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Some local business owners fear what will 
          happen when the skate park opens.
Some local business owners fear what will happen when the skate park opens.
 

News

Skatepark Ready to roll

Matthew Artz Daily Planet Staff
Wednesday August 14, 2002

A year late and $280,000 over budget, the city plans to debut it’s 18,000 square-foot Harrison Skateboard Park – the biggest in the Bay Area – in west Berkeley next month. 

While skateboarders eagerly await the park’s completion, local businesses are concerned about the influx of young skaters. They fear that a crowded park, located in the industrial neighborhood at Fifth and Harrison streets, could lead to vandalism. 

“You should see the rave parties they have here [now],” said one local worker. 

But city officials say these concerns are being addressed. 

“We’re going to have someone there [supervising] two hours in the morning and a couple of hours in the afternoon, and then from 6:30 until closing at 9:30,” said Ed Murphy, project manager for the city’s parks and waterfront department. 

Murphy added that when there was no scheduled supervision, maintenance workers would patrol the park, and that after closing, the police department would make sure the park wasn’t used. The city is also constructing a 6-foot fence around the park to help enforce closing hours. 

The park will be open 6:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.  

There will also be safety regulations at the new park regarding the use of helmets and pads. 

But some skaters say added precautions are unnecessary. 

“If you put skaters in a cage and have cops roll by to tag them for safety violations, it’s lame,” said Kevin Thatcher, a staffer at the skater magazine THRASHER. “The design could be great [but] they could screw [the new park] up by over-regulating it.” 

Skate parks develop a community etiquette, skaters say, that allows skaters to regulate their own activities without outside supervision. 

“You can’t pay some nanny to run around and tell people what to do, said Jake Phelps, editor of THRASHER. 

The park will be the largest in the Bay Area and will feature two 8-foot bowls and 5-foot high ledges, rails and rolls. 

Phelps was impressed by the park’s design. “Some people have skated it already and say it’s pretty good.” 

With only a few concrete cracks to fill and a fence to build, Mark Mennucci, the skate park’s project manager, said the park should open sometime in September. 

The park was originally scheduled to open last summer. However, construction was halted in November 2000 when the contractor, Morris Construction, hit ground water contaminated with the carcinogen chromium 6. The city spent about $265,000 to clean up the contamination, and built a gravel base below the concrete bowls to prevent further contamination. 

“There’s no way waste is going to come up [now],” said Murphy. 

The project was initially budgeted for $380,000. However, most of that money was used to treat the contaminated water. In 2001, the city allocated another $400,000 to complete the project with new contractor, Altman Engineers. Murphy estimated total project costs at $660,000. 

Phelps expects a lot of skaters for the park’s opening months, but Thatcher says crowds tend to thin out after the first year.  

“Skate parks are never going to be the end all and be all,” he said. “There is too much free asphalt. Kids are still going to go to Pier 7 [in San Francisco]” 

When the park is ready for skaters, city officials are planning a low-key party. 

“There will be a little celebration,” said Lisa Caronna, waterfront and parks director. “Some private companies wanted to do promotions right away, but we want to get a feel for how to run it and make sure that it services the neighborhood.” 

 

 


This is what I think of tarweed

Jim Sharp Berkeley
Wednesday August 14, 2002

To the Editor: 

With ruthless efficiency, the city's landscape crew recently eliminated the plant Madia sativa thriving in the median strip in front of our home. 

Commonly known as “coast tarweed.” Madia sativa is no weed. As you must know, it's one of our indigenous specimens and host to a variety of native insects. In ancient summers, long before the city of Berkeley existed, Madia sativa covered this area. 

Though it's certainly not a rare plant, I don't know where there's another patch on nearby public land. This year's crop was particularly abundant. I'm sorry to see it go. It might have flowered for another month or so, had it not been prematurely weed-whacked. 

We've lived at our current address for the past 14 years. In our view, this little patch of tarweed – this connection with pre-historic Berkeley – is one thing that makes our block special. We particularly enjoy introducing the plant to neighbors, many of whom know little about local ecology. 

 

Jim Sharp  

Berkeley


Calendar of Community Events & Activities

Wednesday August 14, 2002

Wednesday, August 14 

Holistic Exercises Sharing Circle  

3:30 to 6:30 p.m.  

wrpclub@aol.com or 595-5541 for information 

Holistic Practitioners, Teachers, Students & Anyone who knows Holistic exercises take turns leading the group through an afternoon of exercises. 

$20 for six-month membership 

 

Thursday, August 15 

Power for the People 

7 p.m. to 9 p.m. 

Ecology Center, 2530 San Pablo Ave.  

A forum on public power, solar power and community control of energy. Speakers include Paul Fenn, Director of Local Power and publisher of American Local Power News and energy economist Eugene Coyle. 

548-2220 x233 

$5 to $15, sliding scale 

 

Tapping into the Hidden Job Market:  

Networking & Informational Interviewing 

Noon to 1 p.m. 

YWCA Turning Point Career Center, 2600 Bancroft Way 

Cal Martin will speak on networking and informational interviewing.  

848-6370 

$3 at door 

 

Unique Presentation Styles 

Noon to 1 p.m. 

State Health Toastmasters Club, 2151 Berkeley Way 

Learn to use the unique attributes of your personality to improve your public speaking skills. Visitors must preregister. 

595-1594 

Free 

 

Friday, August 16 

Deasophy: Wisdom of the Goddess 

7:30 p.m. 

Redwood Gardens Community Room, 2951 Derby St., Berkeley 

Max Dashu presents a slide show on Goddess cosmologies and female creators from a global perspective. 

654-9298 or maxdashu@LMI.net 

$7-15 donations 

 

Free Theater for Children 

7:30 p.m. 

Epworth United Methodist Church, 1953 Hopkins St. 

Stage Door Conservatory presents Wise men of Chelm, based on Jewish Folk Tales. Adapted by Sandra Fenichel Asher. 

527-5939 

 

Berkeley Women in Black 

Noon to 1 p.m. 

Telegraph and Bancroft 

Standing in solidarity with Israeli and Palestinian women to urge an end to the occupation and the violence. 

548-6310, wibberkeley.org 

 

Saturday, August 17 

Berkeley Alliance of Neighborhood Associations (BANA) Meeting 

9:l5 a.m. to ll a.m. 

Live Oak Park, Fireside Room, l30l Shattuck Ave. 

Citywide meeting concerning local issues. All are welcome. 

849-46l9 or mtbrcb@pacbell.net 

 

Cajun & More Festival 

10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. 

Civic Center Park, Center St. at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way 

4 live bands, crafts fair, outdoor dance floor, micro-brewery beer, Cajun food and free Cajun dance lessons. 

548-3333 

Admission is free 

 

Tour for Blind, Low-Vision Library Patrons 

10:30 a.m. to noon 

Berkeley Public Library, Central Branch 

3rd Floor Meeting Rm, 2090 Kittredge St. 

Tour of the new central branch for blind and low-vision patrons. 

981-6121 

Free 

 

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 

10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

Center Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way 

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

548-3333 

Free 

 

Sunday, August 18 

Bike Tours of Historic Oakland 

10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. 

Oakland Museum of California, 10th St. entrance, at Fallon 

Leisurely paced 5 1/2 mile bike tour about Oakland's history and architecture, led by docents. 

238-3514 

Free: Reservations Required 

 

Jewish Genealogy Educational Meeting 

1 p.m. 

Learn about research resources available from the S.F. Bay Area Jewish Genealogy Society. Open to all. 

Berkeley-Richmond JCC, 1414 Walnut St. 

For info visit www.jewishgen.org/sfbajgs 

Free 

 

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 

 

Thursday, August 22 

Free Meanoma Update 

11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. 

Summit North Pavilion, Cafeteria Annex B & C, 350 Hawthorne Ave., Oakland 

Information on melanoma skin cancer, detection and treatment. 

869-6737 

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. 

981-6250 

Free 

 

Saturday, August 24 

UC Berkeley Circle K Garage Sale 

8 a.m. to 5 p.m. 

Berkeley ACE Hardware parking lot, 2145 University Ave. 

Garage sale fundraiser held by UC Berkeley, non-profit community service organization to raise money for pediatric trauma patients.  

(858) 335-9021 

 

Fuel Cell Car Experiments 

1 to 3 p.m. 

Lawrence Hall of Science, University of California Campus (Just below Grizzly Peak Blvd.) 

Observe a miniature car operating on solar energy and water, and help conduct physics experiments to learn more about this environmentally friendly new technology. For ages 12 and up. 

642-5132 

Admission: $8 for adults; $6 for youth; $4 for children 3-4: Free for children under 3 

 

Vegan Food Party 

11:30 a.m. 

Lake Anza in Tilden Park 

Social, food party event presented by Contra Costa Vegetarians and SFBAVeg. 

dhermit4424@yahoo.com 

Free with Vegan dish 

 

Sunday, August 25 

Destination Telegraph 

Noon to 5 p.m. 

Durant Ave., between Telegraph Ave. and Bowditch Ave. 

Live music, beer and wine garden, street artists, community booths, art and prizes. 

649-9500 or www.telegraphyberkeley.org for information, booth space or to volunteer 

 

Tuesday, August 27 

A House of Straw: A Natural Building Odyssey Slideshow 

7 to 9 p.m. 

Ecology Center, 2530 San Pablo 

Carolyn Roberts presents slides and talks about her experiences building her straw bale house. 

548-2220 Ext.. 233 

Free 

 

Thursday, August 29 

2nd Annual LGBT Elders Conference 

9 a.m. to 5 p.m. 

First Unitarian Church, 685 14th St. Oakland 

Workshops and conference for LGBT elders to learn about senior services.  

705-8918 

$20 registration, no one denied for lack of funds 

 

Saturday, August 31 

Berkeley Youth Orchestra Auditions (Wind, Brass, Percussion) 

All day 

Laney College Music Dept., Fallon St., Oakland 

Berkeley Youth Orchestra will audition musicians aged 10-15 for the 2002-2003 season. 

For an application or more information call Penny Boys at 540-0812 or e-mail her at philiph@seismo.berkeley.edu 

 

Monday, September 2 

National Organization for Women  

Oakland/East Bay Chapter  

6:30 PM.  

Mama Bears Bookstore and Coffeehouse, 6536 Telegraph Avenue  

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 

 


Cal’s corner corps getting thin

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Wednesday August 14, 2002

In the high-flying Pac-10, one of the most important things a team needs for success is a pair of good cornerbacks, sometimes even three or four. But thanks to some classroom troubles, the Cal Bears find themselves facing a season with just two experienced cornerbacks. 

Senior Ray Carmel and redshirt freshman Will Scott were both ruled academically ineligible earlier this week, bringing to three the number of cornerbacks the Bears have lost since last season due to grades. Atari Callen transferred to Idaho State earlier this summer after he was ruled ineligible. 

It’s not as if the players lost are slouches, either. Carmel and Callen came out of spring practice as the starters, while Scott’s athleticism probably would have found him some playing time this season. 

“Coming out of spring, (Carmel and Callen) were our top two guys, no question,” Cal defensive secondary coach J.D. Williams said. “It’s unfortunate that we had to lose them that way.” 

The mass exodus leaves senior Jemeel Powell and junior James Bethea as the only cornerbacks on the Cal roster with significant experience. Powell had an outstanding sophomore year before injuries held him back last season, but the speed and confidence that made him a good player seem to be lacking. Bethea started eight games last season, but that’s damning praise as the Bears were among the worst defensive teams in the nation. Bethea was burned deep repeatedly early in the season and played tentatively the rest of the way, going the entire year without an interception. 

With Bethea and Powell the likely starters, at least to start the season, several unknowns will get a shot at important roles. Redshirt freshman Harrison Smith has moved over from safety, as has senior Jeremy Drake. Harrison, a Skyline High (Oakland) graduate, is more known for his hitting than his coverage, and Drake has struggled to crack the starting lineup since coming in from Mt. San Antonio Junior College in 2000. Neither has elite speed, something the outstanding receivers in the conference would likely exploit at every opportunity. 

There are also three true freshmen who could break into the lineup with a good showing in the next few weeks. Wale Forrester, Donnie McCleskey and Tim Mixon all have good speed, and Mixon in particular has looked impressive in full-contact drills. But asking a true freshman to absorb a full college playbook in a few weeks is a bit too much, so don’t expect to see any of them in the opener against Baylor on Aug. 31. 

“(The freshmen) are a little overwhelmed by the playbook, and that’s to be expected,” Williams said. “We have to be able to run all of our plays, and if they can’t do that, they won’t play until they can.” 

Occasional help could come from a familiar source. Senior LaShaun Ward converted from cornerback to wide receiver midway through last season, and head coach Jeff Tedford said he might call on Ward for spot duty in nickel and dime situations. 

Notes: Sophomore wideout Chase Lyman underwent surgery on Tuesday for a broken pinkie on his right hand, suffered at the team’s first official practice on Saturday. The injury will take at least two weeks to heal, but a hamstring injury suffered at the same practice could hold him back even longer. Tedford said he thinks Lyman could be ready for the Bears’ first game. “Chase knows the offense, and I’m confident he’ll be able to jump right back into the thick of things,” Tedford said... Senior guard Scott Tercero has been held out of practice this week due to a shoulder injury, but is expected to be ready for the opener... Offensive lineman Jon Geisel suffered a hamstring injury during Tuesday’s afternoon practice. The severity of the injury was unknown... JC transfer receiver Jonathan Makonnen went through his first full-contact practice on Tuesday after breaking a finger a week ago... Tight end Terrence Dotsy lost 40 pounds this summer, and now weighs in at about 260 pounds.


Former county board member plans to sue superintendent

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet Staff
Wednesday August 14, 2002

Former Alameda County Board of Education member Jerome Wiggins said he will file suit next week against County Superintendent Sheila Jordan, her husband Larry Cooperman and her campaign committee, alleging slander. 

Wiggins, who represented Berkeley and the surrounding areas before losing a re-election bid in March, charges that Jordan and Cooperman made “racially tinged” accusations that he is violent and falsely asserted that he was arrested for an alleged November 1988 assault. 

Wiggins, who is black, said it is too early to determine how much money he will seek in damages. 

Jordan said she has never mentioned Wiggins’s race, or used a photograph of the former board member, when accusing him of violent behavior and intimidation tactics. 

She said that by raising the charge Wiggins has created the link between blacks and violence. 

“He’s the one who makes it racially-tinged,” she said. “I find that totally offensive that somehow being a bully is associated with being African-American.” 

Jordan and Wiggins are bitter enemies. The pair engaged in a high-profile budget battle last year that was often personal, and this year, Jordan contributed $10,000 to the campaign of Jacki Fox Ruby, who ousted Wiggins in March. 

In the closing days of the campaign, Jordan sent out campaign literature accusing Wiggins of threatening the superintendent, fellow board members and Ruby supporters. 

The campaign piece quoted several Wiggins e-mails, including one that accused a fellow board member of “unethical, racist and despicable” behavior. The campaign literature also quoted a statement Wiggins allegedly made to another county staff member threatening to bring a baseball bat and destroy county computers during an appointment with Jordan. 

Wiggins said he never threatened Jordan in the phone call and was simply making an animated point about the computer system. 

In July 2001, Cooperman wrote an Oakland Tribune column stating that Wiggins had “a previous arrest for politically motivated violence” in November 1988. Cooperman asserted that Wiggins, then a member of the AC Transit board, was arrested for an alleged assault on a pair of opposition campaign workers. 

But Wiggins was never arrested for the scuffle, according to the Berkeley Police Department. 

“They never went and checked the public record to verify the (arrest) allegation and that’s slander,” Wiggins said. 

Jordan acknowledged that Cooperman made a mistake, but said he was simply relying on what was reported in an erroneous article that appeared in the UC Berkeley student newspaper. 

Jordan said Cooperman has not repeated the accusation since learning that Wiggins was not, in fact, arrested. 

But Wiggins noted that Jordan included a clipping of the newspaper’s headline, which read “Candidate held after early morning scuffle,” in the campaign piece she sent out this year. 

Wiggins said Jordan, knowing he was not arrested, improperly implied that he was. 

Jordan said she has tried to put the ongoing feud with Wiggins behind her. But if Wiggins files suit, the superintendent said, she may bring up several “counter-charges.” Jordan declined to elaborate on what those charges might be, but suggested that they could prove harmful.  

“Jerome really needs to think about jeopardizing himself and his family further,” she said. 

Wiggins dismissed Jordan’s warning, arguing that any counter-charges would be rooted in hearsay. 

“This isn’t about violent behavior,” he said. “You went and told people that I’d been arrested. ... All the rest is innuendo.” 

Wiggins’s attorney Steve Anthony, with Oakland law firm Anthony and Carlson, declined to comment on the specifics of the suit until he files the claim next week. 

 

 


Sanitation standards are in the toilet

Zach Tomcich Berkeley
Wednesday August 14, 2002

To the Editor: 

Why is it that businesses are allowed to sell coffee and food without being required to provide toilets? Why is it that public bathrooms in Berkeley parks are not equipped with sinks or toilet paper? I made Berkeley my home three years ago, and for the most part I love living here. But I am so completely horrified at how difficult and unsanitary it is to use the bathroom in Berkeley. 

There is no reason why any business in Berkeley should be allowed to sell coffee or food without providing clean bathroom facilities. This is basic zoning 101. There is a direct correlation between drinking coffee and needing to use the bathroom. Businesses should be forced to deal with people’s need to use the bathroom if they are to sell any sort of food, including prepackaged drinks. Most other civilized cities have such requirements. 

Berkeley park bathrooms are in desperate need of maintenance. Why is it that toilets are provided without sinks to wash your hands or toilet paper? This is disgusting. Are we really in such dire financial shape that we cannot afford to clean up our own waste in a sanitary manner? There are Thirds World countries that deal with their own waste better then we do. I’ve seen overflowing portable toilets in Berkeley Parks that made me want to vomit. It's very sad that a city so world renowned for it's revolutionary ideas is so far behind the rest of the world in our cleanliness. 

 

Zach Tomcich 

Berkeley 

 

 

 


Coughlin breaks backstroke world record

Daily Planet Wire Services
Wednesday August 14, 2002

Fort Lauderdale, Fla. – Cal junior Natalie Coughlin broke the world record in the 100-meter backstroke at the U.S. National Championships and became the first woman to swim the race in under one minute. Her record time of 59.58 broke China’s Cihong He’s 1994 mark of 1:00.16.  

“This is very exciting. It’s a huge barrier in the sport of swimming and for it to be an American to break the world record is awesome,” said Cal head swimming coach Teri McKeever. “She definitely delivered when she needed to.”  

The championships, which take place from August 12-17, is used as a consideration for team selection to such events as the 2002 Pan Pacific Championships, 2003 World Championships and 2003 World University and Pan American Games.  

Coughlin has now set three world records to go along with her 24 American records. In her brief career, she is a two-time NCAA Swimmer of the Year, has won six individual NCAA titles and was named the recipient of the 2001-02 Honda Sport Award Winner for swimming April 3. She also was a finalist for the AAU James E. Sullivan Award as the nation’s top amateur athlete earlier this year and recently was one of five nominees for an ESPY award as Best Female Collegiate Athlete.  

In Monday’s opening events, Coughlin edged out 10-time Olympic medalist Jenny Thompson in the 100 fly and also placed in the 400-meter free relay, along with Danielle Becks, Staciana Stitts and Haley Cope, as the team finished fourth with a time of 3:48.79.


Study: Berkeley 2nd safest for walkers

By Kurtis Alexander Daily Planet Staff
Wednesday August 14, 2002

Despite two fatalities this year resulting from vehicles striking people, a report released Tuesday by Washington D.C.-based Surface Transportation Policy Project says Berkeley is the second safest pedestrian city in California. 

The report surveyed the state’s 58 largest cities with populations greater than 100,000 and found that only Irvine presents less of a vehicle threat than Berkeley. Nearby Richmond, Vallejo and San Jose ranked among California’s ten most dangerous for pedestrians. 

“Berkeley has a fairly high [pedestrian-vehicle] incident rate per capita, but only because there are so many people walking,” explained Kristi Kimabll, northern California Campaign Director of STPP. “People walking are less likely to get hit in Berkeley than in other cities.” 

Nearly 15 percent of Berkeley commuters walk to work, more than any other California city with at least 100,000 residents, according to 2000 census data.  

San Francisco was second to Berkeley with 9.4 percent of its commuters traveling by foot. 

Tuesday’s safety report comes just weeks after Berkeley leaders wrote a pedestrian safety tax measure for the November ballot. The proposed measure would raise property tax by 1.3 cents per square foot to fund the development of lighted crosswalks, pedestrian-activated traffic signals, traffic circles and other safety features. 

Supporters of the pedestrian tax measure say Tuesday’s report does not lessen the need for more pedestrian safety features in Berkeley. Some even questioned the report’s findings. 

“What this report tells us is that we do need to pursue safety measures,” said Wendy Alfsen, coordinator of pedestrian group Walk and Roll Berkeley. 

Alfsen said that the STPP report inappropriately factored the number of people who walk into the safety ratings, whereas the quantity of incidents should have been weighed more heavily. 

“In terms of absolute numbers, we’re very high,” said Alfsen. 

The report indicates that Berkeley is second only to San Francisco in the number of pedestrian-vehicle incidents per capita. 

The report calculations are based on 2001 data from the California Highway Patrol. 

Councilmember Kriss Worthington, an advocate of the pedestrian safety tax, agreed that the report needs to be reviewed more carefully before conclusions can be drawn. 

“Numbers can be shifted into different verdicts,” he said. 

Opponents of the city’s proposed safety tax are certain to use the report to bolster their argument against the measure. 

“I don’t know that we need this tax because I don’t think it will help,” said Berkeley Resident Art Goldberg, who signed ballot arguments against the proposed tax. “And if Berkeley is really the second safest city, that would prove we don’t need it.”


We can all clean our smokestacks

Charlene M. Woodcock Berkeley
Wednesday August 14, 2002

To the Editor: 

Most of you reading this doubtless consider the San Francisco Bay Area a beautiful place to live. And yet all of us who drive are helping to despoil it. Smog lays like a pall over the whole area and spreads the length of the Great Central Valley, a globally significant source of food. Pollution and ozone were so extreme here on Friday the elderly and children were advised to stay indoors. 

We may think there's nothing we can do, but if each of us will abstain from driving even for just one day a week and commit to walking, biking, or using BART and buses, it will make a difference. 

We need to lobby our municipal and regional governments and especially CalTrans to commit more funds to public transportation and less to planning for ever more cars. The Bay Area Air Quality board must do more than levy small fines on the oil refineries that flout pollution regulations. 

We can do this, and we can teach our children why it is essential for their future that we convert to non-polluting modes of transportation and require Bay Area industries to clean up their smokestacks. 

Will you make one day a car-free day next week? And the next? You can do it. 

 

Charlene M. Woodcock 

Berkeley


Mullin takes new front office job with Warriors

The Associated Press
Wednesday August 14, 2002

OAKLAND – Chris Mullin, a five-time All-Star and the Golden State Warriors’ fourth-leading career scorer, rejoined the Warriors as a special assistant Tuesday. 

Mullin, who played 13 of his 16 NBA seasons with Golden State, will work in player development and evaluation while also playing a role in the team’s business operations, chief operating officer Robert Rowell said. 

He will not take a supervisory role above general manager Garry St. Jean. 

Mullin, the seventh overall draft pick in 1985, played his first 12 seasons with Golden State, averaging a career-high 26.5 points during the 1988-89 season. He was a star on the Warriors’ playoff teams in the early 1990s before the franchise began its current string of eight consecutive losing seasons.


World Food Prize winner applauded

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet Staff
Wednesday August 14, 2002

UC Berkeley visiting professor Pedro Sanchez, the recently-announced winner of the prestigious World Food Prize, said his interest in agriculture and hunger issues began on his family’s farm in Cuba, where his father ran a soil business. 

“In a way, agriculture is in my blood,” said Sanchez, 61, in a statement. “My father’s love for the soil played a large role in my decision to devote my efforts to solving the world’s food problems.” 

Sanchez, who came to the United States in 1958 to study at Cornell University, has spent the last three decades using natural products, instead of synthetic fertilizers, to revitalize infertile soil and increase crop yields for hundreds of thousands of small farmers in Africa, Asia and Latin America. 

“He is transforming the lives of African farmers who can now feed their families and become self-sufficient because of the programs he developed,” said Kenneth Quinn, president of the World Food Prize Foundation, in a statement. “His work perfectly embodies the spirit of the World Food Prize.” 

Quinn announced that Sanchez won the award Sunday at the International Horticultural Congress in Toronto. 

Sanchez will receive the $250,000 prize during an Oct. 24 ceremony in Des Moines, Iowa, where the foundation is based. The prize was established in 1986 by Norman Borlaug, winner of the 1970 Nobel Peace Prize for his work in world agriculture. 

Sanchez, who chairs the United Nations Task Force on Hunger, said he feels an urgency in his work. 

“I’m impatient to get hunger over with,” he said. “There’s no room for complacency when you see kids who are malnourished and, as a result, are more susceptible to diseases.” 

Before coming to UC Berkeley in January, Sanchez spent 10 years as director general of the International Centre for Research in agroforestry, based in Kenya, now known as the World Agroforestry Centre. 

There he spearheaded efforts to use natural resources like rock phosphates, rather than costly fertilizers, to increase crop yields for African farmers two to four times, according to the foundation. 

Prior to his work at the agroforestry center, Sanchez was an assistant professor of soil science at North Carolina State University and worked to turn 75 million acres of acidic soil into productive farmland. 

“It was a paradigm shift in how people viewed tropical soils,” said David Zilberman, co-director of UC Berkeley’s Center for Sustainable Resource Development. “A region that had previously been dismissed as farmable land has since become a new breadbasket for Brazil.” 

During his time at North Carolina State, Sanchez was also able to shine a spotlight on the destructive effects of using bulldozers to clear land in the Amazon basin. 

His research eventually contributed to policy changes on land clearing in Peru, Brazil and Indonesia. 

“What’s unique about Pedro is that he is more than just a great scientist,” said Zilberman. “He is skilled in developing policy and building an institutional framework that takes the research into the real world.” 

 


Your big mess is my minor problem

Don Read Berkeley
Wednesday August 14, 2002

To the Editor: 

The Planet sent a misleading message to the public by putting three recent articles on the top of the front page under the headlines “More payroll problems in school district,” “Payroll problems continue to plague school district” and “Personnel matter may have cost district its payroll precision” and by relying for its criticisms on a disgruntled former district employee who departed “under mysterious circumstances.” 

