast of $6.4 billion to $7 billion, lowering the range to between $6.2 billion and $6.5 billion. 

At the time, it blamed lower-than-expected sales on soft demand for PC processors in Europe. 

For the third quarter, the company expects sales to be between $6.3 billion and $6.9 billion, within the range of analysts’ estimates. 

Rival Advanced Micro Devices Inc. issued two warnings last month that its second-quarter sales would not meet expectations. AMD is expected to release its earnings after the markets close Wednesday. 

Shares of Intel closed down 76 cents, or nearly 4 percent, to $18.36 in Tuesday trading on the Nasdaq Stock Market. After the announcement, shares gained 26 cents in the extended session. 


Apple forecasts a ‘slight profit’ for this quarter

By May Wong, The Associated Press
Wednesday July 17, 2002

SAN JOSE — Apple Computer Inc. reported third-quarter results Tuesday that were in line with revised Wall Street expectations but did little to buoy the sagging personal computer industry. 

For its quarter ended June 29, the Cupertino-based computer maker said it earned $32 million, or 9 cents a share, on revenue of $1.43 billion. In the year-ago period, Apple earned $61 million, or 17 cents a share, on revenue of $1.47 billion. 

Analysts polled by Thomson Financial/First Call expected earnings of 9 cents a share on revenues of about $1.42 billion. 

The PC market has been “very weak,” said chief financial officer Fred Anderson, who expects for the fourth quarter a “slight profit” and revenues that will be about the same as the third quarter. 

Last month, Apple warned of soft demand and said third-quarter revenues would range between $1.4 billion and $1.45 billion, down some 10 percent from its previous forecast of about $1.6 billion. 

Apple shipped 808,000 Macintosh computers during the third quarter, down 2 percent from the year-ago quarter, the company said. 

The overall personal computer industry is struggling with the economic slowdown. 

Some analysts don’t expect a turnaround in the PC market until late 2003, while the market research firm International Data Corp. forecasts a slight, 2.5 percent increase of PC shipments in the United States this year. 

Industry observers expect that on Wednesday, chief executive Steve Jobs will introduce at Macworld Expo New York new products that could help boost Apple’s near-term revenues. Among them: a new PowerMac computer and possibly a Windows-based version of the iPod portable music player and a larger, 17-inch flat-panel iMac. 

Apple has launched several efforts since last year to try to surpass the 5 percent share it has of the total PC market.


State Farm to close some California offices

Staff
Wednesday July 17, 2002

NEW YORK — State Farm Insurance Cos. said Tuesday that it plans to consolidate some offices in California, affecting more than 1,200 jobs. 

The Bloomington, Ill., mutual insurer plans to close operations centers in Westlake Village and Costa Mesa, and reduce the number of claims locations to 20 from 66 offices in the next 18 to 24 months.  

Company-owned locations that are closed will be sold. 

The restructuring won’t immediately result in loss of jobs. Affected employees are expected to be offered relocation, reassignment and severance opportunities, the company said. 

State Farm employs about 6,000 people in California. The insurer also has about 1,800 independent contract agents in California. 

The move will cut expenses by at least $69 million annually, the company said. 

The restructuring is one of several efforts by State Farm, the nation’s largest property-casualty insurer, to reduce its expenses and underwriting losses. The company lost $5 billion in 2001 as claims costs escalated and weak equity markets cut into its investment income. State Farm reported net income of $400 million in 2000. 

Last month, State Farm, which insures more than 15 million homes nationwide, said it had placed a moratorium on new homeowners policies in 17 states, including California, and had restricted sales of new homeowners policies in six other states. 

The moratoriums and restrictions on new sales are expected to be temporary and reflect profitability and other issues on a state-by-state basis. 


Spanish arrests lead to heightened security

By Don Thompson, The Associated Press
Wednesday July 17, 2002

SACRAMENTO — Patrols around San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge by the California Highway Patrol doubled Tuesday and state officials claimed to have alerted local police near Disneyland and Universal Studios after the sites turned up in what are believed to be terrorist videos. 

But Disneyland and the Anaheim Police Department denied being alerted by state authorities and reported they were taking no unusual security measures. 