The district just completed the first issuance of payroll and vendor checks using a software program widely used by other districts and a computer system operated by the Pleasanton Unified School District. This reorganization of the districts financial information and data processing system is critical to remedying what for years has been a highly unreliable payroll system and antiquated financial reporting system. The district is moving forward to making available reliable financial and personnel information to district management and the school board.  

In a first round of any data conversion “glitches” will happen. That the new system ignored a zero at the beginning of a bank account number is hardly surprising and is easily remedied. So is a one-time miscalculation of payroll withholding taxes. This is not, as the former employee would have it, a “big mess.” The big mess was in the old system for which the former employee was responsible. It is incredible to suggest, as one article did, that the former data processing manager's employment ended because he was doing “too successful” a job. 

School Board President Shirley Issle is right when she says that the public needs to give the district time to iron out the minor problems with the new system – but not quite as much time as the six months she suggests. The district's financial crisis does not permit six months of patience. If this system is not operating smoothly in three months, we may well have a new “big mess.” 

 

Don Read 

Berkeley


Police use Elvis to encourage teens to drive safely

Daily Planet Wire Service
Wednesday August 14, 2002

ALBANY – Elvis might have left the building for good 25 years ago this week, but the “King” is helping two Albany police officers convey a message of traffic safety to teens throughout the state. 

Elvis impersonator Lt. Bill Palmini of the Albany Police Department and his guitar-playing colleague, Sgt. Art Clemons, have traveled throughout California as the band Elvis & the Lawmen, using the late rock-n-roller's songs to promote driving safety to teens. 

The band's new CD is called “One Way Ride,”and features 14 Elvis hits picked to convey a traffic safety message. 

The recording also includes the national anthem – which is also an Elvis impersonation. 

The band, which is a project funded by a grant of the California Office of Traffic Safety, has performed at more than 500 school assemblies.


$900,000 mistake a boon to school district

By David Scharfenberg, Daily Planet Staff
Tuesday August 13, 2002

Unaccounted funds will cut $2.8 million budget deficit 

 

The Berkeley Unified School District has revised its projected 2002-2003 budget deficit, slashing the figure from $2.8 million to $2 million after discovering that it had underestimated state funding for next year by some $900,000. 

District officials cheered the revision. But some worried that the Alameda County Office of Education, which has jurisdiction over Berkeley Unified, still might reject the district’s budget because, even with the $900,000 improvement, it includes a $2 million shortfall.  

“If they follow the technical letter of the law, they probably shouldn’t approve it,” said the district’s Associate Superintendent of Business and Operations Jerry Kurr.  

County Superintendent Sheila Jordan said her office has not received all the documents it needs to fully evaluate the district’s budget, but suggested that Berkeley Unified faces an uphill battle in winning approval. 

“There’s a good chance [the budget] won’t be passed,” she said. “But it’s certainly not impossible.” 

Jordan, who is scheduled to make a ruling on the budget in the coming weeks, said the county might approve the document with a lengthy list of conditions attached. Otherwise, it goes back to the drawing board. 

Board of Education President Shirley Issel said she is hopeful that the county will sign off on the district budget. 

“I’m cautiously optimistic,” she said. 

Jordan said the county will have a better sense for the true state of the district’s budget, and its prospects for approval, by the end of next week when all the budget documents are in hand. 

Jordan expressed mild frustration that the district hadn’t already provided the county with “multi-year projections,” documents which assess the longer-term budget outlook. 

“It’s not good,” she said. “We’re all operating on deadlines.” 

The Fiscal Crisis & Management Assistance Team, a state agency that has been advising the district on its budget since last year, is working on the projections and are expected to complete them this week, district officials said. 

The $900,000 accounting mistake was discovered in recent weeks while compiling the final 2002-2003 budget, endorsed by the school board June 26. 

The oversight, labeled a “significant error” in a memo from Kurr to the board last week, was the result of a miscalculation of the district’s expected “revenue limit,” or level of state funding for next year. 

Kurr said he is reasonably certain the district will receive the $900,000 included in its latest budget estimate, but noted that the money will not be secure until the state passes a 2002-2003 budget. 

The state legislature is more than a month late in meeting its constitutional deadline for passing a budget, with the state Assembly unable to muster the two-thirds vote it needs to pass a $100 billion spending plan. 

With a $2 million deficit, the district should be able to pay all its bills next year, district officials say, but it will not meet a state requirement for a reserve amounting to 3 percent of its total budget. 

A proper reserve for Berkeley Unified would be about $2.7 million next year, according to Kurr. 

Issel said she was pleased with the $900,000 correction. 

“That’s $900,000 less in cuts that we’re looking at,” she said, adding that she hopes more corrections are on the way. “I’d like to see (the deficit) keep coming down like a bad fever that’s breaking.” 


The benefits of height limits

Carol Denney
Tuesday August 13, 2002

To the Editor: 

It accomplishes little for opponents and supporters of the height initiative to point at each others’ houses or living arrangements and call it intelligent debate. I live on a “transit corridor” where there is no efficient transit and gridlock is a fact of life. The planning department seems oblivious to overcrowding’s effect on parks, parking, pedestrian and bike safety, and general livability. I despair imagining my neighborhood's future with or without the height initiative, which I believe doesn't go far enough. 

I hope the voters of Berkeley will pass the height initiative to send a message to the bureaucrats who are poised to exacerbate an already unlivable situation. Affordable housing? The working poor can’t afford these chicken coop units in the first place. Maybe someday we’ll get some honest solutions to our urban difficulties, but don't kid the voters that the current situation is other than a developers’ feast. 

 

Carol Denney  

Berkeley


Out & About Calendar

Staff
Tuesday August 13, 2002


Tuesday, August 13

 

Tomato Tasting 

2 p.m. to 7 p.m. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

Derby Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way  

Sample 35 different Tomato varieties. 

548-3333 

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 

 

Nuclear War: Then and Now, Part II 

The Decision to Drop the Bomb on Hiroshima 

7 p.m. 

Friends' Meeting House, 2151 Vine St. 

Screening of two network documentaries on the subject. 

705-7314 or BerkMM@Earthlink.net 

Free 

 


Wednesday, August 14

 

Holistic Exercises Sharing Circle  

3:30 to 6:30 p.m.  

wrpclub@aol.com or 595-5541 for information 

Holistic Practitioners, Teachers, Students & Anyone who knows Holistic exercises take turns leading the group through an afternoon of exercises. 

$20 for six-month membership 

 


Thursday, August 15

 

Power for the People 

7 p.m. to 9 p.m. 

Ecology Center, 2530 San Pablo Ave.  

A forum on public power, solar power and community control of energy. Speakers include Paul Fenn, Director of Local Power and publisher of American Local Power News and energy economist Eugene Coyle. 

548-2220 x233 

$5 to $15, sliding scale 

 

Tapping into the Hidden Job Market:  

Networking & Informational Interviewing 

Noon to 1 p.m. 

YWCA Turning Point Career Center, 2600 Bancroft Way 

Cal Martin will speak on networking and informational interviewing.  

848-6370 

$3 at door 

 

Unique Presentation Styles 

Noon to 1 p.m. 

State Health Toastmasters Club, 2151 Berkeley Way 

Learn to use the unique attributes of your personality to improve your public speaking skills. Visitors must preregister. 

595-1594 

Free 

 


Friday, August 16

 

Deasophy: Wisdom of the Goddess 

7:30 p.m. 

Redwood Gardens Community Room, 2951 Derby St., Berkeley 

Max Dashu presents a slide show on Goddess cosmologies and female creators from a global perspective. 

654-9298 or maxdashu@LMI.net 

$7-15 donations 

 

Free Theater for Children 

7:30 p.m. 

Epworth United Methodist Church, 1953 Hopkins St. 

Stage Door Conservatory presents Wise men of Chelm, based on Jewish Folk Tales. Adapted by Sandra Fenichel Asher. 

527-5939 

 

Berkeley Women in Black 

Noon to 1 p.m. 

Telegraph and Bancroft 

Standing in solidarity with Israeli and Palestinian women to urge an end to the occupation and the violence. 

548-6310, wibberkeley.org 

 


Saturday, August 17

 

Berkeley Alliance of Neighborhood Associations (BANA) Meeting 

9:l5 a.m. to ll a.m. 

Live Oak Park, Fireside Room, l30l Shattuck Ave. 

Citywide meeting concerning local issues. All are welcome. 

849-46l9 or mtbrcb@pacbell.net 

 

Cajun & More Festival 

10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. 

Civic Center Park, Center St. at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way 

4 live bands, crafts fair, outdoor dance floor, micro-brewery beer, Cajun food and free Cajun dance lessons. 

548-3333 

Admission is free 

 

Tour for Blind, Low-Vision Library Patrons 

10:30 a.m. to noon 

Berkeley Public Library, Central Branch 

3rd Floor Meeting Rm, 2090 Kittredge St. 

Tour of the new central branch for blind and low-vision patrons. 

981-6121 

Free 

 

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 

10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

Center Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way 

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

548-3333 

Free 

 


Sunday, August 18

 

Bike Tours of Historic Oakland 

10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. 

Oakland Museum of California, 10th St. entrance, at Fallon 

Leisurely paced 5 1/2 mile bike tour about Oakland's history and architecture, led by docents. 

238-3514 

Free: Reservations Required 

Jewish Genealogy Educational Meeting 

1 p.m. 

Learn about research resources available from the S.F. Bay Area Jewish Genealogy Society. Open to all. 

Berkeley-Richmond JCC, 1414 Walnut St. 

For info visit www.jewishgen.org/sfbajgs 

Free 

 

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 

 


Thursday, August 22

 

Free Meanoma Update 

11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. 

Summit North Pavilion, Cafeteria Annex B & C, 350 Hawthorne Ave., Oakland 

Information on melanoma skin cancer, detection and treatment. 

869-6737 

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. 

981-6250 

Free 

 


Saturday, August 24

 

UC Berkeley Circle K Garage Sale 

8 a.m. to 5 p.m. 

Berkeley ACE Hardware parking lot, 2145 University Ave. 

Garage sale fundraiser held by UC Berkeley, non-profit community service organization to raise money for pediatric trauma patients.  

(858) 335-9021 

 

Fuel Cell Car Experiments 

1 to 3 p.m. 

Lawrence Hall of Science, University of California Campus (Just below Grizzly Peak Blvd.) 

Observe a miniature car operating on solar energy and water, and help conduct physics experiments to learn more about this environmentally friendly new technology. For ages 12 and up. 

642-5132 

Admission: $8 for adults; $6 for youth; $4 for children 3-4: Free for children under 3 

 

Vegan Food Party 

11:30 a.m. 

Lake Anza in Tilden Park 

Social, food party event presented by Contra Costa Vegetarians and SFBAVeg. 

dhermit4424@yahoo.com 

Free with Vegan dish 

 


Sunday, August 25

 

Destination Telegraph 

Noon to 5 p.m. 

Durant Ave., between Telegraph Ave. and Bowditch Ave. 

Live music, beer and wine garden, street artists, community booths, art and prizes. 

649-9500 or www.telegraphyberkeley.org for information, booth space or to volunteer 

 


Tuesday, August 27

 

A House of Straw: A Natural Building Odyssey Slideshow 

7 to 9 p.m. 

Ecology Center, 2530 San Pablo 

Carolyn Roberts presents slides and talks about her experiences building her straw bale house. 

548-2220 Ext.. 233 

Free 

 


Thursday, August 29

 

2nd Annual LGBT Elders Conference 

9 a.m. to 5 p.m. 

First Unitarian Church, 685 14th St. Oakland 

Workshops and conference for LGBT elders to learn about senior services.  

705-8918 

$20 registration, no one denied for lack of funds 

 


Saturday, August 31

 

Berkeley Youth Orchestra Auditions (Wind, Brass, Percussion) 

All day 

Laney College Music Dept., Fallon St., Oakland 

Berkeley Youth Orchestra will audition musicians aged 10-15 for the 2002-2003 season. 

For an application or more information call Penny Boys at 540-0812 or e-mail her at philiph@seismo.berkeley.edu 

 


Monday, September 2

 

National Organization for Women  

Oakland/East Bay Chapter  

6:30 PM.  

Mama Bears Bookstore and Coffeehouse, 6536 Telegraph Avenue  

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 

 

28th Annual Solano Avenue Stroll 

10 a.m. to 6 p.m. 

Solano Avenue 

A mile-long block part featuring “Journey of a Thousand Cranes’ Parade” at 11 a.m.  

527-5358 or www.salonstroll.org 

Free 

 

Watershed Environmental Poetry Festival 

10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

Center Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way 

Free 

 


Sunday, September 15

 

Heritage Day 

11 a.m. to 5 p.m. 

4th and University Ave. 

International BBQ and beer festival 

Free 

 

Bike Tours of Historic Oakland 

10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. 

Oakland Museum of California, 10th St. entrance, at Fallon 

Leisurely paced 5 1/2 mile bike tour about Oakland's history and architecture, led by docents. 

238-3514 

Free: Reservations Required 

 


Saturday, September 21

 

BREAD and Roses Garden Party 

1 to 5 p.m. 

Peralta Community Garden, Berkeley 

Hopkins & Peralta, Wheelchair accessible  

BREAD's birthday party - five years of dismantling corporate rule through local 

currency. 

644-0376 

$12 in advance, $15 door, low-income rate $10 

 

Coastal Cleanup Day 

10 a.m. 

Work at the outflow of Strawberry Creek to clean up the San Francisco Bay coastline. 

info@strawberrycreek.org or 848-4008 

Free 

 


Saturday, October 12

 

Indigenous People's Day Pow Wow, Indian Market & Fall Fruit Tasting 

10 a.m. to 6 p.m. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

Center Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way 

Free 

 


Tuesday, October 15

 

Fall Fruit Tasting 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

2 to 7 p.m. 

Derby Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way  

Free 

 


Sunday, October 20

 

Bike Tours of Historic Oakland 

10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. 

Oakland Museum of California, 10th St. entrance, at Fallon 

Leisurely paced 5 1/2 mile bike tour about Oakland's history and architecture, led by docents. 

238-3514 

Free: Reservations Required 

 


No baseball strike date set

By Ronald Blum, The Associated Press
Tuesday August 13, 2002

Players are relieved the
deadline has been put off
 

 

CHICAGO — Baseball players backed off setting a strike date Monday, saying they were hopeful recent progress in bargaining talks could lead to an agreement by the end of the week. 

“We feel like there’s a window of opportunity to get something done in the next several days and we’re willing to explore that,” Atlanta’s Tom Glavine said following a 3 1/2-hour meeting of the union’s executive board. 

Glavine, a senior member of the board, said players were prepared to give the negotiating process “every chance to succeed.” Talks were to continue Tuesday in New York, and the board scheduled a telephone conference call Friday to review developments. 

“There has been progress on a number of issues over the last several days,” union head Donald Fehr said. “It would be very nice if that progress continued and we reached a deal in short order. That’s the goal.” 

By delaying setting a deadline, the union increases pressure on the owners without the threat of an imminent walkout. 

“You establish a date when you believe it is essential to reach an agreement, bearing in mind that a strike is the last thing the players want. And we are not at that point yet,” Fehr said. 

Rob Manfred, the owners’ top labor lawyer, called the decision “a positive step.” 

“We look forward to getting back to the bargaining table, and hope we can reach a negotiated agreement without any need for the interruption of the season,” he said. “Both parties feel pressure to reach an agreement because of the enormity of the harm that would be caused by a strike.” 

A strike date seemed inevitable once the executive board scheduled a meeting. Making it seem even more ominous was that exactly eight years ago, baseball ground to a halt on this date, laid low by labor issues that eventually cost fans 921 games and a World Series. The 1994 strike lasted 232 days and was the longest stoppage in the history of U.S. major sports. 

Eighteen teams were off Monday, and about 50 players attended the meeting, with more listening in on a telephone conference call. Fehr said players didn’t want to have a public confrontation so close to the anniversary of last year’s terrorist attacks. 

“Sure it’s a factor,” he said. “Players understand Sept. 11. Half were on road when it hit.” 

Both sides pointed out how they had moved closer to an agreement since the talks began in January. 

Last week, they agreed on a $100,000 raise in the minimum salary to $300,000 and to mandatory random testing for steroids. But they are still apart on the key issues of increased revenue sharing among the 30 teams and management’s desire for a luxury tax on high-payroll clubs. 

“I think both parties have shown flexibility in an attempt to get to a common ground with respect to those core economic issues,” Manfred said. 

Fehr spoke with commissioner Bud Selig before the meeting, but declined to reveal details of the conversation. “We talked about the overall situation in bargaining, the hopes we had as to what might transpire in the next few days,” Fehr said. 

At ballparks, players were relieved a deadline had been put off. 

“Everybody is a winner if we can get through this thing without setting a strike date,” Colorado’s Larry Walker said. 

“If they come to the table and give us what we’re looking for, there won’t be a strike,” Chicago Cubs star Sammy Sosa said. 

In Crawford, Texas, White House deputy press secretary Scott McClellan said a strike “would be a terrible thing to have happen.” President Bush, the former owner of the Texas Rangers, has “not been involved in any way,” McClellan said. 

“But it is clear,” he added, “that a strike would be unfortunate and terrible for baseball fans across America, and the president is an avid baseball fan.” 

The luxury tax appears to be the most difficult issue, with Fehr describing it “as a big hurdle.” While there was a luxury tax in place in 1997, 1998 and 1999, owners viewed it as largely ineffective. The key to finding a deal may be finding a tax level that can satisfy management’s desire to restrain salaries while not slowing them so much that players would strike over the issue. 

Owners made a new luxury tax proposal Sunday but Manfred declined to discuss it. He said that session “kind of got things back on track a little bit.” 

“It is possible to get an agreement in the very near future,” Manfred said, without giving a specific time period. 

Finding a way to slow salaries has been a perennial management goal, but players would like to keep things the way they are. Since 1976, the last season before free agency, the average salary has jumped from $51,500 to $2.38 million, a 46-fold increase. 

Baseball has had eight work stoppages in since 1972. Players don’t want to finish the season without a contract, which expired Nov. 6, fearful owners will lock them out or change works rules. The union’s preference has been to control the timing of a confrontation, preferring late in the season, when more money is at stake for owners. 


Rents still down

Matthew Artz, Daily Planet Staff
Tuesday August 13, 2002

Rental statistics released last week document what property owners and apartment seekers already know: Berkeley rents are down. Apartment vacancies are up. 

The report released by Cal Rentals, a university-run student rental service, shows that prices have fallen steadily since they peaked last summer. 

In July, a studio apartment cost $870 a month, $114 less than last year and $59 more since June, the second largest monthly drop in four years.  

A one-bedroom in July rented for $1,202 a month, just $9 less than in June, but $173 less than a year ago. Two-bedroom apartments experienced the biggest decline. Last month a two-bedroom rented for $1,598 a month, $58 less than in June and $224 less than July 2001. 

This year is on its way to becoming the first since the advent of Berkeley’s rent control in 1998 that rent prices might be lower than the previous year’s. In late 1998, rents jumped 30 percent and continued to climb for the next three years, according to the Cal Rentals report. 

And while prices are now dropping, said Robert Englund of the Berkeley Property Owners Association, apartment vacancies are increasing. Since July, “for rent” signs have multiplied. 

The reason for the changes after the three years during which renters flooded Berkeley is that many fled the city as the economy moved into recession. From July 2001 to November 2001, average rents dropped $131 for studios, $143 for one-bedrooms and $167 for two-bedrooms. 

Renters are pocketing the savings but landlords are paying the price. 

After a brief upswing earlier this summer, property owners expect another difficult fall. “This is the period of the highest demand, but their are still a lot of vacancies,” Englund said. 

Landlords who bought their property during the boom are hurting the most.  

“There are some owners who are struggling to make mortgages due to vacancies and lower rents,” said Englund. 

Al Fatake, of K and S Realty, cited one Berkeley client who purchased an eight-unit building in early 2001 in which three of the apartments were empty. Today the bedrooms are still empty.  

“They bought it when they thought the market was right, and tried to rent them for $1800,” Fatake said. The owners reduced the asking price but have not found any takers. 

Fatake said that the average turnaround time for a vacated rental averages 30 to 60 days. During the boom it was two weeks, he said. 

Among the surprising benefactors of the slump: Berkeley students who live in dormitories. For the second time since the 1995-1996 school year, the university is reporting that it has open dorm beds. According to Michelle Kniffin of the university’s housing department, 52 spaces were available last week. 

In recent years, freshman who could not find dormrooms were said to have slept in cars or on friends’ couches for months. 

“The last two years were really horrendous,” Kniffin said. “It’s nice to be able to say ‘Yes, I have housing available for you.’ “


Pool plan appears all wet

Estelle Jelinek
Tuesday August 13, 2002

To the Editor: 

I am writing to voice my strong objection to the closing of Willard and West Campus pools. 

In addition to supporting the south and west Berkeley communities, which always seem to get the short end of the stick when it comes to city services, I believe that closing these two pools will do irreparable damage to the health and welfare of the whole city. 

Let me list a few reasons. During the months of November through April, when the proposed closure is scheduled, King pool would not be available during school hours. That means that workers and residents who presently swim during the lunch hour at West Campus would have no place to swim; this applies also to the many seniors who attend water aerobic classes after the lunch hour at West Campus. And where would the students from Willard swim during the day? 

King pool, which is already overcrowded during the after-work swim times, from 5:15 to 7:30 p.m., and on the weekends, would be inundated with the overflow from the West Campus and Willard pools. With so many more people crowding the lanes, the city would have to hire more life guards (an additional cost), preferably ones more vigilant than the present well-intentioned teenage guards. They are often distracted by homework, socializing, and daydreaming rather than keeping their eyes on the pool for potentially dangerous situations, especially when newcomers swim in the wrong lanes. 

At King there are problems that would be exacerbated by additional swimmers. For example, swimmers often have to wait at King while children are lined up to purchase sugar-packed sweets on sale in the lobby. Staff at King is often not able to keep soap dispensers filled. Staff leaves the floors sopping wet after washing them down, a hazardous situation.  

I could go on and on. My point is this: King pool is overcrowded now; more swimmers would make a very tight situation much worse. Also to think of the high school pool as a reasonable substitute is a gross misrepresentation since that pool has limited hours, is indoors, and is heated like a steam bath. Would you be adding hours and staff there? Then where is the saving? 

Closing West Campus and Willard pools is a poor judgment call. If someone is injured or drowns and the city is sued, the $75,000 you hope to save will seem like chicken feed. I urge you to cancel any consideration of this idea. 

 

Estelle Jelinek 

Berkeley 

 

 


Armstrong eager to play for Raiders

The Associated Press
Tuesday August 13, 2002

NAPA — Trace Armstrong has never been one to sit still. 

When he’s not pushing himself through a rigorous workout routine, the veteran Oakland defensive end is working the phone lines at a breakneck pace to keep tabs on the NFL’s 1,600 players. As president of the NFL Players’ Association, there’s little time for Armstrong to rest. 

That’s why Armstrong is desperate to get back out on the football field. Sidelined for nearly all of 2001 with a ruptured Achilles’ tendon that prematurely ended his first season with the Raiders, Armstrong — who led the AFC with 16.5 sacks for Miami in 2000 — lasted just three games last season and made just 1/2-sack before getting injured Sept. 30 against Seattle. 

Armstrong seems close to being fully recovered from the injury, but the Raiders nevertheless are taking a cautious approach with the 36-year-old defender. They’ve limited his work in contact drills during training camp, and they held him out of the preseason opener in Dallas because the game was on artificial turf. 

“I’ve had injuries before, and probably my biggest fault was not listening to the doctors and trainers,” Armstrong said Monday as the Raiders held their first full day of workouts since the Dallas trip. “I made up my mind when this happened that I was going to be a good listener. I’m really relying on (the Raiders’ training staff). I’m trying not to be bullheaded.” 

Oakland coach Bill Callahan has limited Armstrong to a handful of repetitions with the starting defense when the team scrimmages in full pads, hoping to avoid any possibility of aggravating the injury. Armstrong has been pushing his coach to increase his work in training camp, and Callahan might allow Armstrong to play this week in Tennessee. 

“It’s still possible,” Callahan said.  

In the meantime, Armstrong has stayed busy, studying film and attending team meetings. He’s also keeping an eye the potential labor strike in major league baseball, though it’s highly unlikely it would have any effect on the NFLPA. 

“We watch it but I’ve got 1,600 active guys and 10,000 retired guys (in the NFLPA),” Armstrong said. “That’s enough for me to worry about.”


Home sales steady

By Scott Heil, Special to the Daily Planet
Tuesday August 13, 2002

Unemployment is high. Stock markets are slumping. Economic uncertainty is spreading. But the story of home sales is mostly upbeat. 

Alameda County home sales in June were up 2.6 percent over the same period last year, based on statistics compiled by DataQuick Information Services, a real-estate monitoring service. The average selling price also increased 2.6 percent, according to DataQuick. 

“We think this is really a good time to put a home on the market,” said Ira Serkes, a 25-year veteran broker at RE/MAX Bay Area in Berkeley. Although year-to-date volume of home sales in Berkeley was down between 3 percent and 4 percent, total dollar sales from January to early August nearly matched sales in all of 2001, Serkes said. 

The number of homes sold had been dropping for three years, Serkes said, mostly because competitive bidding had driven prices. This year, even if transactions through December remain flat, the activity so far signals a stabilizing trend. 

As of mid-July, since Jan. 1, 259 homes in Berkeley changed hands. At $579,000, the average price of a Berkeley home keeps edging upward. 

Despite higher prices Jeanine Weller, a broker with Pacific Union Real Estate in Oakland, has seen more volatility in Berkeley's housing market in recent months. Some properties get few bids and some stay on the market longer than they would have in the past.  

Why some homes are receiving fewer bids is not apparent, Weller said. 

“It doesn't seem to be price-related,” Weller said. “Sellers are still expecting top-dollar, and they're still getting it consistently enough.”  

She added that she would have expected more activity given the current low interest rates. 

Serkes, author of “How to Buy a House in California,” says different kinds of buyers and sellers are now entering the market. A couple of years ago, amid the dot-com boom, the market was flooded with buyers relocating from other areas, many from outside the state.  

The torrid market left little room for local residents who wanted to upgrade to a larger house. Some homeowners, Serkes said, were hesitant to sell for fear of not being able to find another house once theirs was sold. 

With less migration to the area, Serkes believes the market is showing the more stable patterns of established residents buying locally. 

July and August are traditionally sleepy months for home sales, and brokers say fall holds the key as to whether the market will continue its stable course. Brokers normally look forward to the seasonal upturn after Labor Day, when buyers and sellers return to the market. September and October typically account for a large share of the year's sales. 

 

 


Reconsidering council chambers

Dona Spring
Tuesday August 13, 2002

To the Editor: 

The Daily Planet recently did an article on the bond ballot measure to retrofit old City Hall. I was quoted in the article as saying that the number of seats in the council chambers would be reduced to 80 seats from the current 110 seats and Councilmember Miriam Hawley was quoted saying that seating in the chambers would not be reduced.  

Apparently Ms. Hawley failed to read the consultants’ report which said that seating in the council chambers would be reduced to at least 80 seats.  

If the dais is made wheelchair accessible, another 10 seats could be lost and if all four aisles are made accessible to people in wheelchairs needing to pass each other coming and going, at least 10 to 15 more chairs would have to be removed, which will reduce seating to less than 60. If more than four wheelchair users want to sit in the room then more chairs have to be removed. 

For many years, the disabled have struggled with the cramped, unsafe corridor and council chambers, trying to make do. It is regrettable (with the notable exception of Councilmember Kriss Worthington) that council members would not spend even one minute trying to understand what “fully accessible” would actually mean to the council chambers. 

Yet, they are asking the community to invest over $21 million (after just spending at least $45 million to retrofit 2180 Milvia City Hall) and still not have a fully accessible and large enough public meeting space. The most important asset of the building is the public meeting space it provides. (The relocation of 45 employees to another retrofitted building can be dealt with in a much less expensive way.)  

There is a proposed separate room for overflow attendees. They will be relegated to watching the public proceedings on a TV screen, the same as if they had just stayed home and watched it there. Separate but not equal. This proposal does not encourage public participation, it discourages it. People come to the council meeting to be part of the live-action, to see all the council members interacting with each other and have interactions with other members of the public. The new proposal will also cost extra staff time to monitor the overcrowding of the council chambers and to shuffle people between two rooms, resulting in conflicts and temper flares. Over flow crowds will still have to be locked out of the building. 

This community values public participation. We deserve better than what we’re going to get with this expensive proposal. The bond and interest will incur a $47 million debt–almost a million dollars per employee. Let's prepare a more cost effective plan to preserve this beautiful old building and return during a healthier economy with a plan increasing democratic participation by providing a larger meeting space with full disabled access. Let's do it the right way at the right time, not the wrong way–right now. 

 

Dona Spring,  

Berkeley City Councilmember


School district lands cheaper plan

By David Scharfenberg, Daily Planet Staff
Tuesday August 13, 2002

The Board of Education voted unanimously last week to join a group of 90 California school districts in purchasing a new property insurance package. 

Officials say the move will save the cash-strapped school district almost $300,000, reducing the district’s annual premium from an estimated $687,000 to $396,000. 

The shift in plans will also allow the district to reduce its deductible from $100,000 per incident to $25,000. The district currently faces a high deductible because of a rash of property damage in recent years, including the April 2000 burning of Berkeley High School’s “B Building.” 

The 90 school districts have pooled their resources through an organization called the Alliance of Schools for Cooperative Insurance Programs. 

ASCIP has been in existence since 1980 and allows grade schools, high schools and community colleges to pool their resources and spread risk across the group. 

“Their willingness to accept us indicates their confidence in our administration and our ability to manage risk properly,” said school board President Shirley Issel. “It’s very heartening.”


UC union wins transit money battle

Matthew Artz, Daily Planet Staff
Tuesday August 13, 2002

UC Berkeley union members will receive university-funded transportation subsidies, one month after the university officially offered the benefit. 

Since July clerical workers have been uncertain whether they were eligible for the $4 subsidy because contract negotiations were still going on. Despite the negotiations, the university has agreed to square away transportation benefits. 

The clerical workers are still negotiating a pay increase and parking issues. 

The transit bonus is offered by New Directions, a UC Berkeley office that promotes environmentally-friendly commuting. On July 1, New Directions increased its monthly public transportation subsidy from $6 to $10 and lowered its car pool parking rates. 

Union officials maintained that the New Directions program was independent of the bargaining process and should have been available to employees of bargaining unions. 

On July 29, the university agreed, but the transportation office failed to recognize the decision. 

“When I went to ask July 30 to get a transit subsidy, I was horrified to be told because I was a member in a union, I didn’t qualify for the reduced new rates,” CUE member Jude Bell said in a statement. 

CUE officials said they received conflicting information from university officials for more than a month. And at one point, the union members were not only denied the July bonus, but weren’t allowed benefits they had previously been offered by New Directions, according to Nora Foster co-chair of the CUE affiliated Improve Transit Parking Committee. 

But now, Harrington says the transit office is offering union members their old transit benefits as well as the July bonus. 

Resolution of the transit bonus, though, does little to bridge the gaps between CUE and the university on other parking issues.  

Union officials have proposed providing members with a free AC Transit pass, currently available to students, and basing parking fees on income. 

“It’s absurd that someone making $130,000 is paying the same for parking as someone making $30,000,” said Sasson. 

In June, CUE approved a strike if matters are not settled, and along with university lecturers represented by the United Federation of Teachers, may announce a strike date for the beginning of the fall semester on Aug. 21.


History

Staff
Tuesday August 13, 2002

Today’s Highlight: 

On Aug. 12, 1972, the last American combat ground troops left Vietnam. 

On this date: 

In 1851, Isaac Singer was granted a patent on his sewing machine. 

In 1867, President Andrew Johnson sparked a move to impeach him as he defied Congress by suspending Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton. 

In 1898, the peace protocol ending the Spanish-American War was signed. 

In 1898, Hawaii was formally annexed to the United States. 

In 1944, Joseph P. Kennedy Jr., eldest son of Joseph and Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy, was killed with his co-pilot when their explosives-laden Navy plane blew up over England. 

In 1953, the Soviet Union conducted a secret test of its first hydrogen bomb. 

In 1960, the first balloon satellite — the Echo One — was launched by the United States from Cape Canaveral. 

In 1962, one day after launching Andrian Nikolayev into orbit, the Soviet Union also sent up cosmonaut Pavel Popovich; both men landed safely on Aug. 15. 

In 1977, the space shuttle Enterprise passed its first solo flight test by taking off atop a Boeing 747, separating, then touching down in California’s Mojave Desert. 

In 1985, the world’s worst single-aircraft disaster occurred as a crippled Japan Air Lines Boeing 747 on a domestic flight crashed into a mountain, killing 520 people. 

Ten years ago: After 14 months of negotiations, the United States, Mexico and Canada announced in Washington that they had concluded the North American Free Trade Agreement, to create the world’s largest trading bloc.  

Five years ago: Steel workers approved a contract ending a 10-month strike against Wheeling-Pittsburgh Steel Corp. A flash flood in Arizona’s Lower Antelope Canyon claimed the lives of 11 hikers. 

One year ago: A suicide bomber blew himself up on the patio of a restaurant near the northern Israeli coastal town of Haifa, killing himself and wounding 21 people. 

Today’s Birthdays: Singer-musician Buck Owens is 73. Actor George Hamilton is 63.  

 


Gunman gets away with cash from credit union

Matthew Artz
Tuesday August 13, 2002

A bank teller was injured Monday during an armed robbery of the Cooperative Center Federal Credit Union at 2001 Ashby Ave., the Berkeley Police Department reported. 

According to police, two males entered the credit union at 10:30 a.m. One of the men, carrying a rifle, robbed the two tellers on duty and hit one in the back of the head with his gun. 

The second man held a duffle bag into which the men stuffed money before fleeing by foot in an unknown direction, police said.  

The injured teller was taken to Alta Bates Hospital. As of press time, police did not know the extent of the tellers’s injuries or how much money was stolen from the credit union. 


Homemade bomb blows off San Leandro man’s hand

The Associated Press
Tuesday August 13, 2002

SAN LEANDRO – Police reported today that a man's hand was blown off and his body was lacerated with shrapnel on Sunday night after a bomb he was apparently trying to build exploded in his face. 

The man, identified by authorities as Robert Chandler, 34, was making the bomb out of fuses, gun powder and a CO2 cartridge like those used in B.B. guns. Police do not yet know what he planned to do with the explosive device. 

“He's saying that he found the cartridges and was trying to dismantle the device but the evidence we found at the scene is contrary to what he says,” Lt. Steve Pricco said, alluding to additional bomb supplies -- including four empty cartridges, explosive powder and fuses -- that police later found. 

“We have no indication that he was going to use this for a specific target,” said Pricco, though police found camping equipment in his car. “We are kind of theorizing that he was going camping and he was making these things ... for kicks.” 

Police were first alerted to the incident at an apartment building at 77 Estabrook St. in San Leandro after neighbors reported hearing a gun shot around 11:20 p.m. on Sunday.


Bay Area Briefs

Staff
Tuesday August 13, 2002

Police identify
fatal shooting victim
 

OAKLAND – Police today identified the man shot Sunday in the 9600 block of Edes Avenue in Oakland as either Lawrence Baldridge or Keith Jamerson. 

An Oakland homicide detective was not sure why this man had two names. "Perhaps he had an alias or had changed his identity,'' the detective suggested. 

It was the 70th homicide in Oakland so far this year. 

The man was shot numerous times around 2:30 p.m. Sunday and was pronounced dead at Highland Hospital Police are currently looking for the man's killer, described as a black male, 32 to 35 years of age with a muscular build and balding.  

 

Park reports two drowning
deaths in less than a week
 

PLEASANTON – East Bay Parks officials are "continuing business as usual but with heightened awareness'' after the second drowning death in less than a week, according to the park's aquatics manager Don McCormick. 

“We're satisfied with our program and are not making changes at this point,” McCormick said Monday, noting that the recent heat wave has drawn more people than usual to the parks' swimming areas. 

Two fishermen in float tubes discovered a man's body floating in the waters at Shadow Cliffs Regional Park in Pleasanton Monday night at 8:45. 

The coroner is still trying to determine whether drugs or alcohol were involved in the drowning of the man, who had light brown hair and blue eyes, was between 25 and 40.years old and nearly 6 feet tall. 

His body had been floating in the water for a day or two, according to park officials. Last Tuesday, an 8-year-old boy was found floating unconscious in 4 feet of water at the Cull Canyon Reservoir. He was pronounced dead at the hospital. 

The Shadow Cliffs drowning Monday brings the death toll in the park's lakes to four this year, above the historical average of between two to three deaths a year since the 1960s. 

Larry Moss, the park's risk manager, pointed out that the park is not required by state law to even post lifeguards at lakes. "We do that as a public service,'' Moss said, adding that park lifeguards have successfully rescued 300 people this year from park lakes, where the water is often murky. 

The most common drowning victims, Moss said, are adults that have been drinking alcohol or children that do not swim well. 

“We wish we could prevent these drownings,” Moss said. “Everybody here takes it personally.” 

Anyone with information on the Shadow Cliffs drowning victim is asked to call Park Sgt. Jon King, 881-1833. 

 

UC professor wins
World Food Prize
 

A Cuban farmer’s son was named winner Sunday of the 2002 World Food Prize for helping to transform depleted tropical soil into productive agricultural land. 

Pedro Sanchez, a visiting professor of tropical resources at the University of California, Berkeley, will receive $250,000 in recognition of his work that includes finding ways to neutralize acidity in Brazilian soil and to improve nitrogen flow in blighted farmland in Africa. 

Sanchez, 62, is the former director general of the International Center for Research in Agroforestry in Nairobi, Kenya. 

He left Cuba during Fidel Castro’s revolution, earning a master’s degree and a Ph.D. from Cornell University. 

The award was announced at the International Horticultural Congress in Toronto, Canada, by Kenneth M. Quinn, president of the Des Moines-based World Food Prize Foundation. 


Sierra Club cleans Richmond creek

Daily Planet Wire Service
Tuesday August 13, 2002

The plan is to restore the creek and to encourage
the government to make more restoration efforts
 

 

RICHMOND – Fifty volunteers slogged through the calf-deep mud of Richmond's Baxter Creek last weekend, where they yanked out a leafy vine called water parsley, picked up soda cans and other rubbish, and hauled it all away in buckets. 

“People got more than their hands dirty,” said Eric Wesselman, regional director of the Sierra Club, which organized the creek cleanup. “One guy even got mud in his ears.'” 

The Sierra Club organized the event to help restore the creek but also to pressure the government to do more to restore Bay Area ecosystems. 

Wesselman said CalFed, the joint state and federal government program dedicated to managing water needs in the Bay Area, is underfunded and allows bay restoration to take a backseat to the water needs of corporate farms and growing South California cities. 

“Our concern is that CalFed does not have the resources they need to carry out their mission right now,” Wesselman said, noting that CalFed needs over $10 billion to implement the first stage of a plan adopted two years ago. “We can do our part with Baxter Creek but this is a big job and it will take a big program like CalFed to really save the bay.” 

Volunteers Monday yanked out the water parsley because it is an invasive species, and its leafy vines had spread out over the creek, slowing the flow and increasing its temperature. 

Ecosystem changes like this, Wesselman says, have caused the red-legged frog to disappear, though a new frog has come along that seems to enjoy the warmer waters of Baxter Creek. 

Nearly half of the fresh water that used to flow into the San Francisco Bay is presently being diverted to farms and cities, which in turn has caused the winter run of Chinook salmon to drop 90 percent since the 1970s, according to the Sierra Club. 

“We're hoping to engage Sierra Club members in hands-on restoration work,” Wesselman said, “but also to pressure CalFed to find the money to restore the Bay.”


Boxer tours Oakland shores to inspect port security

Daily Planet Wire Service
Tuesday August 13, 2002

OAKLAND – U.S. Sen. Barbara Boxer Monday toured the Port of Oakland where port officials and representatives from the U.S. Coast Guard briefed her on security efforts being taken to protect the facility against terrorism. 

Boxer, who is charged with reconciling port security bills in the House and the Senate, told port officials during the brief tour that added security must be top priority and vowed to help get as much money as possible to ensure that it happens. 

The current bills being considered – Senate Bill 1214 and House Bill 3983 – would bring about $650 million a year for port security measures that include added U.S. Coast Guard personnel and explosives detection technology. 

Boxer said the best approach to combat terrorist strikes is to enhance security at all possible fronts, including airports, ports, rail systems, power plants and water plants. 

“We have to stay ahead of the terrorists,” the senator said. “We have to do all of it right and there's no question that port security is crucial.” 

Part of the problem, Boxer suggested, was to make the number of cargo containers that have to be inspected smaller by relying on so-called “trusted vendors'' and by working with other countries to have them inspect the cargo before it reaches American shores. 

Currently, only a small percentage of the thousands of cargo containers that are brought in each day are checked.  

“We need to make sure before cargo comes in that we've inspected it, that we know it's safe,” Boxer said. “It's going to be very labor intensive to do that.” 

Boxer said she also supports the concept behind the trusted vendor to be used at the nation's airports through a trusted traveler program in which – after providing their personal information – frequent travelers would get identification cards that allow them to go past security checkpoints. 

Speaking about the impending deadline for airports to meet federal airport standards for baggage screening, Boxer said she is opposed to putting off the Jan. 1 deadline even though only the Los Angeles International Airport has indicated that it could meet the deadline. 

“We really can't put off dates,” Boxer said, adding that she is frustrated by the slow-moving process of making bomb-detection technology easier to get. 

“We got special guided smart bombs that go into caves, burrow down and find a bad guy and we can't check the luggage for bombs that is lying at our feet,” Boxer said.


Senate confirms Freeman to head California power authority

The Associated Press
Tuesday August 13, 2002

SACRAMENTO — The state Senate, in a fiery two-hour debate that stirred old passions about rolling blackouts and price manipulation by now-bankrupt energy traders, confirmed the nomination Monday of 76-year-old S. David Freeman as the state’s top energy chief. 

Freeman, a blunt-talking 40-year public power veteran and choice of Gov. Gray Davis to steer billions of dollars toward building new state power plants, prevailed over Republican opposition in a 25-13 vote. 

Republicans painted Freeman as incompetent, unqualified and unworthy of the $220,008-a-year job he has held since last August. But a Democratic majority, even while acknowledging discomfort with Freeman’s track record during last year’s energy crisis, backed Davis’ nominee to chair the California Consumer Power and Conservation Financing Authority. 

Freeman’s responsibilities include issuing up to $4 billion in bonds to buy, build or lease power plants, and another $1 billion to spur energy conservation. 

Sen. Jackie Speier, D-Daly City, called it her toughest choice on a gubernatorial nominee in a decade, saying, “I’m going to lay this one on the governor. He wants David Freeman. I’m going to give him Mr. Freeman.” 

Speier and other Democrats joined Republicans questioning Freeman’s role as head of the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, when it joined Texas-based Enron and other power generators charging California high prices for electricity.


Psychologist testifies: Stayner highly psychotic

The Associated Press
Tuesday August 13, 2002

SAN JOSE — A psychologist who administered an inkblot test to accused Yosemite killer Cary Stayner testified Monday the former park handyman often lives in a fantasy world and gave psychotic responses to the test. 

Defense witness Myla Young testified in Santa Clara County Superior Court that the results of Stayner’s Rorschach test reveal he spends more time than average people indulging a fantasy world and he would not be able to distinguish fantasy from reality at times. 

Stayner also dwells on minute details rather than looking at a picture or situation overall, Young testified. 

“He can’t see that there’s a forest out there,” she said. “All he can see is that there are individual trees.” 

Stayner’s lawyers are trying to convince a jury he was insane when he killed Carol Sund, 42, her daughter Juli, 15, and Argentinean teenage family friend Silvina Pelosso, 16, in 1999. 

Stayner has already pleaded guilty to beheading Yosemite guide Joie Armstrong and is serving a life sentence in federal prison. He could get the death penalty if convicted on the state murder charges in this case, which was moved to San Jose because of extensive publicity in California’s Central Valley. 

In one inkblot, Stayner saw a demon and cowboys. Young said neither answer was a psychotic response, but the demon was not a “popular” response given by most respondents. 


National COC to develop American Indian businesses

Staff
Tuesday August 13, 2002

WASHINGTON — American Indian businessmen from 16 states have created a nationwide chamber of commerce promoting economic development among the historically disadvantaged group. 

“We want to empower the Native American and Alaska Native,” Michael Harwell, spokesman for the new U.S. American Indian Chamber of Commerce, said Monday. “We want to be a force and we want to level the playing field for this group.” 

The number of businesses owned by American Indians grew by 84 percent and increased their revenues by 179 percent from 1992 to 1997, the most recent figures available from the Commerce Department, but fewer than 1 percent of businesses nationwide were owned by Indians. 

Business development in Indian Country is generally hampered by a lack of investment capital and inadequate training and education, especially in terms of technology. 

The Commerce Department is assisting in the creation of the new chamber of commerce. It provided start-up money for the organization and plans to offer technical and financial assistance to Indian businesses and including chamber representatives on international trade missions, said Selma Sierra, an adviser in the department’s Minority Business Development Agency. 

The hope is to reproduce the successes of the American Indian Chamber of Commerce is modeled after the U.S. Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, which Sierra said has become a powerful advocate for Hispanic-owned businesses. 

Other minority groups in the country also have a national chamber of commerce. 

“We feel this is an opportunity to participate and to give back to the culture,” said Harwell, a member of the Otoe-Missouria Tribe. He owns a public relations firm in Dallas and is president of the American Indian Chamber of Commerce of Texas. 

In 1997, there were 197,300 Indian-owned businesses employing 298,700 people and generating $34.3 billion in revenues, according to the Commerce Department. 

California has the most Indian-owned businesses with 26,600. Alaska had the highest concentration with 11 percent of businesses owned by its native population. Oklahoma and New Mexico each exceeded 5 percent. 

The group met in Albuquerque, N.M., Monday and will announce its formation Tuesday evening. The initial planning meeting, which included representatives from 10 state Indian chambers of commerce, was held in May. Since then, six new states have joined.


Bankruptcy fears up at United after US Airways filing

By Dave Carpenter, The Associated Press
Tuesday August 13, 2002

CEO says government likely to reject
United’s $1.8 billion loan guarantee
 

 

CHICAGO — The stocks of major airlines fell sharply Monday and there was growing concern that United Airlines, the nation’s second-largest carrier, could follow US Airways into bankruptcy. 

Shares of United parent UAL Corp., which have already had lost more than half their value since the start of July, sank another 27 percent to close at $3.80 on the New York Stock Exchange. They traded at $35 a year ago. 

United has more than $2 billion in cash reserves, more aircraft than US Airways and a superior route system. But high costs, daily losses exceeding $1 million and lingering fallout from the Sept. 11 attacks threaten the same fate for United as its smaller rival if its recovery plan doesn’t take off soon. 

Without significant changes, analysts said, United could file for bankruptcy by the end of the year. Like US Airways, the majority employee-owned airline would likely continue to operate while reorganizing its operations. 

United’s labor costs are among the industry’s highest and the carrier wants to roll back some of the hefty raises it negotiated recently. 

“The way things are going, particularly with the unions, I think United is decidedly on the way toward Chapter 11,” said veteran industry observer David Field, Americas editor for Airline Business magazine. 

United officials have declined to discuss the prospects of a Chapter 11 filing. But interim CEO Jack Creighton told United employees Sunday that the government appears likely to reject the company’s application for a $1.8 billion loan guarantee, which it considers key to its ability to compete in a struggling market.


Los Angeles Archdiocese budget hit

Staff
Tuesday August 13, 2002

LOS ANGELES — The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles has been hit so hard by stock market losses and the prospect of settling sexual abuse claims that it plans to cut its budgets for ministry and education by as much as 30 percent and leave some jobs unfilled. 

“We’re in 2 1/2 years of not just zero return but minus return,” Cardinal Roger M. Mahony told the Los Angeles Times. “We not only didn’t get a dollar, we lost huge amounts of money. So while we did have a reserve fund to get through one or two rainy years, I’m very alarmed.” 

Archdiocesan spokesman Tod Tamberg said the nation’s largest archdiocese still does not have a budget and has not reported unspecified losses from the stock market. 

He said he does not know if there will be layoffs, though personnel costs have been contained through attrition. 

Meanwhile, the archdiocese is expected to subsidize its new $200-million Cathedral of Our Lady of Angels and conference center for several years to meet operational costs, the Times reported. The cathedral will be dedicated Sept. 2, but the extent and cost of celebrations will be scaled back with only soft drinks, not lunch, served at the ceremony. 

“We have so many of our people out of work,” Mahony said. “The cathedral’s got to be a spiritual center primarily. So we have to cut back on expenses on the operations, expenses on the staff, to meet the times.” 

Mahony said endowments that support scholarships for Catholic elementary and high school students and for St. John’s Seminary in Camarillo, as well as archdiocesan operational costs, have been particularly hard hit by the stock market’s decline. 

The archdiocese’s financial records are not open to the public because it is a nonprofit religious institution. 

In the past, the archdiocese’s annual operating budget has been about $500 million, according to past statements by church officials. The archdiocese has about 300 employees, according to a Dun & Bradstreet report. 

Tamberg could not determine how much money the archdiocese has lost in the stock market. 

In comparison, the Diocese of Orange, which has a budget roughly one-tenth the size of Los Angeles’, reported that its investment income for the fiscal year ended July 30, 2001, fell $20 million from the previous year. 

So far, the Los Angeles archdiocese’s payments to sexual abuse victims have totaled about $3.5 million, most of it covered by insurance, Tamberg said. 

That amount does not include any future settlements or lawsuits, including a class-action lawsuit filed last month on behalf of 50 alleged victims against the archdiocese. 


Briefs

Staff
Tuesday August 13, 2002

Charles Schwab announces
plans for more major layoffs
 

SAN FRANCISCO — Slumping stock broker Charles Schwab Corp. on Monday said it will resort to more mass layoffs after concluding the dismal market conditions are unlikely to improve this year. 

The San Francisco-based company will start the purge by closing an Austin, Texas call center and pruning jobs from other call centers in Denver, Indianapolis, Phoenix and Orlando, Fla. 

The Austin office closure will jettison 300 workers and the cuts in the call centers outside Texas will eliminate another 75 jobs, the company said. 

Even more firings will occur after management spends the next one to two months mapping out ways to lower its operating expenses by $200 million annually. 

Besides saving money by shrinking its payroll, Schwab said it will probably spend less on advertising and other discretionary items. 

The cost-cutting steps disclosed Monday will save the company about $26 million annually. Schwab will absorb a $36 million charge against its third-quarter earnings to cover severance pay and the costs for closing offices. 

 

Freedom Communications
agrees not to sell
 

IRVINE — The family that owns Freedom Communications Inc., a nationwide media firm that includes The Orange County Register, reached a tentative agreement Sunday not to sell the company. 

Instead, family members will explore ways to transfer “significant ownership” from the older to the younger generation, said Kirk Hardie, head of the Hoiles Family Council. 

“This is something that intrigued everybody enough to go forward researching it,” Hardie said. 

Details of the proposed stock transfers were to be worked out. The plan will be considered by company board members at a meeting Tuesday, Hardie said. 

Forty-three adult descendants of company founder R.C. Hoiles met at a Costa Mesa hotel over the weekend to discuss options for unhappy shareholders who have complained about their inability to cash out their holdings. 

Selling the company was a possibility favored by some, including board member Tim Hoiles, the founder’s grandson. Independent analysts pegged the company’s value at $1.5 billion to $2 billion. 

Tim Hoiles’ attorney, San Francisco antitrust lawyer Joseph M. Alioto, said Sunday night that Hoiles consented to trying the new plan after members of the fourth generation promised they would try to buy him out. 

Hoiles owns 8.6 percent of the company and contends mismanagement has driven down his shares. He had threatened to sue family members. 

Hoiles agreed not to file suit pending implementation of the new approach, Alioto said. 

But the attorney emphasized that if the new plan did not come together quickly, selling the company was still an option. 

“If this does not make it, the next in line is the sale of the company,” Alioto said. 

Hardie previously said the family was divided over whether to sell. Some favored it, others were opposed, and a larger group was taking a wait-and-see approach before the weekend meeting. 

“The company is not for sale,” Board Chairman R. David Threshie, who is married to R.C. Hoiles’ granddaughter, said in a company statement. “We have agreed to explore ways to transfer significant ownership to the younger generation.” 

Freedom is the nation’s fourth largest family owned newspaper chain, according to newspaper analyst John Morton. It ranks behind Advance Publications Inc. (Newhouse), Hearst Corp. and Cox Newspapers Inc. 

“The family shareholders are in agreement that this is an equitable and fair solution to move us forward,” Rick Oncken, chairman of the Family Liquidity Committee, said in the statement. 