Spanish police arrested three Syrians on Tuesday suspected of being al-Qaida members, including one who had videos of the World Trade Center, the California locations, New York’s Statue of Liberty and the Sears Tower in Chicago. 

Within an hour after the news surfaced, California Highway Patrol officers fanned out Tuesday to talk to police in the local jurisdictions, said George Vinson, Gov. Gray Davis’ security adviser. 

But Anaheim Police spokesman, Sgt. Rick Martinez, denied Vinson’s claim. 

“No, we have not heard from them,” he said. He also denied assertions by the California Highway Patrol that they were coordinating special patrols around Disneyland with the Anaheim Police Department. 

“I can confidently say that nothing out of the ordinary is taking place,” he said. “However, nothing is ordinary since September 11.” 

For Disneyland and Universal Studios, Vinson said, the state notified the Anaheim and Los Angeles police departments. Those offices, in turn, notified the security departments for the two theme parks. 

Disneyland officials also denied being alerted by either agency. 

Investigators have previously found similar video tapes, maps and pictures — though not of California sites, Vinson said. 

“We’ve been through this drill a number of times,” Vinson said. “Just possessing that stuff isn’t against the law, and without something further from interviews or whatever, it’s difficult to tell if they were planning an attack.” 

Vinson said he had no further such information from interrogations of the three Syrians. 

Two of the suspects were arrested in Madrid and the other in the eastern town of Castellon, the Spanish Interior Ministry said in a statement. They were identified as Ghasoub Al-Abrash Ghalyoun, Abdalrahman Alarnaot Abu-Aljer and Mohamen Khair Al Saqq. Ghalyoun and Abu-Aljer had Spanish nationality, police said. 

The ministry statement said Ghalyoun belonged to the radical Muslim Brotherhood and had been arrested in Spain in April but later released. 

At the time of his first arrest, police confiscated many videos including five shot by Ghalyoun during a trip to the United States in 1997. 

“The form and type of recording go beyond touristic curiosity as shown by two of the tapes, which are entirely of different angles from different distances of the Twin Towers in New York,” the statement said. 

Other videos were extremely violent and showed Islamic fighters training in camps and during combat scenes in Chechnya, the statement said. 

An FBI task force is working with FBI operatives and local law enforcement in Spain to locate and capture suspected terrorists, a U.S. law enforcement official said. Some of the people the task force is looking to locate are men who might be tied to terrorists and have traveled to the United States in recent years. 

It was not immediately clear why Ghalyoun was released in April or re-arrested Tuesday. 

The arrests were ordered by Judge Baltasar Garzon as part of an operation begun last year with the detention of more than a dozen people across the country between November and April. The judge has accused those arrested then of recruiting members for al-Qaida, financing the group and taking part in preparations for the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on the United States. 

Spanish authorities are trying to figure out what Mohamed Atta, the Sept. 11 ringleader, was doing during two trips to Spain months before the attacks. 

Meanwhile, Vinson said California will now fine-tune its terror response plan in keeping with the security plan announced Tuesday by President Bush. 

“None of it is a surprise,” he said, because it was developed in consultation with the 50 state security advisers. “Ours is going to fold in nicely because we helped design theirs.” 

Editor’s note: Associated Press Writer Ciaran Giles in Madrid contributed to this report. 


Ex officials warn that U.S. policies threaten repression

Staff
Wednesday July 17, 2002

CORONADO — Former Secretary of State Warren Christopher and former FBI and CIA chief William Webster challenged administration policies dealing with terrorism suspects Tuesday, and Christopher warned that secrecy threatens to lead America down a path to repression. 

The former officials spoke to hundreds of judges at the 9th U.S. Circuit’s annual conference where controversy also swirled around a recent decision holding a portion of the Pledge of Allegiance unconstitutional. 

In a panel discussion of national security and civil rights, Christopher raised the specter of the kind of repression once common in Argentina. 

“When I was in the Carter administration, I was in Argentina and I saw mothers in the streets protesting, asking for the names of those being held, those who had disappeared,” Christopher said. 

“We must be very careful in this country of not holding people without revealing their names. It leads to the ’disappeared,”’ he said. “The names of people should be revealed so that relatives will know what has become of their loved ones. It’s a good precaution against having the ’disappeared.”’ 