R.C. Hoiles, who bought the Santa Ana Register in 1935, used his newspaper to promulgate his libertarian political philosophy in Orange County. 

Today, The Register has won three Pulitzer Prizes and has a circulation of 315,000. The paper is flagship of a group that includes The Gazette in Colorado Springs, Colo., and the Tribune papers in suburban Phoenix, among 28 daily newspapers, 37 weeklies and eight television stations. 

Irvine, Calif.-based Freedom is the 12th largest newspaper group in circulation, according to the Audit Bureau of Circulations. 

As a private company, Freedom doesn’t publicly report full financial information. 


UW scientist probes Indian myth for tsunami clues

By Elizabeth Murtaugh, The Associated Press
Tuesday August 13, 2002

SEATTLE — When scientists figured out that sea water drowned groves of tall trees up and down the coast of Washington state the same year a tsunami hit Japan, they theorized that a massive earthquake in the Pacific most likely triggered both events. 

Based on Japanese records, scientists were able to pinpoint a date — Jan. 26, 1700 — and estimate that the rupture of a long stretch of sea floor had caused a magnitude 9 quake, which would be the largest known temblor ever to strike what is now the contiguous United States. 

But Ruth Ludwin, a University of Washington geophysics professor, wanted more. There appeared to be no accounts of cataclysmic earth-shaking in the stories and legends of the only North Americans who would have been here to witness the quake — Indians. 

“When you talk about a very large earthquake in 1700, for that to be really convincing to me, I really need to have evidence from people who were there,” Ludwin said. “I was looking for a more comprehensive story.” 

Ludwin began to search obscure volumes of tribal folklore, where she found that, for centuries, Indians from British Columbia’s Vancouver Island to the coast of Northern California had been telling strikingly similar tales of mudslides, of plains that suddenly became oceans and other stories that strongly suggest tribes bore witness to tsunamis like the one in 1700. 

Many of the legends involve a mythic battle between a thunderbird and a whale. 

One tale told by generations of Hoh Indians from the Forks area of Washington’s Olympic Peninsula contains what Ludwin considers the clearest description of a concurrent earthquake and tsunami yet discovered in tribal legend. 

As the story goes, Ludwin wrote in a research paper, “There was a great storm and hail and flashes of lightning in the darkened, blackened sky and a great and crashing ’thunder-noise’ everywhere. ... There were also a great shaking, jumping and trembling of the earth beneath and a rolling up of the great waters.” 

The Makah Indians, whose reservation at Neah Bay sits at the northwest tip of Washington state, also have a version — one that ends with a thunderbird delivering a whale inland to the mouth of a river, giving the giant beast to a tribe that had been starving one winter thousands of years ago. 

Although it’s unclear exactly how long the story has been told, it formed the basis of the tribe’s centuries-old whale hunt and could be linked to one of the seven “megathrust” quakes scientists believe have occurred over the past 3,500 years. 

“I think it’s really interesting that our cultural knowledge can help unravel some of these scientific mysteries,” said Janine Bowechop, director of the Makah Museum. “I feel good that we can share information and then really have a better understanding for both worlds.” 

Many legends contain no time elements. Others that were never written down have been lost entirely, so Ludwin’s work can seem like trying to solve a puzzle with most of the pieces missing. But she insists it’s worth it. 

“The work that I’ve done is not extremely important from a scientific point of view, but it’s important from the point of view of understanding and believing,” Ludwin said. “It’s another piece of the puzzle.” 

The megathrust quake believed to have occurred in 1700 ruptured the Cascadia subduction zone, where two of the tectonic plates that form the Earth’s crust — the Juan de Fuca and the North America plates — overlap. From its northern end, off the western coast of Vancouver Island, the subduction zone stretches about 600 miles south to Cape Mendocino in Northern California, then runs into the San Andreas fault. 

It was the Japanese who first theorized that an enormous earthquake in the Pacific caused what they called their “orphan tsunami,” so named because there was no local temblor that accompanied the torrent of 6-foot-high waves that crashed along 500 miles of coastline. 

When they learned that groves of red cedars and Sitka spruces along Washington’s coast had dropped several feet, drowning in saltwater sometime in the late 1600s or early 1700s, they theorized that one huge quake must have been responsible for both the Japanese tsunami and this state’s “ghost forests.” 

Radiocarbon dating of spruce stumps narrowed the timeline of the tree drownings to somewhere between 1680 and 1720, said Brian Atwater, a U.S. Geological Survey scientist in Seattle. 

That was too large a window, so scientists went back to one of the estuaries where roots of red cedars had survived and could be dated by the rings in the roots. 

At that grove, near the Copalis River in Grays Harbor County, tree-ring dating showed the red cedars died sometime between August 1699 and May 1700. 

“If we had found that those red cedars died in 1697 or 1703, we would say, ’Well, we’re not sure your tsunami came from our earthquake,’ ” Atwater said. “We knew there was an earthquake or a series of earthquakes. The question was how big and exactly when.” 

Although the geological evidence of the 1700 megathrust seemed solid, there were still some skeptics before Ludwin started finding Indian tales that supported the science. 

Tribal folklore, Atwater said, “is important, because people understandably want human evidence as well as physical evidence.”


California condors head south by plane

The Associated Press
Tuesday August 13, 2002

There were only 208 condors in the
wild and captivity as of Aug. 1.
 

 

TIJUANA, Mexico — Biologists ferried three California condors to Mexico on Monday, flying the birds by plane on the first leg of a journey to a remote mountain site where a small colony of the endangered giant birds. will be released this fall. 

The birds arrived in Tijuana aboard a private plane from Burbank, Calif., said Bruce Palmer, California condor recovery coordinator for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. 

Three more condors were to have followed on a second flight during the afternoon, but hours of paperwork delays led biologists to postpone shipping them to Mexico until Wednesday.  

From Tijuana, the three birds were to continue on by plane and truck to a remote and rugged site in the Sierra de San Pedro Martir on the northern end of the Baja California peninsula. 

When the other three birds join them, the six will remain in a mountaintop pen for several weeks. 

Once acclimated, five of the condors, all juveniles, will be released to fly over what was once the southernmost extension of a range that stretched from Mexico to Canada. Condors have been absent from Mexico for at least 50 years. 

“To have a place that is reasonably isolated and protected from people, this is important for the birds to develop,” Palmer said. 

All six birds were hatched and raised in captivity; the adult female, however, spent two years flying wild before biologists opted to recapture her because she was straying too close to power lines, which have killed other condors. 

In the 1980s biologists began an aggressive program to capture the last of the free-flying condors and breed them in captivity. From a low of 22 birds, there were 208 condors in the wild and captivity as of Aug. 1. 

As the population grew, biologists began returning the birds to the wild in 1992, releasing them in California and Arizona. The Mexico release will mark the international expansion of program. Eventually, another 20 or so condors could be released at the site in Baja California. 

The goal of the $40 million recovery program is to establish two wild populations and one captive population of condors, each with 150 birds, including a minimum of 15 breeding pairs apiece. Since condors range so far, biologists will consider the Mexican colony part of the California population, with which it is expected to mix. 


Bush calls on citizens in forum on the economyBush calls on citizens in forum on the economy

By Lawrence L. Knutson, The Associated Press
Tuesday August 13, 2002

WACO, Texas — President Bush, trying to calm a jittery stock market and show he’s attacking the nation’s economic problems, is seeking advice from an assemblage ranging from blue-collar workers to blue-chip CEOs. 

A welder, a truck driver and other wage earners were set to join Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney and leading Cabinet members at an invitation-only economic forum Tuesday at Baylor University law school. 

But the leading participants in “The President’s Economic Forum” represented a short cross-section of the cream of America’s corporate boardrooms, including the CEOs of International Paper, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the New York Stock Exchange, American Express, Home Depot, Caterpillar, Intel Corp., the National Association of Manufacturing, Folgers Coffee, eBay, Verizon Communications, National Semiconductor and Yahoo Inc. 

Democrats dismissed the forum as a public relations ploy and a nod to corporate donors to GOP coffers. Many economists were skeptical it would do much to restore consumer confidence. 

“I think it’s pretty much a complete waste of time. I think the president’s time would be better spent just being on vacation,” said Bruce Bartlett, a conservative economic adviser to the first President Bush. 

College presidents, economists, labor officials, farmers, health and education professionals, and technology experts also were invited. The roster included more than 240 participants. 

“This is a listening and teaching session for the president,” White House chief of staff Andrew Card said. 

Bush also planned to use the platform offered by the forum to announce he would not release $5.1 billion officially earmarked for combatting terrorism — some of which Congress earmarked for purposes unrelated to homeland security. Some administration officials said Bush was blocking the money as a signal to Congress to rein in spending. 

Administration officials hastened to rebut complaints that vocal critics of the administration’s economic policies were excluded from the forum, as were members of Congress. 

“The president believes that the best solutions are found outside Washington, and that’s why he wants to hear directly from working Americans and small investors, who are the backbone of our economy,” deputy White House press secretary Scott McClellan said. 

“I see this as an opportunity to have a concentrated engagement with 200-250 people whose opinion I respect,” Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neill said in an interview Monday with The Associated Press. 

With control of both houses of Congress at stake in November’s midterm elections, Democrats have been quick to attack the forum. 

Democratic Party chief Terry McAuliffe cited an “administration adrift” and sought to revive criticism Democrat Bill Clinton leveled against Bush’s father in 1992 that he was out of touch with economic concerns of ordinary Americans. 

Bush was set to spend more than four hours at the Baylor conference, located less than an hour’s drive from his 1,600 acre ranch near Crawford in central Texas. 

The president was attending four of the eight sessions, including panels on corporate responsibility; economic recovery and job creation; health care security; and small investors and retirement security. 

Cheney was covering the others: small business and smarter regulation; education and workers; technology and innovation; and trade. 

The forum coincided with a meeting of Federal Reserve policy makers in Washington and came a day before the chief executives of publicly traded companies must certify to the Securities and Exchange Commission the accuracy of their financial statements. 

Some analysts saw the timing as an effort by the White House to get out in front of any negative developments on the corporate accountability front that could further roil the markets. 

Few analysts expected much from the forum. But some suggested it could do no harm — and did show the president involved in the economic-policy process. 

Others suggested it served the White House’s purpose of showing the president involved in the economic-policy process. 

“There’s no down side to that,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist for the Economy.com consulting service. 

Business groups applauded the gathering. 

“It’s a great platform for me on behalf of the business community to speak candidly about what we have to do to strengthen the economy,” U.S. Chamber of Commerce President Tom Donohue said. 


Slain journalist Daniel Pearl buried

By Paul Wilborn, The Associated Press
Tuesday August 13, 2002

LOS ANGELES— Months after his kidnapping and murder in Pakistan, Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl was finally buried in his home town and remembered as an inspiration to people across the world. 

“Danny will continue to inspire his family and the millions of friends and strangers who were touched by his life and death,” Pearl’s family said in a prepared statement. 

Pearl, 38, was killed in January in Pakistan while working on a story about links between Islamic extremists and Richard C. Reid, who allegedly tried to ignite explosives hidden in his shoe during an international flight. 

Pearl’s body, in an oak casket covered with red flowers, was returned to the United States on Thursday. 

The service Sunday was held at an undisclosed location in Encino, an area of Los Angeles where Pearl’s family lives. 

During the ceremony, Pearl’s father, Judea, chanted the Kaddish, the Jewish prayer of mourning. 

Mitchell Newman, one of Pearl’s friends, played a selection from Bach on the violin, and Rabbi Harold Schulweiss reflected on the significance of Pearl’s life and work. 

The family asked that anyone interested in offering memorials to Pearl initiate or support musical events in their communities on Oct. 10, Pearl’s birthday. Pearl played the violin. 

“He will always be remembered for his pursuit of truth and dialogue, his respect for people of all backgrounds, and his love of music, humor and friendship,” the family said. 

In February, a videotape given to American diplomats confirmed that Pearl was dead. A body found in May in a shallow grave in Karachi was later identified as Pearl’s through DNA. 

Last month, four men, including British-born militant Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh, were convicted of the kidnapping and slaying. Saeed was sentenced to death by hanging and the others received life sentences. All have filed appeals, and seven others are being sought in the case. 

A collection of Pearl’s stories, “At Home in the World,” was published last month. 

His family has also formed The Daniel Pearl Foundation to promote cross-cultural understanding through journalism, music and innovative communication. 

——— 

On the Web: 

http://www.danielpearl.org 


Berkeley arts fest begins on high note

By Peter Crimmins Special to the Daily Planet
Monday August 12, 2002

The 5th annual Berkeley Arts Festival kicked off Saturday afternoon with a bang, rattle, “squonk” and “blat.” Shattuck Avenue became a corridor of noise with musicians on every downtown street corner. With crowds promenading past groups of political petitioners, bullhorns of street poets and open-jam musicians, the day was typical Berkeley turned up a notch or two. 

Center Street was closed to traffic, allowing pedestrians to wander from the Farmers’ Market at Martin Luther King Jr. Way to Oxford Street and the UC Berkeley campus. The festival’s main stage featured the City Council Singers and hip-hop artist Azeem attracting a few dozen listeners. 

Professional “tinkerer” Fran Holland had a difficult time attracting people with his “buffoons” – noise-making horn-like instruments, made from plastic straws and movie posters. He also had trouble giving away the instruments from his assigned post in front of the Bank of America parking lot. 

So he wisely moved to the corner of Center and Shattuck where interested pedestrians were more plentiful. 

“There’s more action down here,” said Holland, as he blew two horns eliciting a noise that a potential customer compared to a passing truck. 

Holland contributed to the overall din of the street. From the apex of the Shattuck triangle, visitors could hear saxophone and drums on the northwest corner, a melodic solo sax on the northeast corner, Holland’s “passing truck” from the southeast, blues by a duo on a steel guitar and wash-bucket bass from the southwest and amplified poets by the taxi stop. 

Political activists were also present, affirming the theme of this year’s festival, “art and politics.” Covering the red-brick sidewalk near the BART station entrance were the Green Party, the Socialist Party, the National Women’s Political Caucus, the Berkeley Organization for Animal Advocacy and Jonathon Keats, who petitioned to turn a law of philosophy into a city ordinance. 

The conceptual artist and absurdist, dressed in a three-piece suit on a 90 degree day, is proposing the principle of non-contradiction, which says that every entity must be equal to itself. Or, put simply, A=A. Although a fundamental law of philosophical logic, it has never been introduced into a civic legal code. Most passers-by ignored the petition, some were confused by its premise, and a few were indignant to its uselessness. 

But some were game for the idea. Keats managed to collect 65 signatures by the end of the day. However, 24 were not county residents and one was a Mayor Shirley Dean forgery, which left only 42 legitimate signatures. Keats is planning to bring his petition to the next Berkeley City Council meeting in September. 

The Berkeley Arts Festival continued Sunday with a marathon piano recital at the Wells Fargo Annex building on Center Street. The five-hour recital performed by local pianists was a musical memorial to Robert Helps, the composer and UC Berkeley professor who passed away last year. Works by Helps and some of his known favorites, including Ravel, Chopin, Schubert and Debussy, were performed on a hand-made Fazioli grand piano donated by Piedmont Pianos for the duration of the festival. 

Pianist Jerry Kuderna prefaced his performance Sunday afternoon with an announcement that he had never played a Fazioli until a week prior and pondered if the acoustics of the square room with high ceilings would do the justice to the piano’s tone. Kuderna was a student of Helps and played two of his mentor’s pieces Sunday. 

Music performances at the Wells Fargo Annex at 2081 Center Street will continue during the Berkeley Arts Festival, on Wednesday, Thursday, Saturday and Sunday evenings. Schedules of these and all festival events can be found at www.berkeleyartsfestival.com.


AC Transit’s only hope may be a parcel tax and more riders

Steve Geller Berkeley
Monday August 12, 2002

To the Editor: 

 

This November, AC Transit will have a new parcel tax on the ballot. Bus fares are going up too. Increased bus fares could be a great source of revenue, especially if the down economy encouraged more transit use. However, this doesn’t seem to be the case. People are spending less, but this does not affect transportation choices very much. Even in this down economy, too many people are still choosing to drive, rather than ride a bus. The personal car, once purchased, is not perceived as an expense – but bus fare sure is. 

AC Transit’s new parcel tax may not pass. Property owners make up most of the drivers filling our streets with vehicles three-quarters empty. Nothing effective is being done to change their habits, to turn more of them into bus riders, more inclined toward the new tax. 

If the parcel tax does not pass, and the weak economy continues to hold down Measure B sales tax revenue, we are going to lose a major part of our bus service. I think it comes down to “use it or lose it”. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Steve Geller 

Berkeley


Soriano sparks Yankees to win over Mulder

By Ben Walker The Associated Press
Monday August 12, 2002

NEW YORK – The New York Yankees needed a jump start. Once again, Alfonso Soriano provided the spark. 

Soriano homered and scored three times as the Yankees roughed up Mark Mulder and beat the Oakland Athletics 8-5 Sunday to avert a three-game sweep. 

“He does a lot of things,” Yankees manager Joe Torre said. “He certainly did a nice job today.” 

Soriano’s leadoff single started a three-run first as the Yankees broke their 17-inning scoreless streak. He doubled with two outs to key a two-run second. 

“I think my job is get to get on base, not to hit home runs,” Soriano said. 

Maybe, but he hit his 29th homer in the sixth as the Yankees tagged Mulder (13-7) for a season-high eight runs. 

“The Soriano homer, I thought it was a pretty good pitch,” Mulder said. “That was the only pitch all day where I made the pitch I wanted and they hit it. He just got to it.” 

Jason Giambi drove in three runs against his former team, helping the AL East leaders maintain a four-game advantage over Boston and avoid their first three-game losing streak since May 22-24. 

Mike Mussina (14-6) continued to struggle, yet wound up with the win. In his last three starts, he’s given up 16 runs and 36 hits in only 16 innings. 

“I’ve got a lot to improve on,” he said. “I’m working hard at it and the guys have been out there supporting me offensively quite a bit.” 

Terrence Long homered and made another excellent catch in center field for the Athletics. But he also grounded into two rally-killing double plays. 

The Yankees finished 5-4 this year against the wild card-contending Athletics. New York chased the A’s from the playoffs in the last two seasons. 

Behind Mulder, the Athletics hoped to finish off their first three-game sweep at Yankee Stadium since July 1994. 

Instead, Soriano, Derek Jeter and Bernie Williams opened up with singles for a run, and Giambi followed with a bad-hop grounder over second baseman Mark Ellis in short right field for a two-run single. 

Mulder recovered to strike out the next four batters, but Williams and Giambi hit RBI singles in the second. 

Jeter, who began the day in a 2-for-19 skid, added an RBI single in the fourth for a 6-3 lead. 

“Well, they finally got some knocks out of the top of the order,” A’s manager Art Howe said. “The first two games, we were able to keep those guys off base.” 

Shane Spencer homered on Mulder’s first pitch in the sixth, and Soriano connected one out later. Soriano is one home run shy of becoming the first second baseman with 30 homers and 30 steals in a season. 

Jermaine Dye hit an RBI single, and Long followed with his ninth homer to make it 3-all in the second. Scott Hatteberg singled home a run in the sixth, Mussina’s last inning. 

Long robbed Ron Coomer of extra bases with a running catch in the third, grabbing the ball right before he slammed his head into the padded wall. Long stayed down on the ground for a minute or so, got a nice ovation from the crowd of 54,703 and left in the seventh inning. 

Long bruised his right elbow and was listed as day to day. 

Oakland’s Miguel Tejada hit a run-scoring single in the ninth for his 98th RBI. 

Notes: Yankees C Jorge Posada got the day off to rest a sore knee. He caught all 16 innings of Friday night’s 3-2 loss. ... Tejada angrily flung his bat after being hit in the left elbow by Steve Karsay’s pitch in the seventh. Tejada and the Yankees have had problems in the past. ... Soriano needs one more homer to tie the team record for a second baseman, set by Joe Gordon in 1940. ... Rondell White went 0-for-17 on the Yankees’ six-game homestand, hitting the ball out of the infield only twice. ... Raul Mondesi struck out in all four at-bats for New York..


Buried creek could resurface in downtown

By Chris Nichols Special to the Daily Planet
Monday August 12, 2002

The blue line laid on the streets of downtown Berkeley last week is not graffiti. It’s the markings of a city-sanctioned campaign. 

Winding down the middle of Center Street, between Oxford Street and Shattuck Avenue, a plastic blue strip traces the underground route of Strawberry Creek, a waterway which many would like to see unearthed and flowing above ground. 

Volunteers from several environmental groups, including Friends of Strawberry Creek and Eco City Builders, laid the line Thursday to draw attention to their restoration plans, known as the Strawberry Creek daylighting project. 

One plan for “daylighting” the creek calls for the leveling of an entire city block in order to expose a section of the subterranean waterway. 

The creek, which originates above ground in the Berkeley hills and flows west across the UC Berkeley campus, was engineered to flow underground to permit the development of west and central Berkeley. 

The most ambitious proposal includes a hotel, conference center and courtyard surrounding the restored creek at Oxford and Center streets. 

A more moderate plan calls for only the removal of pavement, along a portion of Center Street, to expose the creek for public enjoyment. 

Supporters of the creek project say educational, commercial and environmental benefits of the free-flowing waterway would be significant. 

“The creek is a critical piece of the natural history of Berkeley,” said Richard Register, president of Eco City Builders. “It's the most concentrated place of biodiversity in the city.” 

Unearthing the stream will improve the natural habitat for birds, mammals, fish and reptiles dependent on the creek, restorationists say. 

Others tout the restoration as a way to attract people to downtown businesses. 

A long-term vision proposes “daylighting” the stream along its entire underground route from downtown Berkeley to the bay, said Councilmember Donna Spring. 

“I think once the public sees how nice one stretch of creek is, they would support opening up more. We could do this block by block. It doesn't have to be all at once,” Spring said. 

Supporters of the daylighting project hope the symbolic blue line painted last week will prompt the city to take the next step in the creek’s restoration – conducting a financial feasibility study. 

City officials, however, say the feasibility study cannot be rushed because of the project’s numerous economic and transit implications. Construction on Center Street could slow business for downtown restaurants and shops as well as force AC Transit to re-route buses. 

Creek supporters have already secured $80,000 of the estimated $250,000 study from the Coastal Conservancy, a state environmental agency. The study will consider residents’ interest in the project as well as the cost of necessary land acquisitions, construction and traffic alterations. 

City officials say these factors will vary depending on what “daylighting” site is ultimately selected. Currently, Center Street seems to be the most popular option because of its width. 

“This is a block by block decision. For some blocks this [construction] could cost $2 million, others $4 million. There's a wide range,” said Rene Cardinaux, director of the city’s public works. 

City officials say much of the construction cost will be recovered by increased business in the downtown. An above-ground stream would attract patrons to the area, they say. 

“[The project] is not something that will happen this year or next year,” said Arrietta Chakos, chief of staff for the city manager’s office.


Hypocrisy in the height initiative?

Richard Register Berkeley
Monday August 12, 2002

To the Editor: 

 

One who lives in a glass house should not throw stones. Howie Muir, co-author and champion of the Berkeley height initiative lives in one of the “big bulkies” he reviles. Not in an absolute sense, but in a relative sense. His place rises a full story and a pitched roof above the one-story houses that constitute probably 95 percent of his neighborhood.  

But Muir is not all misrepresentation. All one-story buildings block each others views of the bay, as would all two-story buildings in a neighborhood of two-story buildings or all uniform height buildings in any neighborhood. When Muir points out that a wall of four-story buildings along San Pablo would block his view – a view he has only from his rooftop anyway – I agree. This is one of the reasons some people favor “centers-oriented” development over corridors, and why, to get enough housing in the city to make any real difference, some of us support somewhat taller buildings in downtown. Centers around the Ashby BART Station and the west Berkeley center around University Avenue, from San Pablo to the Southern Pacific train stop. Such centers make transit work much better and get people out of their cars. The best city arrangement would be mainly “centers-oriented” development with corridors emphasized within the centers having even greater density. The corridors should not connect continuously from center to center. We should be able to see around the centers and the centers themselves should be interesting architecture with roof and terrace planting to make them appear something like natural hills. Also, “centers-oriented” development leaves room for restoration of waterways and other natural features whereas corridors of medium density, say four stories, create a much more expensive barrier to remove one day when we recognize the value of opening creeks and retaining views from higher places. This sounds a little complex, but it uses the best of both “corridors-oriented” and “centers-oriented” development. 

If you think it’s worthwhile to consider such things and try innovative approaches to solving today’s housing and environmental problems, you better vote against the Berkeley height initiative in November. 

 

 

 

 

Richard Register 

Berkeley


Major League players likely to set strike date Monday

By Ronald Blum The Associated Press
Monday August 12, 2002

NEW YORK – All the drama in baseball this season hasn’t been confined to the field. 

Some of the toughest pitches are being hurled across Manhattan conference rooms, where owners are demanding economic changes that could spark the game’s ninth work stoppage since 1972. 

And it could come to this: No World Series for the second time in nine years. 

Players are likely to set a strike date when their executive board meets Monday, possibly leading to a walkout in late August or early September. The key stumbling block appears to be management’s demand to slow escalating player salaries — a luxury tax on teams with high payrolls. 

“Eventually, it all has to be tied together,” said Atlanta pitcher Tom Glavine, the National League player representative. “There’s caution on our side because obviously the big issues — revenue sharing and luxury tax — are out there. Those can set the negotiations in motion quickly in one direction or the other.” 

Finding a way to slow salaries has been a perennial management goal long before Bud Selig became commissioner in 1998. Players, however, would like keep things the way they are. Since 1976, the last season before free agency, the average salary has jumped from $51,500 to $2.38 million, a 46-fold increase. 

Selig said it has reached the point where only the richest teams can compete. He thinks revenue-sharing — taking from the biggest clubs and giving to the smaller ones, like his family-owned Milwaukee Brewers — is the only way to restore competitive balance. 

“The system is so, in my judgment, badly flawed, it’s going to take a myriad of solutions,” Selig said earlier this month. 

One owner who sticks up for big-market clubs is George Steinbrenner, whose New York Yankees’ payroll is $135 million. He doesn’t think they should have to subsidize smaller teams. 

Steinbrenner also thinks profit-sharing should be used to raise payrolls, not help teams rack up profits. But he’s not certain how much his opinion counts these days. 

“Bud Selig and I have been friends for a long time. I’m not sure how much he relies on me anymore,” Steinbrenner said in an interview published Sunday in The New York Times. “I don’t know. He kind of has his allies, and most of them are small-market guys.”


Pedestrian safety on ballot

By John Geluardi Special to the Daily Planet
Monday August 12, 2002

Berkeley streets, considered some of the most dangerous in the state for pedestrians and bicyclists, may get safety improvements if voters agree to a new tax in November. 

Last month, the City Council approved a ballot measure to ask voters to approve a special tax expected to raise approximately $10 million over 10 years. Property taxes would increase by 1.3 cents per square foot. According to the city’s financial analysis, the annual cost for the average 1,900 square-foot homeowner would be $24.70 a year. 

In order for the new tax to become law, two-thirds of city voters must vote yes for the measure. 

Traffic improvements to increase pedestrian and bicycle safety would include pedestrian activated traffic signals, lighted pedestrian crosswalks and traffic circles. 

Opponents of the tax say that property taxes are already too high and that bicyclists and pedestrians are injured because they do “crazy stuff.” They should pay more attention to traffic, opponents say. 

According to the 2000 Bicycle and Pedestrian Safety Task Force Report, Berkeley has the highest rate of pedestrian and bicycle accidents of 45 cities of similar size in the state. 

And according to the traffic division of the city’s public works department, which maintains traffic injury statistics, one pedestrian and one bicyclist have been killed by automobiles so far this year. 

District 2 Councilmember Dona Spring said pedestrian safety measures are long overdue. The city’s most dangerous intersection according to the BAPST report are at University and Shattuck avenues, within Spring’s council district. 

“We have 20 percent more cars on the streets than 20 years ago and people don’t feel safe,” she said. “If we are going to ask people to leave their cars at home and bicycle or walk to work, we have to make the streets safe for them.” 

She added that the new tax is necessary because there isn’t enough money in the public works department budget to make necessary safety improvements. 

“The public works budget is overwhelmed with fixing streets, sidewalks and maintaining the existing traffic safety systems,” Spring said. “This extra tax is only for 10 years and will give us a real shot in the arm.” 

But former chair of the city’s Budget Commission Art Goldberg helped write arguments against the measure. He said the tax is poorly thought out and unnecessary. He said there is no solid calculation of how much money the tax will raise and no clear statement about where the money is going.  

In addition, Goldberg said the real problem is not traffic management but pedestrians and bicyclists who dart out into traffic and aggressively assert their right of way.  

“I see them do crazy stuff everyday,” he said. “Pedestrians in this city assert their right of way in crosswalks all the time. They should realize they are at a disadvantage to a car.”  

Bicycle Friendly Berkeley President Dave Campbell disagreed.  

“The way to improve pedestrian and bicycle safety is to slow cars down,” he said. “It would be very bad public policy for a city the size of Berkeley, with such a high ratio of people who bike and walk, to put automobiles first.” 

Spring added that motorists are the problem and that Berkeley’s quality of life is rapidly diminishing as more cars and fewer pedestrians fill the streets.  

“All of the people I talk to say they want more pedestrian safety,” she said. “There is a constant stress always having to watch for cars.”


More downplaying height limits

Lenora Young Berkeley
Monday August 12, 2002

To the Editor : 

 

A letter by Ms. Nicoloff attempts to get people to believe that her height initiative will protect neighborhoods. Her ordinance would not do that. It would, in reality, deprive Berkeley neighborhoods of the people who have made Berkeley a thriving city. It would prevent long-term residents from moving from homes that have become too large for one or two individuals due to changes which have taken place in their lives, and because they are now in need of public transit. The kind of apartments on transit corridors that are needed could not be built under Ms. Nicoloff's initiative.  

She continues her letter by attempting to malign several organizations and councilmembers. This tactic won’t get Berkeley the rental units it needs to house Berkeley's retired adults. Voting against the height initiative will show support for Berkeley. 

 

 

 

Lenora Young  

Berkeley


Bay Area leaders want say on Iraq

Daily Planet Wire Report
Monday August 12, 2002

MARTINEZ – Two prominent East Bay lawmakers say they support a “regime change” in Iraq, but they emphasize that Congress should be consulted in advance. 

U.S. Reps. George Miller, D-Martinez, and Ellen Tauscher, D-Alamo, were among at least eight Bay Area lawmakers who signed a letter on July 26 cautioning President George W. Bush to obtain congressional authorization before any such effort. 

A replacement for the government of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein, whom the Iraqi legislature declared “president for life” in 1990, would be “good for all the parties concerned,” Miller said. 

“The question of how you achieve that change, however, remains an open question,” Miller cautioned. “It is clear to me that whatever action the United States takes must be within the rule of law.” 

Tauscher spokesperson April Boyd says Tauscher agrees that members of Congress should be consulted before military action. 

Tauscher herself has no knowledge of military plans being made by the Bush administration. 

But Bush has made no secret of his desire to remove Hussein. In June he was reported to have ordered the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency to begin a comprehensive secret effort to overthrow the Iraqi government. In a June 1 commencement speech at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, N.Y., Bush said the United States should be ready to take “preemptive action” against regimes considered to be a threat.  

“If we wait for the threats to fully materialize, we will have waited too long,” Bush told the cadets. 

U.S. Rep. Anna Eshoo, D-Atherton, emphasized the need for evidence before military action. She also considered whether instigating an armed conflict might cause the very thing that it was intended to prevent. 

“The president has made his support clear for a regime change, but has yet to give the American people or Congress evidence that our country is immediately threatened by Iraq,” said Eshoo. “There must be a full and clear debate regarding any proposed regime change including the question, would military action precipitate the use of biological weapons, and how would an attack affect regional stability.” 

U.S. Rep. Mike Honda, D-San Jose, said that because Iraq has not complied with its pledge to permit full access to its facilities by United Nations inspectors, U.S. officials are now in the precarious situation of not knowing exactly what kind of weapons Iraq has. 

“I believe it would be in the best interest of the U.S., our allies and the world if an Iraqi regime complied fully with the U.N. inspectors and proved that programs to build weapons of mass destruction are non-existent,” Honda said. “Saddam Hussein has not shown an interest in accomplishing this mission.” 

Honda added that officials within the Bush Administration disagree as to what kind of weapons the Iraqis have. 

Honda said another important consideration in deciding whether to conduct a military action against Iraq would be support from the international community, a concern also cited by U.S. Rep. Lynn Woolsey, D-Petaluma. 

“The U.S. must not engage Iraq militarily unless there is direct evidence of Iraq's involvement in terrorist activities,” she said. “Anything less could destroy the international coalition to fight terrorism and could significantly damage U.S. relations with countries in the Middle East, Europe, and Asia,” Woolsey continued. “Any action we take militarily should be done with the support of the international community.”


Bay Area Briefs

Monday August 12, 2002

FBI reports bridge terrorist threat 

SAN FRANCISCO — Various state and federal law enforcement officials increased patrols on and around the Golden Gate Bridge on Sunday after bridge district officials learned of a potential terrorist threat 11 months after attacks on New York and Washington. 

The bridge was placed on a “superheightned” state of alert after information was shared through an interagency coalition Friday, said Mary Currie, spokeswoman for the Golden Gate Bridge Highway & Transportation District. 

The California Highway Patrol, FBI, U.S. Coast Guard, Federal Aviation Administration and other agencies “all aggressively are doing exactly what needs to be done to protect and keep the Golden Gate Bridge secure,” Currie said. 

She would not elaborate on the details of the threat or specify the information’s source. However, the bridge district board’s president, Harold C. Brown, told the Contra Costa Times the FBI was gauging the credibility of a threat that terrorists planned to crash an aircraft into the span. 

Video footage, shared by Spanish authorities and thought to be the work of al-Qaida, included shots of the bridge’s suspension anchors and also featured other American landmarks, including Disneyland, Chicago’s Sears Tower and New York’s Statue of Liberty believed to be terrorist targets. 

 

One more Oakland homicide 

OAKLAND – The Oakland Police Department reports that it is investigating a homicide that occurred a 2:26 p.m. Sunday at the 9600 block of Edes Avenue. 

A police spokesman said a male victim was shot numerous times before being taken to Highland Hospital where he later died.


Napster assets up for auction

The Associated Press
Monday August 12, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO – The assets of file-sharing service Napster Inc. went up for auction Friday with an asking price of $25 million and a deadline only eight business days away. 

Trenwith Securities, a Costa Mesa-based securities firm, was hired by Napster’s creditors to help generate interest between now and the Aug. 21 bid deadline. Trenwith has been pitching to everyone from venture capitalists, music retailers and media firms to major record labels that drove Napster into bankruptcy this year. 

But those interested will have to outbid German publishing giant Bertelsmann, which has promised to bid an additional $9 million at the auction to be held Aug. 27, bringing the total value of its bid to more than $100 million. Bertelsmann advanced Napster, which boasted some 60 million users at its zenith, more than $85 million in loans and is funding the Redwood City, Calif.-based firm’s operations during its bankruptcy reorganization. 

The creditors committee named by the bankruptcy judge, however, is hoping it can do better with Trenwith’s help. 

The committee, which includes the law firm of former Napster lawyer David Boies and some music and software companies, thinks the judge might not count most of Bertelsmann’s initial $85 million, in which case the winning bidder could put up as little as $25 million.


Small businesses looking better

By Matthew Artz Daily Planet Staff
Saturday August 10, 2002

Maria Magana has an old, yellowing photograph of her shop, Pepitos Deli, taken before a 1999 facelift. Four years ago, her storefront was in as bad a shape as the photo. 

Today, however, peeling paint, old window panes and an ugly metal door at the San Pablo Avenue deli have given way to fresh coats of green, purple and yellow, a craftsman wood door and an ornate new sign. 

Why the change? A city of Berkeley facade grant. 

The four-year old program has given money to about 130 small business owners to improve the look of their storefronts and add safety features to their businesses. 

“This is a useful tool to help blighted property,” said Ted Burton of the city’s Office of Economic Development.  

The program targets property owners in certain parts of the city, including downtown, University Avenue and south and west Berkeley. The owners usually receive about $3,500. The grant money mostly goes toward new signs, awnings, paint, windows, doors and outside lighting. 

“The program helps us to convince owners to clean up their storefronts and make the neighborhood safer and look better,” said Burton. 

The program’s most noticeable impact has been on San Pablo Avenue, between University and Ashby avenues, where 52 businesses have received city grants. 

“We work with San Pablo merchants and residents to identify neighborhood clusters so we can revitalize an entire area,” said Burton 

Local merchants acknowledge the improvement. 

“I think the neighborhood looks really nice,” said Pete Raxakoul, owner of Country Cheese at San Pablo Avenue and Addison Street. “There’s a lot more people walking around now. It’s a lot less scary with the new lights.” 

Raxakoul said he was approached last year by the Office of Economic Development about participating in the program. 

“I wasn’t planning on doing any work, but if someone offers it for free, it’s always nice.”  

With free money comes certain restrictions. 

Magana said her initial plan for Pepitos Deli had a more “Hispanic” theme, but city officials rejected the design on grounds that it would reduce the property’s resale value. 

Still, she is happy with the end result. “The city was very helpful and the sign looks great,” she said. 

However, some owners aren’t happy with their refurbished storefronts. 

Deloris Handel, the new owner of Lucky Dog Pet Shop at 2154 San Pablo Ave., thinks the sign and paint that the city and former owner chose for her shop doesn’t grab people’s attention. 

“Aesthetically it’s a great sign, but as far as attracting business, it doesn’t work,” she said. She would have preferred neon. 

Construction on the Country Cheese storefront begins in two weeks. However, this may be one of the final facelifts for of the year. 

The program, which has given out an estimated $240,000 over the last four years, was not funded this year due to budget cuts. All current projects are being funded with money from the previous year’s budget. 

Burton said he is hopeful that funding will be restored, and that Telegraph Avenue merchants have expressed interest in the program. 

“There is definitely more to be done,” he said.  


Particle matter a serious matter

Sara MacKusick Chair of the Community Environmental Advisory Commission
Saturday August 10, 2002

I support Doug Fielding's enthusiasm for creating more playing fields in Berkeley, and I don't even object to his support for the existing playing field at Harrison Park (Gabe Catalfo Field) which is an area with poor air quality. But I do object to Mr. Fielding's attempt to ignore and/or distort the facts about the city of Berkeley's current air study at the park. 

Mr. Fielding asserts that the city's air study is flawed “according to the person overseeing the issue of particulate matter (PM) at the state EPA.” Who is the person? What is the flaw? Does Mr. Fielding know that this project was reviewed by the Bay Area Air Quality Management District as well as the California Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment, and that these agencies consult with Berkeley staff on a regular basis? Mr. Fielding may be ready to conclude that the location of the air monitor explains the poor air quality readings at Harrison Field; I’ll bet parents of children with asthma aren't willing to be so cavalier.  

Mr. Fielding refers to a “long term study of 3,500 children in the Los Angeles basin that found no correlation between particulate matter and increased respiratory distress among athletes versus non-athletes.” Mr. Fielding misinterprets this study which was reported in The Lancet in February 2002 and titled “Asthma in exercising children exposed to ozone: a cohort study.” The study investigated the link between exposure to air pollution– ozone, nitrogen dioxide and particulate matter (PM) – during exercise or time spent outdoors and the development (new diagnoses) of asthma. And actually, on the basis of their data, the study’s authors concluded that “air pollution and outdoor exercise could contribute to the development of asthma in children.” (That's not an attack of asthma; that's a new diagnosis of asthma.) 

The scientists who study air pollution and health take this PM stuff seriously and so should the rest of us, even Mr. Fielding. 

 

Sara MacKusick 

Chair of the Community  

Environmental Advisory  

Commission


An unusual building system was developed in Berkeley

By Susan Cerny Special to the Daily Planet
Saturday August 10, 2002

Scattered around west Berkeley is an unusual building system which consists of pre-cast concrete wall panels with translucent glass blocks set into the concrete in a pattern that created a lattice-work of diamond-shaped openings in a grid-pattern. They are referred to as “concrete grid forms.” 

This building system appears to have been developed around 1938 by George A. Scott at his 3075 Telegraph Avenue shop. His company was called the Concrete Grid Form Company and his office, constructed with grid forms of course, is still standing at 3075 Telegraph. Architects Walter Steilberg and Bernard Maybeck were enlisted by Scott as consulting designers. About the same time, Fred Stadelhofer of Berkeley Pump developed a variation on the form with cement contractor E. H. Buel. 

Scott's method of constructing the forms had the concrete poured into an egg-crate like mold with the glass blocks installed later. Buell's method had the concrete poured directly around the glass blocks.  

A wall of these pre-cast panels was exhibited as a garden wall at the 1938 Treasure Island Exposition, and the system was featured in an article in the September 1940 issue of Architect and Engineer. Walls of these concrete grid forms provide light with privacy and an interesting decorative pattern. The translucent glass block is associated with the Art Deco Style and is again being used today. 

Concrete grid-form buildings can be seen at various locations around Berkeley. There are several concrete-grid form buildings built by the Berkeley Pump Company between 1945-1955 by E.H. Buel in the 2200 block of Fifth Street, the 2300 block of Fourth Street, at 816 and 830 Bancroft Way, and 721 Channing Way. On the north side of the 700 block of Bancroft is an impressive block-long wall of these grid forms. Berkeley Pump was a large manufacturing business in Berkeley which made pumps for a variety of uses but its manufacturing plant was a collection of buildings scattered across several blocks. The buildings have been mostly converted to offices and some retail uses.  

The best place to view these concrete grid forms is at 1001 University Avenue. The former Mobilized Women of Berkeley building (1938, attributed to Bernard Maybeck) is now part of Amsterdam Art and the large auditorium is open as part of their retail business. Other grid-form buildings are located at 3075 Telegraph Avenue (1938), 805 Camellia (1946), 746 Folger (1951), the bathrooms at Kleeberger Field on the university campus; 1025 Carleton Street; 1800 Dwight Way; and 1865 University Avenue.  

Susan Cerny is author of Berkeley Landmarks and writes this in conjunction with the Berkeley Architectural Heritage Association.  


Mime Troupe lampoons U.S. policy

By Robert Hall Special to the Daily Planet
Saturday August 10, 2002

“The closer you get the funnier we seem,” urged the guy on the portable stage tucked into the northeast corner of Willard Park. He beckoned the crowd nearer, smiling. It scooted up with tarps and blankets and coolers so late arrivals could fit in. A bluegrass band enlivened the mellow afternoon air while someone passed out “No War” bumper stickers and vendors sold cookies and drinks. 

It was time for political satire, and where better for political satire than a grassy sward in Berkeley? 

The occasion was one of San Francisco Mime Troupe’s free shows that crop up all over the Bay Area this time of year. In the words of one of its collective, Amos Glick: “We’ve been doing political theater for over 40 years for anyone who will listen.” 

Plenty were listening at Willard Park last Sunday. The name of the troupe’s latest jibe at politics-as-usual is “Mr. Smith Goes to Obscuristan,” based on the Frank Capra film, “Mr. Smith Goes to Washington,” in which a naïve, goodhearted Jefferson Smith played by James Stewart joins congress only to discover that (gasp!) politics is corrupt. 

The movie is almost as naïve as Smith, but it provides a useful springboard for the Mime Troupe’s sendup, in which naïve, goodhearted New York firefighter Jefferson Smith is co-opted by the state department to observe the presidential elections in the mythical but emblematic middle eastern country of Obscuristan. No surprise that the United States just wants to use Smith. Obscuristan’s shoo-in candidate is in its pocket, and though it claims that the country is so worthless that it is “forced to import sand,” when it turns out to have oil the state department only shrugs. 

“Who knew?” a spokeswoman coos, batting her eyes. 

“Mr. Smith Goes to Obscuristan,” generates laughs and has a few good lines. For example, when a repressor groans, “Have you seen what happens when you give free speech to well-fed children? It isn’t pretty.” But its satire of U.S. foreign policy and the Bush administration is neither inventive nor biting. More akin to “Saturday Night Live” than to Bertolt Brecht or Dario Fo, it features a Dick Cheney who once worked for “Scandalburton,” and a President Bush who chokes on pretzels, cannot pronounce new words, and fusses, “This peace process is taking longer than a colonoscopy.” The Obscuristan candidate Automaht Regurgitov, declares, “If you know which way the wind blows, you know which way to bend,” and his upstart opposition aspirant is named Ralif Nadir. The news media gets ambushed too. CNN becomes SNN, the Selective News Network, which insists that its on-site reporter remember “nothing but puff pieces.” 

Written by Josh Kornbluth, Gene Sullivan and the Mime Troupe, and directed by Sullivan and Keiko Shimato, “Obscuristan” takes easy shots at sitting-duck targets but is likable. And though its cast members have variable talents, they all go at the material with infectious good humor. 

Oddly, the greatest irony of this particular performance may have occurred on its fringes, where demonstrators waved placards accusing the Mime Troupe of being “Racist and Orientalist.” Protesters protesting protesters? Its most unsettling moment may have come from the audience. When an Obscuristan patriot cried to the United States, “Everybody hates you,” several people cheered, while I flinched at those cheers. Has national self-loathing gone so far?  


Arts Calendar

Saturday August 10, 2002

 

Friday, August 9 

3Canal 

The Cut & Clear Crew with DJ Engine Room 

9:30 p.m. 

Ashkenaz, 1317 San Pablo Ave. 

525-5024 or www.ashkenaz.com 

$12 in advance, $15 door/ Free for 12 and younger 

 

Henri-Pierre Koubaka 

8:00 p.m. 

Freight & Salvage, 1111 Addison St. 

548-1761 or www.freightandsalvage.com 

$15.50 in advance, $16.50 at door 

 

Left Hand Smoke, Schfvilkus 

9:30 p.m. 

The Starry Plough, 3101 Shattuck Ave. 

841-2082 

$7 door 

 

Marvin Sease plus Beverly Watson 

1st show 7 p.m., 2nd show 10 p.m. 

Rountree’s Rhythm & Blues, 2618 San Pablo Ave. 

663-0440 

$40 in advance 

 

Rebel Music 

8 p.m.. 

La Peña Cultural Center, 3105 Shattuck Ave.  

A Collective of artists and musicians from the Bay. Hiphop, reggae, dance hall and spoken word. 

849-2568 or www.lapena.org 

$10 

 

Saturday, August 10 

Afromuzika 

9 p.m. 

Ashkenaz, 1317 San Pablo Ave. 

525-5024 or www.ashkenaz.com 

$12 door/ Free for 12 and under 

 

De Rompe y Raja & Lucho Cabrera 

8 p.m. 

La Peña Cultural Center, 3105 Shattuck Ave.  

Afro-Peruvian singer Lucho Cabrera from Ica, Peru, performs for the first time at La Peña with De Rompe y Raja. 

849-2568 or www.lapena.org 

$13 in advance, $15 at door 

 

Mark Growden’s Electric Pinata, Beth Custer Ensemble 

9:30 p.m. 

The Starry Plough, 3101 Shattuck Ave. 

841-2082 

$7 door 

 

Tony MacMahon, Jody Stecher & Eric Thompson 

8:00 p.m. 

Freight & Salvage, 1111 Addison St. 

548-1761 or www.freightandsalvage.com 

$15.50 in advance, $16.50 at door 

 

Marvin Sease plus Beverly Watson 

1st show 7 p.m., 2nd show 10 p.m. 

Rountree’s Rhythm & Blues, 2618 San Pablo Ave. 

663-0440 

$40 in advance 

 

Berkeley Arts Festival Opening Day 

10-ring Cultural Circus 

Noon to 6 p.m. 

Main stage on Center St. near the City Garage between Shattuck and Milvia 

The 5th annual Berkeley Arts City Wide Celebration of Art and Politics opens with this event. Music, poetry, speakers, storytelling and more. 

665-9496 

Free 

 

University of California, Berkeley Summer Symphony 

8 p.m. 

Hertz Hall on the U.C. Campus located near the intersection of Bancroft and College. 

Performing Brahms’s Piano Concerto No. 1 in d-minor with soloist Mei-Fang Lin and Beethoven’s Symphony No. 5 in c-minor. 

642-4864 

Free 

 

Sunday, August 11 

Jim Hurst & Missy Raines 

8:00 p.m. 

Freight & Salvage, 1111 Addison St. 

548-1761 or www.freightandsalvage.com 

$15.50 in advance, $16.50 at door 

 

Prezidenz Brown with DJ Jah Wizer 

9:30 p.m. 

Ashkenaz, 1317 San Pablo Ave. 

525-5024 or www.ashkenaz.com 

$11 door 

 

Robert Helps Memorial Marathon Concert 

Berkeley Arts Festival 

11 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

Wells Fargo Annex, 2081 Center St. 

A dozen of the best pianists of the Bay join in a marathon tribute to Robert Helps, who died last year. 

665-9099 

$10 

 

Virginia Mayhew 

4:30 p.m.  

Berkeley Jazz School, 2087 Addison St. 

New York-based saxophonist-featuring Ingrid Jensen, Harvie Swartz-Allison Miller. 

845-5373 for reservations  

swing@jazzschool.com or www.jazzschool.com 

$6 to $12 

 

Tuesday, August 13 

Tom Rigney and Flambeau 

8:30 p.m. 

Ashkenaz, 1317 San Pablo Ave. 

525-5024 or www.ashkenaz.com 

$8 door/ Free for 12 and under 

 

Wednesday, August 14 

Phil Marsh 

8:00 p.m. 

Freight & Salvage, 1111 Addison St. 

548-1761 or www.freightandsalvage.com 

$15.50 in advance, $16.50 at door 

 

Roadoilers with the Bluegrass  

Intentions 

8:30 p.m. 

Ashkenaz, 1317 San Pablo Ave. 

525-5024 or www.ashkenaz.com 

$10/ Free for 12 and under 

 

Thursday, August 15 

Colcannon 

8:00 p.m. 

Freight & Salvage, 1111 Addison St. 

 

 

548-1761 or www.freightandsalvage.com 

$15.50 in advance, $16.50 at door 

 

Dean Santomieri: Multimedia Works 

Berkeley Arts Festival 

8 p.m. 

Wells Fargo Annex, 2801 Center St. 

Multi-media works “The Boy Beneath the Sea” and “A Book Bound in Red Buckram...” presented by composer, monologist, and video artist Santomieri. 

665-9496 

$10 

 

Friday, August 16 

Farallon Brass Ensemble Concert 

8 p.m. 

Crowden Music Center, 1475 Rose St. Berkeley 

Performance by Farallon Brass Ensemble highlighting their brass camp for young musicians. 

$10 general, $5 students/seniors 

Girls in Ties, 151 Cameo Dr., and Robert and Karen 

7 p.m. to 11 p.m. 

Café Eclectica, 1309 Solano Ave. 

527-2344 

$4 

 

Duck Baker & Jamie Findlay 

8 p.m. 

Freight & Salvage, 1111 Addison St. 

548-1761 or www.freightandsalvage.com 

$15.50 in advance, $16.50 at door 

 

Native Elements with Buffalo Soldier 

Joined by special guest Humble Soul 

9:30 p.m. 

Ashkenaz, 1317 San Pablo Ave. 

525-5024 or www.ashkenaz.com 

$11 door/ Free for 12 and under 

 

Saturday, August 17 

Composer Portraits with Sarah Cahill and Gabriela Frank 

Berkeley Arts Festival 

8 p.m. 

Jazzschool, 2087 Addison St. 

665-9099 

$10 

 

The Edios 

8:00 p.m. 

Freight & Salvage, 1111 Addison St. 

548-1761 or www.freightandsalvage.com 

$15.50 in advance, $16.50 at door 

 

 

Freedom! Now! 

Berkeley Arts Festival Gallery & Headquarters 2055 Center St. 

Reception 6 to 8 p.m. 

Through Aug. 25, Tues. - Sun., noon to 5 p.m. 

Commemorates the work of those who struggled for justice and freedom from government/state repression. 

841-2793 

 

First Year Anniversary Group Exhibition 

Through Aug. 17 

Ardency Gallery, 709 Broadway, Oakland 

New works from various artists. 

836-0831 

 

Images of Love and Courtship 

Through Sept. 15 

Gathering Tribes, 1573 Solano Ave. 

Ledger paintings by Michael Horse. 

528-9038 

Free 

 

The Creation of People’s Park 

Through Aug. 31, Mon. - Thurs., 9 a.m. 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, with curator Harold Adler. 

hjadler@yahoo.com 

Free 

 

"New Visions: Introductions '02"  

Works from emerging Californian artists 

Through Aug. 10 

Pro Arts, 461 Ninth St., Oakland 

763-4361 

Free 

 

"New Work: Part 2, The 2001 Kala Fellowship Exhibition"  

Through Sept. 7, Tues.-Fri. Noon to 5:30 p.m., Sat. 12:00-4:30 p.m. 