Christopher’s comments came during a presentation in which Stanford Law School Dean Kathleen Sullivan posed a hypothetical situation in which an Arab student is detained by authorities. 

The administration spokesman, Assistant Attorney General Viet Dinh was challenged by Christopher after he said that detainees were being given extensive information on their rights including the right to have lawyers. 

“I wonder if you would be willing to make the name (of the man detained) available to the press,” Christopher said. 

Dinh replied: “We would not provide a list of persons of interest to us.” 

But after Christopher’s loudly applauded warning about “the disappeared,” Dinh said, “That is such great advice and one I take to heart.”


Energy companies exploited state’s market, GAO says

By Mark Sherman, The Associated Press
Wednesday July 17, 2002

State lawmakers reduced the incentive to conserve power as prices rose 

 

WASHINGTON — Deregulation of electricity in California “created almost textbook conditions” for energy companies to keep power prices unfairly high in 2000 and 2001, a congressional investigation finds. 

“Wholesale electricity suppliers exercised market power by raising prices above competitive levels,” the General Accounting Office concluded in a report released Tuesday. 

The GAO report is the latest of several studies that found that serious structural problems in California’s deregulation paved the way for the soaring electricity prices and rolling power blackouts in 2000 and 2001. 

It was made by public by Democratic Reps. Peter DeFazio of Oregon and Jay Inslee of Washington the day before the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission is expected to adopt new rules aimed at preventing a repeat of the energy crisis, which reverberated across the West in the form of energy price spikes. 

The report blamed several flawed rules for allowing prices to rise even during hours of light demand. 

State lawmakers froze retail prices for consumers, reducing, if not eliminating, the incentive to conserve power as prices rose, the GAO said. 

Until the height of the crisis, California regulators discouraged utilities from entering into long-term contracts for power. The reliance on spot sales enabled power wholesalers to withhold electricity from the market “until it was critically needed,” making it possible to charge exorbitant prices. 

Utilities flirted with financial ruin struggling to meet demand amid wholesale power costs that reached $300 per megawatt hour. One megawatt is enough to power about 750 homes. 

Even when price caps first were imposed in late 2000, they were ineffective, the GAO said, but did not analyze why. The report also did not analyze certain pricing and trading strategies that Western politicians have said allowed Enron Corp. and other companies to manipulate the energy market. 

Western lawmakers sharply criticized FERC for failing to intervene aggressively as wholesale electricity prices soared in 2000 and early 2001. Until last summer, FERC refused to impose any significant price controls, contending price caps would impede energy production, worsening the supply problem. 

Wholesale cost receded after FERC imposed a price cap last summer, utilities and state agencies signed long-term contracts and the price of natural gas, the fuel for many power plants, fell. 


Report: Tight border led to more illegal immigrants

By Ben Fox, The Associated Press
Wednesday July 17, 2002

SAN DIEGO — A costly, nine-year effort to seal portions of the U.S.-Mexico border has failed to reduce illegal immigration, a new study has found. 

The security buildup along the Southwest border also has forced immigrants to cross in dangerous, remote areas, increasing the likelihood of death from exposure and drowning. In addition, it may cause those who enter the country illegally to stay longer, according to a report by the Public Policy Institute of California. 

“The border buildup alone doesn’t solve this problem,” Belinda Reyes, an economist who co-authored the study, said Tuesday. 

Activists on both of the immigration issue have made similar claims in the past, but the institute’s study bases its claims on updated Census data along with information from focus groups and a community survey. The authors planned to present their findings to Democratic members of Congress on Wednesday. 

The study bills itself as the most comprehensive analysis of the a border crackdown that began in 1993 with Operation Hold the Line in El Paso, Texas and Operation Gatekeeper in San Diego in 1994. 

Prompted by public concerns over the relative ease of crossing the border, Congress and the Clinton administration approved the hiring of thousands of additional Border Patrol agents and had new fences, lights, motion sensors and other equipment installed in the most-heavily traversed corridors. 

The annual border enforcement budget tripled between 1995 and 2001 and now exceeds $2.5 billion, according to the report from the nonpartisan policy institute. 

As a result, the numbers of illegal immigrants crossing in cities such as San Diego, El Paso or Brownsville plummeted while they soared in the mountains and deserts in between. 