Kala Art Institute, 1060 Heinz Ave. 

Featuring 8 Kala Fellowship winners, printmaking 

549-2977  

 

“If These Walls Could Talk” 

Through Sept. 8 

Lawrence Hall of Science, University of California Campus (just below Grizzly Peak Blvd.) 

See how various civilizations built all kinds of structures from mud huts to giant skyscrapers at this building exhibit. 

642-5132 

Admission: $8 for adults; $6 for youth 5-18, seniors and disabled; $4 for children 3-4; Free for children under 3, LHS Members and fulltime Berkeley students. 

 

“Virtually Real Oakland - The Magic, The Diversity and the Potholes” 

Through Sept. 21, Mon.-Fri. 8:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. 

Photolab Gallery, 2235 Fifth St., Berkeley 

Exhibit by Ken Burson; digitally enhanced photos of Oakland. 

644-1400 

Free 

 

Friday, August 9 

Once Upon a Mattress 

7:30 p.m. [5 p.m. Sat. & Sun. Aug. 10 and 11] 

Julia Morgan Theater, 2640 College Ave.  

A hilarious retelling of "The Princess and the Pea," presented by Stage Door Conservatory, by students grades 5 through 9. 

527-5939 

$8 to $12 

 

Friday, August 16 

“Pericles, Prince of Tyre” 

8:00 p.m. 

Wells Fargo Annex, 2081 Center St. 

This romance follows Prince Pericles, hunted for a crime he did not commit, on an epic voyage around the Mediterranean. Presented by Woman’s Will, the Bay Area’s all-female Shakespeare Company. 

665-9496 

Free 

 

Saturday, August 10 

"Poetry in the Plaza" honors June Jordan 

Berkeley Arts Festival 

2:30 p.m. 

Central Library, 2090 Kittredge St. 

Readings from poets Marvin K. White, Sharon Doubiago, Lucha Corpi, Chinaka Hodge and others. 

981-6233 

Free 

 

Wednesday, August 14 

Café Poetry and open mic hosted by Kira Allen  

7:30 p.m. 

La Peña Cultural Center, 3105 Shattuck Ave.  

849-2568 or www.lapena.org 

$2 

 

Saturday, August 24 

Rhythm & Muse 

6:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Art Center, 1275 Walnut St. 

Poetry reading and open mike featuring Zigi Lowenburg & Raymond “Nat” Turner. 

527-9753 

Free admission 

 

Wednesday, August 14 

Premiere of “MMI” by John Sanborn 

Berkeley Arts Festival 

8 p.m. 

Wells Fargo Annex, 2081 Center St., Berkeley 

Event also features a piano concert featuring Sarah Cahill performing recent works and some composed specifically for her. 

665-9496 

 

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 

 

Truth: Exposing Israeli Apartheid  

7:30 p.m. 

La Pena, 3105 Shattuck Ave. 

Premiere of documentary by local filmmaker Wendy Campbell. 

655-5889 

$20 donations


Calendar of Community Events & Activities

Saturday August 10, 2002

Friday, August 9 

Community Skin Cancer Screening Clinic 

11 a.m. to 2 p.m. 

Markstein Cancer Education Center, Summit Campus, 2450 Ashby Avenue 

Skin cancer screenings offered to people with limited or no health insurance. By Appointment only. 

For more information or to make an appointment call 869-8833 

 

Saturday, August 10 

Avotcja's Birthday Bash 

7:30 p.m. 

Mama Bear's Books, 6536 Telegraph Avenue 

Poetry, music and dance in celebration of poet Avotcja Jiltonilro's 61st birthday. Reservations are suggested. 

428-9684 

$10 donation 

 

B-TV Bowl-a-thon 

11 a.m. 

Albany Bowl, 540 San Pablo Ave. 

2nd annual Bowl-a-thon to raise proceeds for educational and government programs and a needed facility and equipment upgrade. 

848-2288 ext.. 11 

Free 

 

Berkeley NAACP  

General Membership Meeting 

1:00 p.m. 

Church by the Side of the Road, 2108 Russell Street 

Founded in 1909, the NAACP is the largest, oldest, and most effective civil rights organization in the country. Monthly meetings are held every 2nd Saturday.  

510-435-3101 

Free 

Ironing 

6 p.m. 

UC Berkeley Entrance on Telegraph 

Street performance art presented by NO WAY. 

237-9507 

Free 

 

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.  

548-3333 

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 

 

Tree Stories 

2 to 4 p.m. 

Ecology Center, 2530 San Pablo, Berkeley 

Come join us as author Warren David Jacobs reads from his book "Tree Stories." 

548-2220 x233 

Free 

 

 

Sunday, August 11 

Ashkenaz Board Meeting 

7:30 to 9:30 p.m. 

Ashkenaz, 1317 San Pablo Ave. 

The public is welcome and can make open comments from 7:30 p.m. to 7:45 p.m. Meeting will be conducted in the back studio. 

525-5024 or www.ashkenaz.com 

$12 door/ Free for 12 and under 

 

Free Radio Berkeley Benefit 

7 to 10 p.m. 

Benefit for new Free Radio Berkeley home. Speakers include Berkeley City Council member Kriss Worthington, Andrea Buffa of Media Alliance and Pierre Labossiere of the Haiti Support Group.  

533-0401, www.freeradio.org  

$15 to $25, sliding scale  

 

 

Kiwanis Club of Berkeley:  

A Classic Taste of Italy 

4 to 7 p.m. 

St. Mary Magdeline Church, Fellowship Hall. Berryman St. Berkeley 

Spaghetti dinner and auction to raise money for children's programs. 

527-3249 

Kids $5, Adults $15 

 

“Into the Arms of Strangers:  

Stories of the Kindertransport” 

2 p.m. 

Berkeley-Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St., Berkeley 

Screening of Oscar-winning documentary about child holocaust survivors who were sent, without their parents, out of Austria, Germany, Poland and Czechoslovakia to Great Britain. 

848-0237 

$2 suggested donation 

 

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 

Varying entry fees. 

 

Tuesday, August 13 

Tomato Tasting 

2 p.m. to 7 p.m. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

Derby Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way  

Sample 35 different Tomato varieties. 

548-3333 

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 

 

 

Nuclear War: Then and Now, Part II 

The Decision to Drop the Bomb on Hiroshima 

7 p.m. 

Friends' Meeting House, 2151 Vine St. 

Screening of two network documentaries on the subject. 

705-7314 or BerkMM@Earthlink.net 

Free 

 

Wednesday, August 14 

Holistic Exercises Sharing Circle  

3:30 to 6:30 p.m.  

wrpclub@aol.com or 595-5541 for information 

Holistic Practitioners, Teachers, Students & Anyone who knows Holistic exercises take turns leading the group through an afternoon of exercises. 

$20 for six-month membership 

 

Thursday, August 15 

Power for the People 

7 p.m. to 9 p.m. 

Ecology Center, 2530 San Pablo Ave.  

A forum on public power, solar power and community control of energy. Speakers include Paul Fenn, Director of Local Power and publisher of American Local Power News and energy economist Eugene Coyle. 

548-2220 x233 

$5 to $15, sliding scale 

 

Tapping into the Hidden Job Market:  

Networking & Informational Interviewing 

Noon to 1 p.m. 

YWCA Turning Point Career Center, 2600 Bancroft Way 

Cal Martin will speak on networking and informational interviewing.  

848-6370 

$3 at door 

 

Unique Presentation Styles 

Noon to 1 p.m. 

State Health Toastmasters Club, 2151 Berkeley Way 

Learn to use the unique attributes of your personality to improve your public speaking skills. Visitors must preregister. 

595-1594 

Free 

 

Friday, August 16 

Deasophy: Wisdom of the Goddess 

7:30 p.m. 

Redwood Gardens Community Room, 2951 Derby St., Berkeley 

Max Dashu presents a slide show on Goddess cosmologies and female creators from a global perspective. 

654-9298 or maxdashu@LMI.net 

$7-15 donations 

 

Free Theater for Children 

7:30 p.m. 

Epworth United Methodist Church, 1953 Hopkins St. 

Stage Door Conservatory presents Wise men of Chelm, based on Jewish Folk Tales. Adapted by Sandra Fenichel Asher. 

527-5939 

Free 

 

Berkeley Women in Black 

Noon to 1 p.m. 

Telegraph and Bancroft 

Standing in solidarity with Israeli and Palestinian women to urge an end to the occupation and the violence. 

548-6310, wibberkeley.org 

 

Saturday, August 17 

Berkeley Alliance of Neighborhood Associations (BANA) Meeting 

9:l5 a.m. to ll a.m. 

Live Oak Park, Fireside Room, l30l Shattuck Ave. 

Citywide meeting concerning local issues. All are welcome. 

849-46l9 or mtbrcb@pacbell.net 

 

Cajun & More Festival 

10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. 

Civic Center Park, Center St. at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way 

4 live bands, crafts fair, outdoor dance floor, micro-brewery beer, Cajun food and free Cajun dance lessons. 

548-3333 

Admission is free 

 

Tour for Blind, Low-Vision Library Patrons 

10:30 a.m. to noon 

Berkeley Public Library, Central Branch 

3rd Floor Meeting Rm, 2090 Kittredge St. 

Tour of the new central branch for blind and low-vision patrons. 

981-6121 

Free 

 

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 

10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

Center Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way 

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

548-3333 

Free 

 

Sunday, August 18 

Bike Tours of Historic Oakland 

10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. 

Oakland Museum of California, 10th St. entrance, at Fallon 

Leisurely paced 5 1/2 mile bike tour about Oakland's history and architecture, led by docents. 

238-3514 

Free: Reservations Required 

 

Jewish Genealogy Educational Meeting 

1 p.m. 

Learn about research resources available from the S.F. Bay Area Jewish Genealogy Society. Open to all. 

Berkeley-Richmond JCC, 1414 Walnut St. 

For info visit www.jewishgen.org/sfbajgs 

Free 

 

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 

 

Thursday, August 22 

Free Meanoma Update 

11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. 

Summit North Pavilion, Cafeteria Annex B & C, 350 Hawthorne Ave., Oakland 

Information on melanoma skin cancer, detection and treatment. 

869-6737 

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. 

981-6250 

Free 

 

Saturday, August 24 

UC Berkeley Circle K Garage Sale 

8 a.m. to 5 p.m. 

Berkeley ACE Hardware parking lot, 2145 University Ave. 

Garage sale fundraiser held by UC Berkeley, non-profit community service organization to raise money for pediatric trauma patients.  

(858) 335-9021 

 

Fuel Cell Car Experiments 

1 to 3 p.m. 

Lawrence Hall of Science, University of California Campus (Just below Grizzly Peak Blvd.) 

Observe a miniature car operating on solar energy and water, and help conduct physics experiments to learn more about this environmentally friendly new technology. For ages 12 and up. 

642-5132 

Admission: $8 for adults; $6 for youth; $4 for children 3-4: Free for children under 3 

 

Vegan Food Party 

11:30 a.m. 

Lake Anza in Tilden Park 

Social, food party event presented by Contra Costa Vegetarians and SFBAVeg. 

dhermit4424@yahoo.com 

Free with Vegan dish 

 

Sunday, August 25 

Destination Telegraph 

Noon to 5 p.m. 

Durant Ave., between Telegraph Ave. and Bowditch Ave. 

Live music, beer and wine garden, street artists, community booths, art and prizes. 

649-9500 or www.telegraphyberkeley.org for information, booth space or to volunteer 

 

Tuesday, August 27 

A House of Straw: A Natural Building Odyssey Slideshow 

7 to 9 p.m. 

Ecology Center, 2530 San Pablo 

Carolyn Roberts presents slides and talks about her experiences building her straw bale house. 

548-2220 Ext.. 233 

Free 

 

Thursday, August 29 

2nd Annual LGBT Elders Conference 

9 a.m. to 5 p.m. 

First Unitarian Church, 685 14th St. Oakland 

Workshops and conference for LGBT elders to learn about senior services.  

705-8918 

$20 registration, no one denied for lack of funds 

 

Saturday, August 31 

Berkeley Youth Orchestra Auditions (Wind, Brass, Percussion) 

All day 

Laney College Music Dept., Fallon St., Oakland 

Berkeley Youth Orchestra will audition musicians aged 10-15 for the 2002-2003 season. 

For an application or more information call Penny Boys at 540-0812 or e-mail her at philiph@seismo.berkeley.edu 

 

Monday, September 2 

National Organization for Women Oakland/East Bay Chapter  

6:30 PM.  

Mama Bears Bookstore and Coffeehouse, 6536 Telegraph Avenue  

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 

 

28th Annual Solano Avenue Stroll 

10 a.m. to 6 p.m. 

Solano Avenue 

A mile-long block part featuring “Journey of a Thousand Cranes’ Parade” at 11 a.m.  

527-5358 or www.salonstroll.org 

Free 

 

Watershed Environmental Poetry Festival 

10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

Center Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way 

Free 

 

Sunday, September 15 

Heritage Day 

11 a.m. to 5 p.m. 

4th and University Ave. 

International BBQ and beer festival 

Free 

 

Bike Tours of Historic Oakland 

10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. 

Oakland Museum of California, 10th St. entrance, at Fallon 

Leisurely paced 5 1/2 mile bike tour about Oakland's history and architecture, led by docents. 

238-3514 

Free: Reservations Required 

 

Saturday, September 21 

BREAD and Roses Garden Party 

1 to 5 p.m. 

Peralta Community Garden, Berkeley 

Hopkins & Peralta, Wheelchair accessible  

BREAD's birthday party - five years of dismantling corporate rule through local 

currency. 

644-0376 

$12 in advance, $15 door, low-income rate $10 

 

Coastal Cleanup Day 

10 a.m. 

Work at the outflow of Strawberry Creek to clean up the San Francisco Bay coastline. 

info@strawberrycreek.org or 848-4008 

Free 

 

Saturday, October 12 

Indigenous People's Day Pow Wow, Indian Market & Fall Fruit Tasting 

10 a.m. to 6 p.m. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

Center Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way 

Free 

 

Tuesday, October 15 

Fall Fruit Tasting 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

2 to 7 p.m. 

Derby Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way  

Free 

 

Sunday, October 20 

Bike Tours of Historic Oakland 

10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. 

Oakland Museum of California, 10th St. entrance, at Fallon 

Leisurely paced 5 1/2 mile bike tour about Oakland's history and architecture, led by docents. 

238-3514 

Free: Reservations Required 

 

Saturday, October 26 

Pumpkin Carving & Costume Making 

10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

Center Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way 

Free 

 

Sunday, October 27 

Spirit Day 

11 a.m. and 5 p.m. 

4th and University 

Construct altars in a day of reflection. 

Free 

 

Saturday December 7, 14, 21 

Holiday Crafts Fair 

10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

Center Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way 

Free 

 

Saturday December 14 

Holiday Crafts Fair 

10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

Center Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way 

Free 

 

Saturday, December 21 

Holiday Crafts Fair 

10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

Center Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way 

Free 

 

 

 


Keeping Boller healthy is job one for O-line

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Saturday August 10, 2002

If the Cal football team is going to have any success this season, the Bears will have to lean on the strong right arm of quarterback Kyle Boller. But to do that, they’ll have to keep him upright. 

The Bears gave up 32 sacks to opponents last season as Boller was battered mercilessly. He missed two games in the middle of the season with a back injury, then came back and suffered seven sacks in each of the next two games. By the end of the season, Boller was wearing ice packs all over his body following games. 

Boller put on 25 pounds of muscle this summer, bulking up for his final season in Berkeley. But even all that extra padding won’t help if his linemen don’t keep the pass-rushers out of his face more often this season. 

Heading the effort to keep Boller healthy is offensive line coach Jim Michalczik. One of the first hires made by new head coach Jeff Tedford, Michalczik has a lot of candidates for starting spots and less than a month to sort them out. 

“We’ve got some serious battles to sort out over the next few weeks,” Michalczik said Friday. “Whoever can get the job done best is who will be out there.” 

The left side of the line is pretty well set, with tackle Mark Wilson and guard Scott Tercero moving over from the right side, where they started next to each other for most of the past two seasons. Tercero is a senior who has started since his freshman year, although knee injuries have nagged him for the last two years. Wilson, a junior, has started every game for the last two seasons but must fill the extra-large shoes of departed tackle Langston Walker, a second-round NFL draft pick. 

Tercero said while the switch to the other side of the ball has taken work, the familiarity with playing next to Wilson has speeded the process. 

“I’m real comfortable with Mark after working with him for two years,” Tercero said. “I usually know what he’s thinking and how he’s going to react to certain situations.” 

“There are battles going on at every position, and there aren’t any positions that are absolutely locked up,” Michalczik said. “But those two guys on the left side are going to be real hard to displace.” 

The picture is far less clear in the other three spots. Ryan Jones, Jon Geisel and Chris Murphy enter fall practice with the lead on starting spots at center, right guard and right tackle, respectively, but each has someone behind them pushing for playing time. The evaluation period will likely last until the final week before the Aug. 31 opener against Baylor, and Michalczik will work his players as hard as he can to find out who’s the best. 

While Michalczik concentrates on teaching blocking fundamentals, Tedford will design blocking schemes to maximize Boller’s protection. As offensive coordinator at Oregon last season, Tedford oversaw an offense that gave up a Pac-10 low 11 sacks all season. He said he will move the pocket around, rolling Boller out in both directions, as well as varying the depth of Boller’s drop on passing plays. 

The players know they can count on a fair shake from Michalczik, who said he came in to the job with “no expectations. I wanted to be sure not to be biased when I came in.” For a player like Murphy, who came to Cal three years ago as a walk-on, a new coaching staff means a new start. 

“(Michalczik) definitely came in here with a clean slate. He treats everyone the same and doesn’t play favorites,” said Murphy, who has been a backup the past two seasons. “It’s a long road when you come in as a walk-on, like no one wants to give you a chance. But he doesn’t care about that stuff.” 

One thing none of the candidates are lacking is desire. Almost to a man, they have put on weight this summer thanks to new workouts designed by strength and conditioning coach John Krasinski. Tercero gained 15 pounds and now weighs 295, and similar results can be seen throughout the squad. 

“I wish I had taken pictures of the players when I got here, because it’s amazing how much their bodies have changed,” Michalczik said. “They’re not as flabby and they’re all bigger. It can only help to have that extra muscle.”


Last call for candidates

By John Geluardi Daily Planet Staff
Saturday August 10, 2002

The race for five City Council seats is on.  

Eleven hopefuls made their intentions official by submitting nomination papers to the city clerk before 5 p.m. Friday. The five jobs up for grabs are the mayor’s and council seats in the 1st, 4th, 7th and 8th districts. 

“We’re out of the gate,” said former state Assemblymember and mayoral candidate Tom Bates who has filed papers for various political offices 11 times before. “I’ve been campaigning for weeks, but now it feels official.” 

Mayor Shirley Dean, who will be running for re-election against Bates, filed papers two hours before the deadline. “I was overwhelmed by people who offered to sign my nomination papers and it took some time to choose. I wish all of them could sign,” she said. 

Candidates are required to submit nomination papers signed by at least 20 registered Berkeley voters and no more than 30. The signatures are considered important by candidates because they provide a strong indication of community support. 

A third mayoral candidate John Boushell filed nomination papers on Aug. 1. Little is known about Boushell, and he could not be reached by telephone Friday.  

Candidates for the 8th District, which is expected to be a tough race, have until Wednesday to file papers because the seat they are vying for will be vacated by Councilmember Polly Armstrong, a three-time incumbent. The city’s policy is to give candidates extra time to file when an incumbent is not running. 

Despite the extended filing time, two candidates, Planning Commissioner Gordon Wozniak and Peace and Justice Commissioner Anne Wagley, have already filed. At least two others, Zoning Adjustments Boardmember Andy Katz and Green Party member Carlos Estrada, are expected to file on Wednesday. 

Berkeley Housing Commissioner Jay Vega also announced her intention to run for the 8th District seat, but she has not yet pulled nomination papers and could not be reached Friday. 

Wozniak, who filed on Friday, said he’s ready to start the campaign. “Why wait?” he said. “There are a lot of other things to be working on so let’s begin the campaign.” 

Councilmember Dona Spring will be defending her 4th District seat from three challengers, Former Rent Board Member Robert Migdal, David Freeman, a veteran of several city commissions and Citizens Environmental Advisory Commissioner LA Wood.Councilmemeber Linda Maio has only one challenger in the 1st District, Rhiannon, who like Madonna has only one name.  

Rhiannon is a neighborhood activist who serves on the West Berkeley Redevelopment Project Area Commission. 

Councilmember Kriss Worthington also has only one challenger in the 7th District, Peace and Justice Commissioner Micki Weinberg, an 18-year-old UC student. “I feel every Cal student has the responsibility to participate in local government to make Berkeley the best it can possibly be,” he said.  

Weinberg said he will campaign on issues such as crime, safety and affordable housing.  

Worthington kept his filing day tradition and signed in at the city clerk’s office just five minutes before the deadline. Worthington is seeking his third term as a councilmember.  

“The first time I filed, I was collecting signatures on nomination papers up to the last minute,” he said. “Since then it’s become a tradition to file at 4:55.” 

Currently the nine-member council is sharply divided between the moderate and progressive factions. The progressives hold a slim majority, 5 to 4. With five seats up for grabs, including the mayor’s seat, the power struggle could go either way. 

Most concede that the candidates are not in the race for the money. 

The mayor receives $3,127 a month and the councilmembers receive $1,975 each month. According to the city’s web site there are no medical benefits or vacation pay.  

“Why would people spend $55,000 (the average cost of a council campaign) to win a seat that pays only $22,000?” Worthington said. “In Berkeley we get a lot of candidates who run because they are passionate about their ideas.” 

There are also five seats on the Rent Stabilization Board and three seats on the School Board. The filing deadline for most of these seats has been extended until Wednesday.


Restricted waterfront parking on the agenda

Steve White Berkeley
Saturday August 10, 2002

To the Editor: 

I am writing to you regarding a proposed new ordinance to prohibit parking on all marina streets 2 a.m. to 6 a.m. 

I believe this is not only a bad law, but also that the marina staff, specifically Cliff Marchett, the Marina manager, tried to sneak it in the back door because he feared it would be widely opposed by the public and Waterfront Commission. 

Normally, ordinances which primarily affect the marina are brought before the Waterfront Commission for public comment and the commission’s recommendations before being sent to the City Council for vote. 

This proposal was routed through the traffic department, directly to the council, without notice to the Commission, or the public, in a month when the commission was on recess, apparently in the hope council would pass the law before anyone had heard of it, and before any opposition could be organized. 

Marchetti’s motive for doing this was apparently to avoid the opposition the law will bring, because it will require installing dozens of signs, cluttering up the landscape on every street in the marina. Rather than following the normal “public participation” process, and taking a chance the public would resist the “visual clutter”, he snuck into the council agenda with the help of some other bureaucrats in traffic. 

I urge the council and public to reject unnecessary law, and unfair ploys, by city bureaucrats, and above all, reject uglification of our beautiful waterfront, and vote no on this ordinance. 

 

Steve White 

Berkeley 


Academy considering moving part of Oscars to New York

The Associated Press
Saturday August 10, 2002

The Associated Press 

 

NEW YORK — Could Oscar be coming to New York? 

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and a group of New York leaders have been talking about moving part of next year’s Academy Awards show to New York City to help the city recover from the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. 

The group of New Yorkers — including Gov. George Pataki, Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Miramax Films Co-Chairman Harvey Weinstein — asked the academy to consider bringing at least a portion of the March 23 event to New York. 

The academy is seriously considering the idea as a one-time nod to New York, academy President Frank Pierson told The New York Times and the Los Angeles Times for Friday’s editions. 

He said an early proposal from Weinstein to move the entire show to New York was “out of the question” because the show is a Hollywood staple and because of the academy’s contractual obligations. 

But “New York will be a huge presence in next year’s show,” he said. “America wouldn’t be America without New York and the movie business wouldn’t be the movie business without New York. Just like the movies, it’s part of our culture and our lives.” 

He said any decisions would have to come after a producer is selected for next year’s show, most likely by next month. 

Still to be determined are which segments of the show might be shifted. Events could be held at Radio City Music Hall or at Madison Square Garden, The New York Times reported. 

The events could bring millions of dollars to the city, where tourist-driven industries are trying to recover from the attacks’ impact. 

The Oscars ceremony returned to Hollywood last year for the first time since 1960, to its new home at the Kodak Theatre. For years the event was held at the Shrine Auditorium and the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion in downtown Los Angeles. 


AC Transit puts tax on ballot

Kurtis Alexander Daily Planet Staff
Saturday August 10, 2002

First a fare hike. Then a parcel tax. 

That’s the plan of AC Transit officials who are struggling with a projected $30 million budget shortfall and are entertaining service cuts that could affect the agency’s more than 235,000 bus riders. 

Thursday night, the transit board voted to put a five-year parcel tax on the November ballot, asking homeowners from Richmond to Hayward to cough up $24 annually for the struggling bus agency. 

While the parcel tax alone won’t bridge next year’s projected budget gap, board members say the revenues will help minimize service cuts, particularly in the northern part of Alameda County. 

AC Transit’s tax measure will come alongside three citywide measures asking Berkeley voters for more taxes. The city measures, which include funding for pedestrian safety, a new animal shelter and seismic retrofits at old City Hall cumulatively will cost the average homeowner about $72 a year, according to the city manager’s office. 

Thursday’s action on the AC Transit tax measure follows a decision this spring to raise fares for bus rides from $1.35 to $1.50. The new fares are slated to take effect Sept. 1. 

AC Transit board members blame a weak economy for their recent cash problems. 

“The economy, being stalled as it is, has caused sales tax revenues to be lower than what was projected a year or two ago,” said spokesperson Mike Mills.  

Much of the agency’s funding comes from Measure B, which was passed in 2000 and implemented a half-cent sales tax to help fund countywide transportation projects. It has not provided the anticipated revenues, Mills said. 

Steve Geller, member of the Bus Riders Union and Berkeley Ecological and Safety Transportation Coalition, says that this year is a bad time to ask voters to pay more taxes, but that the tax is necessary. 

“I’m unhappy that they did this, but I guess they had no choice,” he said. 

AC Transit officials cited a survey by consultant Bregman & Associates Thursday that said voter approval of the parcel tax was likely.


Thanks from the seniors, Berkeley

Kiyo Eshima Berkeley
Saturday August 10, 2002

Thank you Berkeley for listening to all the people and caring for our children, our disabled and the elderly. 

All your services for us senior citizens keep us able to contribute to family rather than becoming old and grumpy. Your recent citywide debris pick up also was beautifully done. Berkeley speaks in many different languages: silent vigils for Hiroshima. Once a year, the flag of Tibet flutters in the wind and our hearts remember all the sufferings of people around the world. 

 

Kiyo Eshima 

Berkeley


Two charged with attempted murder at San Francisco airport

Daily Planet Wire Service
Saturday August 10, 2002

The San Mateo County Sheriff's Office reports that two suspects in a police chase Friday morning that ended in an officer shooting a man at San Francisco International Airport are in custody on suspicion of attempted murder and attempted murder of a peace officer. 

Sheriff's Office spokeswoman Bronwyn Hogan said the two men have been identified as Lamar Edwin Hood, 20, and Nathan Cooper, 21, of Oakland.  

Hogan said Hood, who was a passenger in the suspect vehicle, is believed to be a resident of either San Bruno or South San Francisco. 

One suspect was hit by a bullet fired by a San Francisco police officer, but Hogan was not certain which suspect.  

The chase began when an officer attempted to stop Cooper and Hood in the Westborough area for a minor traffic violation around 8 a.m. 

When the car did not stop, police pursued it onto southbound Interstate Highway 280 and to the airport, but apparently lost sight of the vehicle in the longterm parking lot near the United Airlines maintenance facility. 

San Francisco Police Sgt. Larry Ratti said airport bureau officers then responded to a call for assistance. 

He reportedly saw the suspect vehicle drive out of the parking lot at high speed, jump across a traffic island and head straight toward him, Ratti said. The officer pulled out his gun and fired. 

“He fired in defense of his life,” Ratti said. 

According to Hogan, the suspects then continued driving directly toward a United Airlines security guard at the scene, before they hit a traffic island and flipped over. The car landed on its roof near the longterm parking lot entrance. One suspect, who was injured in the incident, was able to climb out and flee into the nearby maintenance facility building, where he was caught and arrested, while the other was detained in the vehicle. 

The San Mateo County Sheriff's Office is conducting a criminal investigation into the incident while the San Francisco Police Department is investigating the officer's use of his weapon. 


Low-frequency sonar a high risk in the water

Sophia Roberts Carmel Valley
Saturday August 10, 2002

To the Editor: 

It is important that we be aware of the impact of the Navy's Low Frequency Sonar technology that was just approved by the Bush Administration. All marine life depends upon hearing for survival; this is why all sea creatures have extremely sensitive hearing. There are already many technologies using the oceans as a medium of communication. Whales and dolphins especially are becoming more confused, losing their families (“schools”) and their bearings. The recent massive strandings of whales may be a response to the sounds, including medium-range sonar already in use by the U.S. Navy, that are making it impossible for whales to function in the ocean. Acoustical damage, plus severe pollution, plus renewed whaling adds up to too much damage. The whales need our help now. 

We have a spiritual obligation to these magnificent intelligent beings who have been on this planet for over 40 millions years. It is both immoral and totally unethical to threaten the lives and habitats of these awesome beings. 

 

Sophia Roberts 

Carmel Valley


State’s jobless rate dips as 7,500 payroll jobs are added

The Associated Press
Saturday August 10, 2002

LOS ANGELES — California’s jobless rate dipped to 6.3 percent in July, down from a revised 6.5 percent a month earlier, as the state added 7,500 payroll jobs, officials said Friday. 

Most of the growth came from the government sector, which showed a net gain of 24,000 positions on a seasonally adjusted basis, according to the state’s Employment Development Department. 

The wholesale and retail trade sectors also added to their ranks, offsetting thousands of job losses in the manufacturing, services and construction industries. 

Economists were lukewarm about the decrease. 

“The economy is flat, it’s mirroring the national trend,” said Stephen Levy, director of the Center for Continuing Study of the California Economy. “For the (San Francisco) Bay area, it’s good the economy has stopped falling. For the rest of the state, it means we’re still waiting for a recovery.” 

The number of people unemployed in California decreased by 46,000 to 1.1 million, but the state jobless rate remained higher than the national figure. U.S. unemployment was unchanged at 5.9 percent in July. 

In July 2001, California’s unemployment rate was 5.3 percent. 

“The (monthly) decrease in the unemployment rate appears to reflect consumer confidence in the economy,” said Jeanne Cain, vice president of government relations for the California Chamber of Commerce, citing the additional 6,000 jobs in wholesale and retail trade. 

“But in terms of more significant growth, we are concerned about upcoming legislation,” she said. 

Legislative efforts to pass bills increasing payroll taxes and giving Indian communities veto power over some infrastructure projects could jeopardize the economy’s ability to rebound, she said. 

In addition, a projected $10 billion state deficit for budget year 2003-2004 could mean fewer government jobs, she said. 

Many of the 24,000 new public sector jobs reported in July were teaching positions. But experts anticipate job growth in public education will plateau or even decline in the coming months, as school budgets feel the pinch of the state budget shortfall. 

With the state employing about one of every seven California workers, the budget deficit is a “big deal” for the job market, Levy said. 


Political hotshot at helm of Bates’ mayoral campaign

By John Geluardi, Special to the Daily Planet
Friday August 09, 2002

 

To help run his bid for mayor, former state Assemblymember Tom Bates has enlisted the help of veteran pol Larry Tramutola, a successful campaign manager who is well known for his grassroots politicking. 

Bates is running against incumbent Mayor Shirley Dean. He sought the help of Tramutola because he said a dull governor’s race will result in low voter turnout Nov. 5. Tramutola has a unique ability to identify voters and get them to the polls, Bates said. 

“I first met Larry many years ago through his work with Cesar Chavez and the farm labor movement,” Bates said. “I chose him to run the campaign because low-turnout elections are one of his specialties.” 

During his 30 years in politics, Tramutola, who is president of the Oakland-based Tramutola Company, has consulted an impressive list of Democratic candidates including Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-San Francisco, U.S. Sen. Barbara Boxer and Mayor Jerry Brown. He also worked on former President Bill Clinton’s California campaign in 1992. Locally, Tramutola has represented Assembly candidate and former Berkeley Mayor Loni Hancock (who is married to Bates), Assemblymember Dion Aroner, D-Oakland, and Councilmember Linda Maio. 

In addition to promoting candidates to office, Tramutola is known for his successful campaigns for parcel taxes and general obligation bonds for schools, colleges and libraries. 

According to his web site, his company has produced more than $11 billion in voter-approved bonds for 127 schools and college districts, most of which required approval of a two-thirds majority. 

Despite Tramutola’s work for Democrats and their causes, he has represented landlord organizations that have not all been associated with progressive agendas. 

Tramutola said he is especially looking forward to Bates’ campaign.  

“I think this is going to be the most interesting race in the Bay Area,” he said. “It’s not often you have a politician who spent 20 years in the state Assembly seeking a local seat.” 

Tramutola said the campaign will focus on reintroducing Bates to voters who already know him from his years on the Assembly and getting those who are new to the area acquainted with him. 

“We are going to let the voters know who Tom is, what his vision is and what his goals are,” he said.  

He added that Bates, who represented the 14th District in the state Assembly from 1976 to 1996, already has a reputation for fighting for the East Bay Shore Park and for finding funding for parks, medical clinics and schools.  

Tramutola claimed that Bates may have enough respect from both moderates and progressives to bring peace to the divisive Berkeley City Council. 

Tramutola graduated Stanford University in the 1970s. After that he went to work for the United Farm Workers of America as an aide to Cesar Chavez. 

“I worked for the UFW for 11 years,” Tramutola said. “That’s where I developed a grassroots approach to politics that is based on mobilizing workers to get the message to the voters in a way that they understand why it’s important they vote.” 

Tramutola has also worked for landlord organizations that often sponsor campaigns against tenant rights ordinances. In 2000 he consulted for the “No on Measure Y” campaign which failed to stop a pro-tenant initiative in Berkeley.  

Tramutola’s administrative director would not comment on rumors that Tramutola is currently working against Oakland’s “Just Cause” campaign, another pro-tenant initiative. 

Despite the campaigns, Tramutola said he is not anti-tenant. 

“I could agree with 80 percent of a pro-tenant agenda but I also think that landlords should have some control over their property,” he said.  

Bates, who has a long history of supporting tenants’ rights, said even if Tramutola works for anti-tenant campaigns his image with voters won’t suffer. 

“My record on supporting tenants rights, especially for supporting ‘just ’cause’ evictions, is pretty clear,” Bates said. “I also have a record of working with small landlords on issues that are important to them.” 

Bruce Cain, the director of the Institute of Governmental Studies at UC Berkeley, said that it’s not unusual for political consultants to work with clients that have contradicting agendas, especially on referendums that are not necessarily affiliated with a political party.  

“It could possibly be an issue for a liberal candidate who was running for the state Assembly... but the local level candidates look for the consultant who is going to do the best job of communicating their message to the community,” he said. 

 

Editor’s note: This is one of two stories profiling the political consultants who will be working for Berkeley mayoral candidates Mayor Shirley Dean and former Assemblymember Tom Bates.


Much of the city a stage during Berkeley Arts Festival

By Peter Crimmins, Special to the Daily Planet
Friday August 09, 2002

Parts of the city will become an art gallery for two weeks as the fifth annual Berkeley Arts Festival’s schedule of performances and exhibitions liven the downtown district, neighborhoods in west Berkeley and even City Hall. Starting Saturday, a citywide spotlight will shine on musicians, writers, performers, tinkerers, filmmakers, designers and a panoply of people who operate artistically.  

The city itself will be a high-concept installation project by San Francisco-based artist Jonathan Keats, who will spend opening day petitioning passersby in an effort to encourage a mock Berkeley City Council to pass a basic law of logic: A=A. The petition sponsors an idea articulated more than 2,000 years ago by Greek thinker Aristotle, whose principle of non-contradiction was a fundamental law of philosophical logic decreeing everything equal to itself. The idea is so simple that at first it may be difficult to grasp. 

“There is not even the possibility of complication,” said Keats, whose proposed legislation would fine a person one-tenth of a penny if they contradict the law. If everything can be equated to itself with the formula A=A, from the Campanile to the mayor to the tritium on campus and the hardened criminals across town, then every person and every thing has the opportunity to be law-abiding. 

For mathematicians and logicians, this principle of non-contradiction is the start of a language for logistical thinking basic truism on which to base more complicated thought equations. But if the City Council does not pass the law, Keats said, it is voting against the most essential truth in the physical universe. 

The absurdity and intellectual background in an attempt to mold a philosophical law into civic legislation is fitting for a college town like Berkeley, and Keats was in fact invited by the Berkeley Arts Festival to perform his conceptual art piece here. “I have a tendency to not know how to do anything,” said Keats, whose previous works include punching a time clock for 24 hours to track the time and duration of his thoughts. The A=A project chiefly consists of reminding people of the omnipresence of a precept for logic. “It’s an installation. It’s everywhere. I want it to be as abstract as possible.” 

The only physical manifestations of the art project will be lapel buttons that Keats is handing out, perhaps a city ordinance, and “maybe something in the newspapers,” but nevertheless “the law is there, we’re moving through it all the time,” Keats said. 

Keats will not be the only one making light of city politics. Members of City Council will come together as the City Council Singers on Saturday to perform Rodgers and Hart’s classic “Blue Moon,” and 7 p.m. each Tuesday George Coates will stage a mock city council at the old City Hall, which will be broadcast live on public access TV on Channel 25.  

Art and politics are the themes of this year’s festival, and a more serious political message will come from hip-hop artist Azeem, scheduled to perform Saturday. Azeem has worked with Michael Franti and Spearhead, and has been featured at Lollapalooza.  

Music will be performed in various corners and niches of Shattuck Avenue between Addison and Durant streets, and in the Wells Fargo Annex building on Center Street. That is also where a roster of Berkeley poets will read and perform 6 to 8 p.m. Aug. 18 in 10-minute intervals. The public library will host readers and film screenings throughout the festival. Even an AC Transit bus will host, en route, a demonstration/lecture, “How To Ride A Bus.” 

Art studios and galleries will open for tours and exhibits in west Berkeley. A gallery crawl Aug. 18 will guide people through Eighth Street Galleries to Alliance Graphics on Parker Street, the Fantasy Records Building on 10th Street and will end at the R&B Museum on San Pablo Avenue.  

Saturday’s Opening Day festivities also include interactive art and activities. A bicycle rodeo will teach stilt walking and unicycle riding, a Music Circus will open itself to anyone who can bring an instrument. For those without instruments, the guys at the Tinkerer’s Workshop will show you how to make a “buffoon” out of straws and paper cones, and then make noise. 

“We don’t like to call it noise,” said Fran Holland, a chief tinkerer at the Workshop. “We’re making powerful sounds. And maybe music.” 

The Tinkerer’s Workshop is builders and inventors at a modest shop in west Berkeley who crowd the shop with recycled bike parts and scavenged junk. At first glance the stuff looks like trash. To a tinkerer, though, it’s all fertile potential. 

Holland works with a lot of young people and organizes after-school projects like his popular bicycle repair workshops. “We creating a safe and stimulating environment to use tools,” he said. “To get kids to a site where they can be creative that is not a restrictive as schools.” 

Whether they make noise or music, during the next two weeks the motley collection of craftspeople and abstract thinkers will showcase their fluid and liberal ideas at the Berkeley Arts Festival. 

 

WHAT: Mock City Council  

WHO: George Coates and others 

WHEN: 7 p.m. Aug. 13 and 20 

WHERE: Old City Hall, 

2134 Martin Luther King Way 

COST: $10 

INFORMATION: 665-9496 


Arts Calendar

Friday August 09, 2002

Music 

 

Friday, August 9 

3Canal 

The Cut & Clear Crew with DJ Engine Room 

9:30 p.m. 

Ashkenaz, 1317 San Pablo Ave. 

525-5024 or www.ashkenaz.com 

$12 in advance, $15 door/ Free for 12 and younger 

 

Henri-Pierre Koubaka 

8:00 p.m. 

Freight & Salvage, 1111 Addison St. 

548-1761 or www.freightandsalvage.com 

$15.50 in advance, $16.50 at door 

 

Left Hand Smoke, Schfvilkus 

9:30 p.m. 

The Starry Plough, 3101 Shattuck Ave. 

841-2082 

$7 door 

 

Marvin Sease plus Beverly Watson 

1st show 7 p.m., 2nd show 10 p.m. 

Rountree’s Rhythm & Blues, 2618 San Pablo Ave. 

663-0440 

$40 in advance 

 

Rebel Music 

8 p.m.. 

La Peña Cultural Center, 3105 Shattuck Ave.  

A Collective of artists and musicians from the Bay. Hiphop, reggae, dance hall and spoken word. 

849-2568 or www.lapena.org 

$10 

 

Saturday, August 10 

Afromuzika 

9 p.m. 

Ashkenaz, 1317 San Pablo Ave. 

525-5024 or www.ashkenaz.com 

$12 door/ Free for 12 and under 

 

De Rompe y Raja & Lucho Cabrera 

8 p.m. 

La Peña Cultural Center, 3105 Shattuck Ave.  

Afro-Peruvian singer Lucho Cabrera from Ica, Peru, performs for the first time at La Peña with De Rompe y Raja. 

849-2568 or www.lapena.org 

$13 in advance, $15 at door 

 

Mark Growden’s Electric Pinata, Beth Custer Ensemble 

9:30 p.m. 

The Starry Plough, 3101 Shattuck Ave. 

841-2082 

$7 door 

 

Tony MacMahon, Jody Stecher & Eric Thompson 

8:00 p.m. 

Freight & Salvage, 1111 Addison St. 

548-1761 or www.freightandsalvage.com 

$15.50 in advance, $16.50 at door 

 

Marvin Sease plus Beverly Watson 

1st show 7 p.m., 2nd show 10 p.m. 

Rountree’s Rhythm & Blues, 2618 San Pablo Ave. 

663-0440 

$40 in advance 

 

Berkeley Arts Festival Opening Day 

10-ring Cultural Circus 

Noon to 6 p.m. 

Main stage on Center St. near the City Garage between Shattuck and Milvia 

The 5th annual Berkeley Arts City Wide Celebration of Art and Politics opens with this event. Music, poetry, speakers, storytelling and more. 

665-9496 

Free 

 

 

 

University of California, Berkeley Summer Symphony 

8 p.m. 

Hertz Hall on the U.C. Campus located near the intersection of Bancroft and College. 

Performing Brahms’s Piano Concerto No. 1 in d-minor with soloist Mei-Fang Lin and Beethoven’s Symphony No. 5 in c-minor. 

642-4864 

Free 

 

Sunday, August 11 

Jim Hurst & Missy Raines 

8:00 p.m. 

Freight & Salvage, 1111 Addison St. 

548-1761 or www.freightandsalvage.com 

$15.50 in advance, $16.50 at door 

 

Prezidenz Brown with DJ Jah Wizer 

9:30 p.m. 

Ashkenaz, 1317 San Pablo Ave. 

525-5024 or www.ashkenaz.com 

$11 door 

 

Robert Helps Memorial Marathon Concert 

Berkeley Arts Festival 

11 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

Wells Fargo Annex, 2081 Center St. 

A dozen of the best pianists of the Bay join in a marathon tribute to Robert Helps, who died last year. 

665-9099 

$10 

 

Virginia Mayhew 

4:30 p.m.  

Berkeley Jazz School, 2087 Addison St. 

New York-based saxophonist-featuring Ingrid Jensen, Harvie Swartz-Allison Miller. 

845-5373 for reservations  

swing@jazzschool.com or www.jazzschool.com 

$6 to $12 

 

Tuesday, August 13 

Tom Rigney and Flambeau 

8:30 p.m. 

Ashkenaz, 1317 San Pablo Ave. 

525-5024 or www.ashkenaz.com 

$8 door/ Free for 12 and under 

 

Wednesday, August 14 

Phil Marsh 

8:00 p.m. 

Freight & Salvage, 1111 Addison St. 

548-1761 or www.freightandsalvage.com 

$15.50 in advance, $16.50 at door 

 

Roadoilers with the Bluegrass  

Intentions 

8:30 p.m. 

Ashkenaz, 1317 San Pablo Ave. 

525-5024 or www.ashkenaz.com 

$10/ Free for 12 and under 

 

Thursday, August 15 

Colcannon 

8:00 p.m. 

Freight & Salvage, 1111 Addison St. 

548-1761 or www.freightandsalvage.com 

$15.50 in advance, $16.50 at door 

 

Dean Santomieri: Multimedia Works 

Berkeley Arts Festival 

8 p.m. 

Wells Fargo Annex, 2801 Center St. 

Multi-media works “The Boy Beneath the Sea” and “A Book Bound in Red Buckram...” presented by composer, monologist, and video artist Santomieri. 

665-9496 

$10 

 

Friday, August 16 

Farallon Brass Ensemble Concert 

8 p.m. 

Crowden Music Center, 1475 Rose St. Berkeley 

Performance by Farallon Brass Ensemble highlighting their brass camp for young musicians. 

$10 general, $5 students/seniors 

Girls in Ties, 151 Cameo Dr., and Robert and Karen 

7 p.m. to 11 p.m. 

Café Eclectica, 1309 Solano Ave. 

527-2344 

$4 

 

Duck Baker & Jamie Findlay 

8 p.m. 

Freight & Salvage, 1111 Addison St. 

548-1761 or www.freightandsalvage.com 

$15.50 in advance, $16.50 at door 

 

Native Elements with Buffalo Soldier 

Joined by special guest Humble Soul 

9:30 p.m. 

Ashkenaz, 1317 San Pablo Ave. 

525-5024 or www.ashkenaz.com 

$11 door/ Free for 12 and under 

 

Saturday, August 17 

Composer Portraits with Sarah Cahill and Gabriela Frank 

Berkeley Arts Festival 

8 p.m. 

Jazzschool, 2087 Addison St. 

665-9099 

$10 

 

The Edios 

8:00 p.m. 

Freight & Salvage, 1111 Addison St. 

548-1761 or www.freightandsalvage.com 

$15.50 in advance, $16.50 at door 

 

Faye Carol 

Black Repertory Group Benefit 

8 p.m. and 10 p.m. 

Black Repertory Group, 3201 Adeline St. 

849-9940 

$10 general, $15 students and seniors 

 

Near East, Far West 

9 p.m. 

Ashkenaz, 1317 San Pablo Ave. 

Traditional music from Armenia, Turkey, Bulgaria, Macedonia, Greece and the Middle East. 7:30 dance lesson with Lise Liepman. 

525-5024 or www.ashkenaz.com 

$12 door/ Free for 12 and under 

 

Oakland Faders Collective 

7 p.m. to 11 p.m. 

Café Eclectica, 1309 Solano Ave. 

527-2344 

$5 

 

Sunday, August 18 

Ericka Luckett 

8:00 p.m. 

Freight & Salvage, 1111 Addison St. 

548-1761 or www.freightandsalvage.com 

$15.50 in advance, $16.50 at door 

 

Israeli Fold Dance 

1:30 p.m. 

Ashkenaz, 1317 San Pablo Ave. 

525-5024 or www.ashkenaz.com 

$5/ Free for 12 and under 

 

August 16, 17 & 18 

The Transparent Tape Music Festival 2 

8:30 p.m. 

Transparent Theater, 1901 Ashby, Berkeley 

(415) 614-2434 for info and reservations 

$7 one night, $15 festival pass 

 

Monday, August 19 

Northern California Songwriters Association Open Mic 

8:00 p.m. 

Freight & Salvage, 1111 Addison St. 

548-1761 or www.freightandsalvage.com 

$4 at door 

 

Exhibits 

 

First Anniversary Group Show"  

Reception, 5 to 8 p.m.  

Through Aug. 17  

13 local artists display work ranging from sculpture to mixed media. 

Ardency Gallery, Aki Lot, Eighth Street 

836-0831 

 

"Before and After"  

Reception 4 to 6 p.m.  

Through Sept. 19  

Albany Community Center and Library Galley 1249 Marin Ave. 

Jim Hair's photographs of the San Diego Hells Angels motorcycle chapter from the 1970s.  

524-9283  

 

Freedom! Now! 

Berkeley Arts Festival Gallery & Headquarters 2055 Center St. 

Reception 6 to 8 p.m. 

Through Aug. 25, Tues. - Sun., noon to 5 p.m. 

Commemorates the work of those who struggled for justice and freedom from government/state repression. 

841-2793 

 

First Year Anniversary Group Exhibition 

Through Aug. 17 

Ardency Gallery, 709 Broadway, Oakland 

New works from various artists. 

836-0831 

 

Images of Love and Courtship 

Through Sept. 15 

Gathering Tribes, 1573 Solano Ave. 

Ledger paintings by Michael Horse. 

528-9038 

Free 

 

The Creation of People’s Park 

Through Aug. 31, Mon. - Thurs., 9 a.m. 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, with curator Harold Adler. 

hjadler@yahoo.com 

Free 

 

"New Visions: Introductions '02"  

Works from emerging Californian artists 

Through Aug. 10 

Pro Arts, 461 Ninth St., Oakland 

763-4361 

Free 

 

"New Work: Part 2, The 2001 Kala Fellowship Exhibition"  

Through Sept. 7, Tues.-Fri. Noon to 5:30 p.m., Sat. 12:00-4:30 p.m. 

Kala Art Institute, 1060 Heinz Ave. 

Featuring 8 Kala Fellowship winners, printmaking 

549-2977  

 

“If These Walls Could Talk” 

Through Sept. 8 

Lawrence Hall of Science, University of California Campus (just below Grizzly Peak Blvd.) 

See how various civilizations built all kinds of structures from mud huts to giant skyscrapers at this building exhibit. 

642-5132 

Admission: $8 for adults; $6 for youth 5-18, seniors and disabled; $4 for children 3-4; Free for children under 3, LHS Members and fulltime Berkeley students. 

 

Upcoming 

"Poems Form/From the Six Directions" 

Aug. 10 through Sept. 15 

Pusod: Center for culture, Ecology & Bayan, 1808 Fifth St. 

A visual poetry exhibition and presentation of a wedding happening, a Filipino tradition. Poetry workshops presented by Eileen Tabios on Aug. 14, 21 and 28 7 to 9 p.m. 

883-1808 

Free 

 

“Virtually Real Oakland - The Magic, The Diversity and the Potholes” 

Aug. 10 through Sept. 21, Mon.-Fri. 8:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. 

Photolab Gallery, 2235 Fifth St., Berkeley 

Exhibit by Ken Burson; digitally enhanced photos of Oakland. 

644-1400 

Free 

 

Friday, August 9 

Once Upon a Mattress 

7:30 p.m. [5 p.m. Sat. & Sun. Aug. 10 and 11] 

Julia Morgan Theater, 2640 College Ave.  

A hilarious retelling of "The Princess and the Pea," presented by Stage Door Conservatory, by students grades 5 through 9. 

527-5939 

$8 to $12 

 

Friday, August 16 

“Pericles, Prince of Tyre” 

8:00 p.m. 

Wells Fargo Annex, 2081 Center St. 

This romance follows Prince Pericles, hunted for a crime he did not commit, on an epic voyage around the Mediterranean. Presented by Woman’s Will, the Bay Area’s all-female Shakespeare Company. 

665-9496 

Free 

 

A Thousand and One Arabian Nights 

Through Sept. 28, Fri. through 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 

 

Shakespeare's Troilus and Cressida 

Through Sept. 1, Sat. and Sun. at 5 p.m..  

John Hinkel Park, off The Arlington at Southampton Road in North Berkeley  

704-8210 for reservations or www.shotgunplayers.org  

Pay what you can 

 

The House of Blue Leaves 

Sept. 11 through Oct. 27 

Berkeley Rep's Roda Theater, 2015 Addison St. Berkeley 

647-2917 or 888-4BRTTIX 

$10 - $54 

 

The Shape of Things 

Sept. 13 through Oct. 20 

Aurora Theatre Company, 2081 Addison St. 

Neil LaBute's love story about two students. 

843-4822, www.auroratheater.org for reservations 

$26 to $35  

 

Poetry 

 

Saturday, August 10 

"Poetry in the Plaza" honors June Jordan 

Berkeley Arts Festival 

2:30 p.m. 

Central Library, 2090 Kittredge St. 

Readings from poets Marvin K. White, Sharon Doubiago, Lucha Corpi, Chinaka Hodge and others. 

981-6233 

Free 

 

Wednesday, August 14 

Café Poetry and open mic hosted by Kira Allen  

7:30 p.m. 

La Peña Cultural Center, 3105 Shattuck Ave.  