The policy institute, relying on Census data, found the overall number of illegal immigrants has continued to rise, growing from between 2 million and 3 million in the mid-1980s to between 6 million and 10 million today. 

Mexican immigrants, according to a survey by their government, were more likely to stay in the United States because of the increased risk and cost of crossing the border. A 2000 survey found 11 percent of recent immigrants returned to Mexico within a year compared to 30 percent in 1992, according to the report. 

The availability of jobs in the United States had a “far stronger” effect on illegal immigration than increased border enforcement, the report found. 

The Border Patrol defends its strategy, noting the decline in apprehensions over the past three years as evidence that fewer people are crossing the border. Agency officials say the U.S. government isn’t to blame for the deaths of hundreds of immigrants from drowning and exposure to heat and cold. 

“It’s not the national strategy that moving them, it’s the smugglers who are taking them through treacherous points for financial gain,” said Mario Villarreal, a spokesman in Washington D.C. 

The Border Patrol also maintains that many illegal immigrants enter the country illegally and overstay their visas, said Ben Bauman, an agent in San Diego. 

Mark Krikorian of the Center for Immigration Studies in Washington, D.C. said the policy institute’s report underscores the “schizophrenic” U.S. immigration policy focused on border control. 

“Our immigration policy features tough border enforcement but no enforcement in the interior,” Krikorian said. “We’re telling illegal aliens that if you get in we are not going to bother you.” 

———— 

 


Opinion

Editorials

Police ask for help with finding mother of abandoned baby

Tuesday July 23, 2002

OAKLAND – Oakland police searching for the parents of an abandoned newborn baby girl said they will run out of leads unless someone who knows the mother steps forward. 

The infant was just 2 to 3 hours old when she was discovered lying on a residential lawn in the 1500 block of 22nd Avenue at 2:51 a.m. Sunday. 

The homeowners said they found the crying newborn immediately after she was dropped off, and were alerted of the child by sounds of someone trespassing on their property. The baby girl, who was covered in placenta with her umbilical cord still attached, was wrapped in a plastic garbage bag. 

The dark-haired, 6-pound girl, suspected to be either white or Hispanic, was taken to Children's Hospital Oakland where she was treated for dehydration and is today listed in stable condition. A quick response by paramedics and the family who found her is credited with saving her life. 

Once the baby requires no further medical attention, she is expected to be handed over to Alameda County Child Protective Service and will likely be placed in foster care. 

Police spokesman George Phillips said today that investigators scoured the area near the abandonment, and have probed hospitals for clues that could lead them to the baby's mother or father, but so far nothing has turned up. 

“The only thing we can do is appeal to people who possibly know the mother,'' Phillips said. “We're hoping they'll step forward and do the right thing.'' 

If found, whoever abandoned the newborn could face several felony charges, including child endangerment. 

Under a 2000 state law, the parents could have avoided any criminal prosecution by turning the infant over to medical professionals. The Newborn Abandonment Law allows parents to abandon their babies at any California health care facility anonymously within 72 hours of the birth. They can have the baby back if they change their minds within 48 hours. 


Oakland police hunting for parents of abandoned baby

Monday July 22, 2002

OAKLAND— Police were searching Sunday for the parents of a newborn baby who was found dehydrated but alive in a garbage bag in the city’s Fruitvale district. 

The infant was in stable condition Sunday at Children’s Hospital in Oakland, according to a hospital spokeswoman. The newborn girl was treated with antibiotics. 

Oakland police Sgt. Paul Figueroa said the baby was found just hours after birth about 2 a.m. with her umbilical cord still attached.  

She was wrapped in clothing and did not appear premature. 

Figueroa said the baby’s parents could have taken advantage of a new state law that allows parents to leave babies at any California hospital with no questions asked. Since they abandoned the infant, they could now face criminal charges. 


History

Staff
Thursday July 18, 2002

Today’s Highlight in History: 

 

On July 18, 1947, President Truman signed the Presidential Succession Act, which placed the speaker of the House and the Senate president pro tempore next in the line of succession after the vice president. 

On this date: 

In A.D. 64, the Great Fire of Rome began. 

In 1792, American naval hero John Paul Jones died in Paris at age 45. 

In 1927, Ty Cobb hit safely for the 4,000th time in his career. 

In 1932, the United States and Canada signed a treaty to develop the St. Lawrence Seaway. 

In 1936, the Spanish Civil War began. 

In 1940, the Democratic national convention in Chicago nominated President Franklin D. Roosevelt for an unprecedented third term in office. 

In 1944, Hideki Tojo was removed as Japanese premier and war minister because of setbacks suffered by his country in World War II. 

In 1969, a car driven by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., plunged off a bridge on Chappaquiddick Island near Martha’s Vineyard; passenger Mary Jo Kopechne died. 

In 1984, a gunman opened fire at a McDonald’s fast food restaurant in San Ysidro, Calif., killing 21 people before he was shot dead by police. 

In 1984, Walter F. Mondale won the Democratic presidential nomination in San Francisco. 

Ten years ago: Britain’s opposition Labor Party chose John Smith as its leader to replace Neil Kinnock. 

Five years ago: German businessman Thomas Kramer was slapped with a record $323,000 penalty by the Federal Election Commission for making illegal U.S. political contributions. All key systems on the Russian space station Mir returned to near-normal, about 24 hours after the already disabled spacecraft lost power. 

One year ago: President Bush, en route to an economic summit in Italy, stopped over in Britain as he began his second trip to Europe in a month. 

Today’s Birthdays: Actor Hume Cronyn is 91. Former South African President Nelson Mandela is 84. Former Sen. John Glenn, an Ohio Democrat, is 81. Skating champion and commentator Dick Button is 73. Author-journalist Hunter S. Thompson is 65. Movie director Paul Verhoeven is 64. Singer Brian Auger is 63. Singer Dion DiMucci is 63. Actor James Brolin is 62. Singer Martha Reeves is 61. Blues guitarist Lonnie Mack is 61. Actor Kurt Mann is 55. Singer Ricky Skaggs is 48. Rock musician Nigel Twist (The Alarm) is 44. Actress Audrey Landers is 43. Actress Elizabeth McGovern is 41. Rock musician John Hermann (Widespread Panic) is 40. Rock musician Jack Irons (Pearl Jam) is 40. Actor Vin Diesel is 35. Rock musician Tony Fagenson (Eve 6) is 24. Actor Jason Weaver is 23. 


History

Staff
Wednesday July 17, 2002

Today’s Highlight in History:f 

On July 17, 1981, 114 people were killed when a pair of walkways above the lobby of the Kansas City Hyatt Regency Hotel collapsed during a “tea dance.” 

On this date: 

In 1821, Spain ceded Florida to the United States. 

In 1898, during the Spanish-American War, Spanish troops in Santiago, Cuba, surrendered to U.S. forces. 

In 1917, the British royal family adopted the name “Windsor.” 

In 1938, aviator Douglas Corrigan took off from New York, saying he was headed for California; he ended up in Ireland, earning the nickname “Wrong Way Corrigan.” 

In 1944, 322 people were killed when a pair of ammunition ships exploded in Port Chicago, Calif. Most of them were blacks who were loading the ships. 

In 1955, Disneyland debuted in Anaheim, Calif. 

In 1975, an Apollo spaceship docked with a Soyuz spacecraft in orbit in the first superpower link-up of its kind. 

In 1979, Nicaraguan President Anastasio Somoza resigned and fled into exile in Miami. 

In 1996, TWA Flight 800, a Paris-bound Boeing 747, exploded and crashed off New York’s Long Island shortly after departing John F. Kennedy International Airport. All 230 people aboard were killed. 

Ten years ago: A historic accord for deep cuts in tanks and other non-nuclear arms in Europe went into effect, nearly two years after it was signed by NATO and the now-defunct Warsaw Pact. 

Five years ago: Woolworth Corp. announced it was closing its 400 remaining five-and-dime stores across the country, ending 117 years in business.  

One year ago: Katharine Graham, chairman of the executive committee of The Washington Post Co., died three days after suffering a head injury in Sun Valley, Idaho. She was 84. 

Today’s Birthdays: Comedian Phyllis Diller is 85. Actor Donald Sutherland is 67. Actor David Hasselhoff is 50. Singer JC (PM Dawn) is 31. Rapper Sole is 29.