849-2568 or www.lapena.org 

$2 

 

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 

 

Saturday, August 24 

Rhythm & Muse 

6:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Art Center, 1275 Walnut St. 

Poetry reading and open mike featuring Zigi Lowenburg & Raymond “Nat” Turner. 

527-9753 

Free admission 

 

Films 

 

Wednesday, August 14 

Premiere of “MMI” by John Sanborn 

Berkeley Arts Festival 

8 p.m. 

Wells Fargo Annex, 2081 Center St., Berkeley 

Event also features a piano concert featuring Sarah Cahill performing recent works and some composed specifically for her. 

665-9496 

 

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 

 

Truth: Exposing Israeli Apartheid  

7:30 p.m. 

La Pena, 3105 Shattuck Ave. 

Premiere of documentary by local filmmaker Wendy Campbell. 

655-5889 

$20 donations


Out & About Calendar

Friday August 09, 2002

Friday, August 9 

Community Skin Cancer Screening Clinic 

11 a.m. to 2 p.m. 

Markstein Cancer Education Center, Summit Campus, 2450 Ashby Avenue 

Skin cancer screenings offered to people with limited or no health insurance. By Appointment only. 

For more information or to make an appointment call 869-8833 

 

Saturday, August 10 

Avotcja's Birthday Bash 

7:30 p.m. 

Mama Bear's Books, 6536 Telegraph Avenue 

Poetry, music and dance in celebration of poet Avotcja Jiltonilro's 61st birthday. Reservations are suggested. 

428-9684 

$10 donation 

 

B-TV Bowl-a-thon 

11 a.m. 

Albany Bowl, 540 San Pablo Ave. 

2nd annual Bowl-a-thon to raise proceeds for educational and government programs and a needed facility and equipment upgrade. 

848-2288 ext.. 11 

Free 

 

Berkeley NAACP  

General Membership Meeting 

1:00 p.m. 

Church by the Side of the Road, 2108 Russell Street 

Founded in 1909, the NAACP is the largest, oldest, and most effective civil rights organization in the country. Monthly meetings are held every 2nd Saturday.  

510-435-3101 

Free 

 

Ironing 

6 p.m. 

UC Berkeley Entrance on Telegraph 

Street performance art presented by NO WAY. 

237-9507 

Free 

 

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.  

548-3333 

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 

 

Tree Stories 

2 to 4 p.m. 

Ecology Center, 2530 San Pablo, Berkeley 

Come join us as author Warren David Jacobs reads from his book "Tree Stories." 

548-2220 x233 

Free 

 

Sunday, August 11 

Ashkenaz Board Meeting 

7:30 to 9:30 p.m. 

Ashkenaz, 1317 San Pablo Ave. 

The public is welcome and can make open comments from 7:30 p.m. to 7:45 p.m. Meeting will be conducted in the back studio. 

525-5024 or www.ashkenaz.com 

$12 door/ Free for 12 and under 

 

Free Radio Berkeley Benefit 

7 to 10 p.m. 

Benefit for new Free Radio Berkeley home. Speakers include Berkeley City Council member Kriss Worthington, Andrea Buffa of Media Alliance and Pierre Labossiere of the Haiti Support Group.  

533-0401, www.freeradio.org  

$15 to $25, sliding scale  

 

 

Kiwanis Club of Berkeley:  

A Classic Taste of Italy 

4 to 7 p.m. 

St. Mary Magdeline Church, Fellowship Hall. Berryman St. Berkeley 

Spaghetti dinner and auction to raise money for children's programs. 

527-3249 

Kids $5, Adults $15 

 

“Into the Arms of Strangers:  

Stories of the Kindertransport” 

2 p.m. 

Berkeley-Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St., Berkeley 

Screening of Oscar-winning documentary about child holocaust survivors who were sent, without their parents, out of Austria, Germany, Poland and Czechoslovakia to Great Britain. 

848-0237 

$2 suggested donation 

 

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 

Varying entry fees. 

 

Tuesday, August 13 

Tomato Tasting 

2 p.m. to 7 p.m. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

Derby Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way  

Sample 35 different Tomato varieties. 

548-3333 

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 

 

Nuclear War: Then and Now, Part II 

The Decision to Drop the Bomb on Hiroshima 

7 p.m. 

Friends' Meeting House, 2151 Vine St. 

Screening of two network documentaries on the subject. 

705-7314 or BerkMM@Earthlink.net 

Free 

 

Wednesday, August 14 

Holistic Exercises Sharing Circle  

3:30 to 6:30 p.m.  

wrpclub@aol.com or 595-5541 for information 

Holistic Practitioners, Teachers, Students & Anyone who knows Holistic exercises take turns leading the group through an afternoon of exercises. 

$20 for six-month membership 

 

Thursday, August 15 

Power for the People 

7 p.m. to 9 p.m. 

Ecology Center, 2530 San Pablo Ave.  

A forum on public power, solar power and community control of energy. Speakers include Paul Fenn, Director of Local Power and publisher of American Local Power News and energy economist Eugene Coyle. 

548-2220 x233 

$5 to $15, sliding scale 

 

Tapping into the Hidden Job Market:  

Networking & Informational Interviewing 

Noon to 1 p.m. 

YWCA Turning Point Career Center, 2600 Bancroft Way 

Cal Martin will speak on networking and informational interviewing.  

848-6370 

$3 at door 

 

Unique Presentation Styles 

Noon to 1 p.m. 

State Health Toastmasters Club, 2151 Berkeley Way 

Learn to use the unique attributes of your personality to improve your public speaking skills. Visitors must preregister. 

595-1594 

Free 

 

Friday, August 16 

Deasophy: Wisdom of the Goddess 

7:30 p.m. 

Redwood Gardens Community Room, 2951 Derby St., Berkeley 

Max Dashu presents a slide show on Goddess cosmologies and female creators from a global perspective. 

654-9298 or maxdashu@LMI.net 

$7-15 donations 

 

Free Theater for Children 

7:30 p.m. 

Epworth United Methodist Church, 1953 Hopkins St. 

Stage Door Conservatory presents Wise men of Chelm, based on Jewish Folk Tales. Adapted by Sandra Fenichel Asher. 

527-5939 

Free 

 

Berkeley Women in Black 

Noon to 1 p.m. 

Telegraph and Bancroft 

Standing in solidarity with Israeli and Palestinian women to urge an end to the occupation and the violence. 

548-6310, wibberkeley.org 

 

Saturday, August 17 

Berkeley Alliance of Neighborhood Associations (BANA) Meeting 

9:l5 a.m. to ll a.m. 

Live Oak Park, Fireside Room, l30l Shattuck Ave. 

Citywide meeting concerning local issues. All are welcome. 

849-46l9 or mtbrcb@pacbell.net 

 

Cajun & More Festival 

10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. 

Civic Center Park, Center St. at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way 

4 live bands, crafts fair, outdoor dance floor, micro-brewery beer, Cajun food and free Cajun dance lessons. 

548-3333 

Admission is free 

 

Tour for Blind, Low-Vision Library Patrons 

10:30 a.m. to noon 

Berkeley Public Library, Central Branch 

3rd Floor Meeting Rm, 2090 Kittredge St. 

Tour of the new central branch for blind and low-vision patrons. 

981-6121 

Free 

 

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 

10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

Center Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way 

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

548-3333 

Free 

 

Sunday, August 18 

Bike Tours of Historic Oakland 

10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. 

Oakland Museum of California, 10th St. entrance, at Fallon 

Leisurely paced 5 1/2 mile bike tour about Oakland's history and architecture, led by docents. 

238-3514 

Free: Reservations Required 

 

Jewish Genealogy Educational Meeting 

1 p.m. 

Learn about research resources available from the S.F. Bay Area Jewish Genealogy Society. Open to all. 

Berkeley-Richmond JCC, 1414 Walnut St. 

For info visit www.jewishgen.org/sfbajgs 

Free 

 

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 

 

Thursday, August 22 

Free Meanoma Update 

11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. 

Summit North Pavilion, Cafeteria Annex B & C, 350 Hawthorne Ave., Oakland 

Information on melanoma skin cancer, detection and treatment. 

869-6737 

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. 

981-6250 

Free 

 

Saturday, August 24 

UC Berkeley Circle K Garage Sale 

8 a.m. to 5 p.m. 

Berkeley ACE Hardware parking lot, 2145 University Ave. 

Garage sale fundraiser held by UC Berkeley, non-profit community service organization to raise money for pediatric trauma patients.  

(858) 335-9021 

 

Fuel Cell Car Experiments 

1 to 3 p.m. 

Lawrence Hall of Science, University of California Campus (Just below Grizzly Peak Blvd.) 

Observe a miniature car operating on solar energy and water, and help conduct physics experiments to learn more about this environmentally friendly new technology. For ages 12 and up. 

642-5132 

Admission: $8 for adults; $6 for youth; $4 for children 3-4: Free for children under 3 

 

Vegan Food Party 

11:30 a.m. 

Lake Anza in Tilden Park 

Social, food party event presented by Contra Costa Vegetarians and SFBAVeg. 

dhermit4424@yahoo.com 

Free with Vegan dish 

 

Sunday, August 25 

Destination Telegraph 

Noon to 5 p.m. 

Durant Ave., between Telegraph Ave. and Bowditch Ave. 

Live music, beer and wine garden, street artists, community booths, art and prizes. 

649-9500 or www.telegraphyberkeley.org for information, booth space or to volunteer 

 

Tuesday, August 27 

A House of Straw: A Natural Building Odyssey Slideshow 

7 to 9 p.m. 

Ecology Center, 2530 San Pablo 

Carolyn Roberts presents slides and talks about her experiences building her straw bale house. 

548-2220 Ext.. 233 

Free 

 

Thursday, August 29 

2nd Annual LGBT Elders Conference 

9 a.m. to 5 p.m. 

First Unitarian Church, 685 14th St. Oakland 

Workshops and conference for LGBT elders to learn about senior services.  

705-8918 

$20 registration, no one denied for lack of funds 

 

Saturday, August 31 

Berkeley Youth Orchestra Auditions (Wind, Brass, Percussion) 

All day 

Laney College Music Dept., Fallon St., Oakland 

Berkeley Youth Orchestra will audition musicians aged 10-15 for the 2002-2003 season. 

For an application or more information call Penny Boys at 540-0812 or e-mail her at philiph@seismo.berkeley.edu 

 

Monday, September 2 

National Organization for Women Oakland/East Bay Chapter  

6:30 PM.  

Mama Bears Bookstore and Coffeehouse, 6536 Telegraph Avenue  

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 

 

28th Annual Solano Avenue Stroll 

10 a.m. to 6 p.m. 

Solano Avenue 

A mile-long block part featuring “Journey of a Thousand Cranes’ Parade” at 11 a.m.  

527-5358 or www.salonstroll.org 

Free 

 

Watershed Environmental Poetry Festival 

10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

Center Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way 

Free 

 

Sunday, September 15 

Heritage Day 

11 a.m. to 5 p.m. 

4th and University Ave. 

International BBQ and beer festival 

Free 

 

Bike Tours of Historic Oakland 

10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. 

Oakland Museum of California, 10th St. entrance, at Fallon 

Leisurely paced 5 1/2 mile bike tour about Oakland's history and architecture, led by docents. 

238-3514 

Free: Reservations Required 

 

Saturday, September 21 

BREAD and Roses Garden Party 

1 to 5 p.m. 

Peralta Community Garden, Berkeley 

Hopkins & Peralta, Wheelchair accessible  

BREAD's birthday party - five years of dismantling corporate rule through local 

currency. 

644-0376 

$12 in advance, $15 door, low-income rate $10 

 

Coastal Cleanup Day 

10 a.m. 

Work at the outflow of Strawberry Creek to clean up the San Francisco Bay coastline. 

info@strawberrycreek.org or 848-4008 

Free 

 

Saturday, October 12 

Indigenous People's Day Pow Wow, Indian Market & Fall Fruit Tasting 

10 a.m. to 6 p.m. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

Center Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way 

Free 

 

Tuesday, October 15 

Fall Fruit Tasting 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

2 to 7 p.m. 

Derby Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way  

Free 

 

Sunday, October 20 

Bike Tours of Historic Oakland 

10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. 

Oakland Museum of California, 10th St. entrance, at Fallon 

Leisurely paced 5 1/2 mile bike tour about Oakland's history and architecture, led by docents. 

238-3514 

Free: Reservations Required 

 

Saturday, October 26 

Pumpkin Carving & Costume Making 

10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

Center Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way 

Free 

 

Sunday, October 27 

Spirit Day 

11 a.m. and 5 p.m. 

4th and University 

Construct altars in a day of reflection. 

Free 

 

Saturday December 7, 14, 21 

Holiday Crafts Fair 

10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

Center Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way 

Free 

 

Saturday December 14 

Holiday Crafts Fair 

10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

Center Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way 

Free 

 

Saturday, December 21 

Holiday Crafts Fair 

10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

Center Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way 

Free 

 


Bears glad to be staying in Berkeley for fall practices

By Jared Green, Daily Planet Staff
Friday August 09, 2002

When the Cal football team opens fall practice on Saturday, they’ll do so in the friendly confines of Witter Field rather than the campus of Cal State Stanislaus in Turlock. 

New head coach Jeff Tedford made the decision to start the season with on-campus practices for the first time since 1994 as one of his first moves with the team. He cited conflicts with summer school classes for many of the players as the main reason for the return to Berkeley. 

“We don’t want to have players missing for practices if we can help it, and the trips up and back to Turlock were unnecessary,” Tedford said. “With most of the players taking summer school classes, it just makes sense to keep practices on campus.” 

The move is a popular one among Tedford’s players, who faced searing heat and little to do outside of practice in past falls. 

“I’m ecstatic we’re not going to Turlock,” senior safety Nnamdi Asomugha said. “It beat us up a lot going into the season. It put us in an uncomfortable situation being up there. It’s a time I don’t really want to remember.” 

Senior linebacker John Klotsche admitted that fall practice isn’t his favorite time of year, but said practicing in Berkeley should make it more tolerable. 

“We’ve got new coaches, and we’re starting a new camp,” he said. “Everyone’s excited. It’s hard to get excited about doing (two practices a day), but at least now we’re in a familiar place.” 

Berkeley is usually about 20 degrees cooler than Turlock at this time of year, something both players and coaches will enjoy. The lower temperature also greatly reduces the risk of dehydration and fatigue, a serious concern in the football world after the high-profile death of Minnesota Vikings lineman Korey Stringer last summer, as well as two college players suffering similar deaths during training camp. 

The Bears will practice twice every day at Witter Field from Saturday until Aug. 22, with the exception of a single practice on Aug. 18. The team’s first scrimmage will be held on Aug. 17 at 4:45 p.m. 

Notes: Senior quarterback Kyle Boller put on 25 pounds of muscle since last season, putting him at about 220 pounds. “I’ve always wanted to be the prototypical QB, 6-foot-4, 225 pounds,” he said. “I finally started eating right and hitting the weights hard, and it’s paid off.”... Tedford singled out Asomugha and Boller as team leaders for the upcoming season. “They’re two guys who have put in the work and understand the sacrifices they have to make for the good of the team. I hope the younger players watch them very closely.”... Tailback Joe Igber changed his number for the fourth time in his Cal career. He will wear No. 20 for his senior season. Cornerback James Bethea and Jon Geisel have also switched numbers... Junior Mark Wilson has moved from right tackle to left tackle, replacing departed Langston Walker, who was drafted by the Oakland Raiders... Senior fullback Ryan Stanger will not play this season due to an abdominal injury, leaving the position wide open heading into fall practice. Tedford said he will use an H-back instead in some situations.


Asbestos concerns in the district

David Richardson, Director, Ward 4 Berkeley
Friday August 09, 2002

To the Editor: 

In early February 2002, several East Bay Municipal Utility District (EBMUD) employees expressed concern to Cal/OSHA about possible exposure to asbestos in roofing materials at district reservoirs. Eight of the district's 186 reservoirs have roofs constructed of corrugated transit paneling that contains asbestos. These eight reservoir roofs were constructed in the 1960s. 

In response to the employees’ concerns, the Alameda County and Contra Costa County Cal/OSHA offices began parallel investigations. In mid-June, the Alameda County office concluded its investigation and issued five citations, four of which the district is appealing. Then in mid-July, the Contra Costa office issued eight citations for similar violations at two additional locations. Six of these citations are being appealed because the district disagrees with Cal/OSHA's interpretation of the regulations. More specifically, the district believes that Cal/OSHA has an incorrect citation for the event and did not consider the notifications to employees made by the district and, most importantly, the district has demonstrated that there was no employee exposure above the Cal/OSHA permissible exposure level. 

As information concerning this issue became available, EBMUD responded immediately by testing the water supply to ensure no impacts, which was confirmed by the test results. Additionally, the district initiated an assessment of conditions at all eight reservoir locations to determine if asbestos was present at concentrations that would pose any potential human health or environmental issues. The district conducted air quality tests to determine if the workers, while performing their tasks, might be exposed to harmful levels of asbestos particles. The test results were far below Cal/OSHA's permissible exposure level. 

In summary, the district has taken this issue very seriously and has taken appropriate actions to ensure the protection of public health, employees, and the environment. The Cal/OSHA citations appeal process is expected to be resolved in 16 to 18 months. 

 

David Richardson 

Director, Ward 4 

Berkeley


Strike threatens Cal’s fall classes

By Matthew Artz, Daily Planet Staff
Friday August 09, 2002

University lecturers and clerical workers are setting plans for a strike that could disrupt the start of UC Berkeley’s fall semester. 

At an Aug. 21 rally at Sprawl Plaza, unions representing the UC employees are expected to announce an official strike date of some time in the first two weeks of the semester, according to Nora Foster, co-chair of a group aligned with CUE, which represents clerical workers. 

A walkout by 633 lecturers, which union officials say constitute more than half of full-time university instructors, and 2100 clerical workers, who are administrative assistants, library assistants and police operators, could leave the university scrambling to provide services. 

For the past year, union officials and university officials have been in negotiations over salary and job security issues. The possible strike represents their failure to reach an agreement. 

“If lecturers, who teach the majority of classes and clerical workers, who register all the students don’t do their jobs on the first two weeks of school, I don’t see how the university can operate well,” said Michael Eisencher, Director of Organizational Development for the American Federation of Teachers, which represents the lecturers. 

The university is prepared for a strike, said Debra Harrington, UC Berkeley’s manager of labor relations. 

“We will be concerned about disruption,” she said, but added that the university could cope with a strike. She noted that during a 1998 strike by the 1,800 member graduate student union, the university maintained its normal class schedule.  

The unions representing lecturers and clerical workers must still clear a legal hurdle before they can engage in a prolonged work stop. 

California labor law requires that parties in collective bargaining go through four stages of negotiations before the union can legally call a strike. Neither of the unions has gone through the four phases. 

But the unions are trying to work around the labor law. A lawsuit that they have filed with the Public Employees Labor Relation Board could give them the legal right they need to strike. 

The unions are alleging that the university has withheld information from the union during bargaining as well as bargained without an appropriate representative. If the labor board finds in favor of the unions, a strike would be considered legal. 

The clerical workers and university are “very far apart,” said Margy Wilkenson, Chief Negotiator for CUE. The union is asking for a 15 percent raise over a two-year contract. The university has offered a 2.5 percent raise over the same period.  

The university cannot raise its offer due to state budget cuts, said Harrington.  

Clerical workers, who have been without a contract since last fall, say they are drastically underpaid. 

“UC library assistants earn 30 percent less than Alameda County assistants,” said Foster, who added that clerical workers face increasing health insurance premiums and did not get a cost-of-living raise last year. 

Lecturers say job security and pay are their two chief concerns. Presently, lecturers must accept one year contracts. Only after their sixth year are they eligible for more secure three-year contracts. 

The average lecturer income is $40,000 according to Eisencher, which he said is less than half the salary of tenured professors. Eisencher also accused the university of purposely releasing lecturers when they become eligible for the three-year contract. 

Harrington said the university recently offered the lecturers increased job security, but that has not bridged the gap. 

“Unless the university makes significant progress, we’re going to be at an impasse,” Eisencher said. 

The university and lecturers are scheduled to meet with a state appointed mediator Sept. 5. 

Union officials were vague about whether they would be supported by other university employees if they go on strike. 

“All [other] unions have said they will do whatever they could to support the workers,” said Eisencher. However, contracted union employees are forbidden from holding sympathy strikes. 

The unions have already petitioned the Alameda Central Labor Council, comprised of local union chapters, for a strike sanction. If granted, local union workers, such as UPS delivery workers and construction workers would refuse to do business with UC Berkeley. 

Harrington said the university has been the target of strike sanctions before and that contingency plans have got them through the difficult times.


Lowe outduels Zito for his 16th victory

By Howard Ulman, The Associated Press
Friday August 09, 2002

BOSTON – Derek Lowe became the American League’s first 16-game winner, outdueling Barry Zito with seven strong innings as the Boston Red Sox beat the Oakland Athletics 4-2 Thursday night. 

The matchup of two of the AL’s three pitchers with 15 wins met expectations as Lowe (16-5) allowed five hits and Zito (15-5) gave up seven in eight innings. Boston’s Pedro Martinez is 15-2. Curt Schilling of Arizona leads the majors with 18 wins. 

The A’s did something that none of Lowe’s three previous opponents managed to do. They scored against the majors’ ERA leader, who lowered his mark from 2.13 to 2.09. 

Miguel Tejada’s solo homer in the sixth made the score 3-1, and ended Lowe’s scoreless streak at 29 2-3 innings, longest in the majors this season and the longest since Greg Maddux’s 39 1-3 innings in September 2000. This year’s previous longest streak was 27 innings by Mark Guthrie of the New York Mets. 

Lowe’s streak might still be intact if he had stuck with his outstanding sinkerball. Instead, he left a curveball over the plate on an 0-2 pitch to Tejada, who hit his 26th homer of the year. 

Of Lowe’s 21 outs, only one reached the outfield. He got 12 outs on grounders, six on strikeouts and two on popups to shortstop Nomar Garciaparra and catcher Jason Varitek. 

Bobby Howry pitched a perfect eighth and Ugueth Urbina got his 26th save despite allowing a solo homer to David Justice. 

Zito pitched his first complete game of the year but never led. 

 

The Red Sox went ahead 1-0 in the second on a walk to Manny Ramirez, a single by Cliff Floyd and a sacrifice fly by Jason Varitek. They made it 3-0 in the fifth when a leadoff walk to Rey Sanchez and a double by Johnny Damon put runners on second and third. Trot Nixon then hit a sacrifice fly for the first out and Garciaparra followed with a single for his 92nd RBI. 

In the eighth, Floyd hit his first homer since being obtained last week from Montreal and 22nd of the season. 

Lowe retired the first four batters on three grounders and a strikeout before Eric Chavez singled in the second. Terrence Long singled before Lowe ended the threat by striking out Greg Myers. 

The former closer allowed singles to Ray Durham and Tejada in the third then retired eight straight batters before one of his infrequent curveballs was hit over the left-field wall by Tejada. 

Justice then walked, but Lowe ended the inning by striking out the next two hitters. 

Zito had more trouble than Lowe but worked out of several jams. 

In the second, he retired the next two batters after Boston put runners at first and second with one out. In the third, he got Floyd to ground into an inning-ending double play. 

And in the fifth, with Garciaparra at first and one out, he got Ramirez and Floyd, the fourth and fifth hitters, to fly out. 

Notes: Garciaparra struck out in four consecutive at bats before his RBI single in the fifth. ... Floyd’s single in the second was his first hit at Fenway Park with Boston in seven at bats. He is 7-for-13 on the road since being obtained from Montreal last week. ... CF Terrence Long was booed on several at bats. His catch of Ramirez’s drive that cleared the low fence in right-center robbed Ramirez of a three-run homer that ended Wednesday’s 3-2 Oakland win instead of winning to for Boston.


Is it ironic?

Randa Baramki, Berkeley
Friday August 09, 2002

To The Editor: 

The irony of Elmer Grossman's recent letters (“Read the Studies”, July 9 and “Tritium Details”, July 25) assailing the environmental group Committee to Minimize Toxic Waste (CMTW) for its anti-tritium activism, is that Mr. Grossman–a member of the Berkeley Environmental Commission–helped spearhead the effort to ban woodburning fireplaces in all new Berkeley home construction.  

At the time, Mr. Grossman advanced the argument that woodburning fires release unhealthy particulate matter and smoke-related toxins into the air. Subsequently, the city prohibited new wood burning fireplaces.  

However, when the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) spews radioactive tritium directly into the air and surrounding environment from an outdoor emission stack near densely populated neighborhoods (and 100 meters from the LBNL Hall of Science), Mr. Grossman inexplicably dismisses any potential health concerns.  

In his two letters attacking CMTW, Mr. Grossman omits the most damning indictment against LBNL's tritium releases: the Environmental Protection Agency's 1998 decision declaring LBNL's tritium contamination eligible for EPA Superfund radioactive clean-up status.  

Although many view so-called “safe” federal radioactive exposure standards with skepticism, between 1998 and 2002, the amount of tritium detected in areas of the LBNL campus exceeded the federal government's own cancer risk screening standards for radiation. 

Despite the EPA's recent withdrawal of its LBNL Superfund designation, the fact remains that unsafe tritium contamination levels permeated the LBNL campus for four years, according to the EPA (one can only speculate about the amount of LBNL’s tritium contamination before the EPA was notified and issued its 1998 declaration.)  

Mr. Grossman's emotional attacks and claims to the contrary, LBNL's documented unsafe radioactive tritium contamination and cancer risk continue to be a critical health and environmental concern to families in the surrounding community.  

 

Randa Baramki  

Berkeley


San Pablo Avenue activist couple fights eviction

By Matthew Artz, Daily Planet Staff
Friday August 09, 2002

 

A former Berkeley mayoral candidate and his wife, a three-time City Council candidate, went to court Thursday to fight for their home. 

Michael Delacour, his wife Gina Sasso and their teenage son, have been threatened with eviction from their ground floor flat at 2223 San Pablo Ave., where they have lived for 11 years. 

Their landlord, William Curry III, who lives upstairs, recently filed a three-day eviction notice charging the family with 17 violations of their lease. 

Curry alleges that Delacour and Sasso have sold marijuana from the apartment, operated an unlicensed bicycle business, harassed other tenants, purposely littered the shared yard and failed to clean up after their dog. 

“For the last three years they have been causing all kinds of problems,” said Curry.  

Sasso, who unsuccessfully ran for the 2nd District City Council seat in 1992, 1994 and 2000, and sat on the city’s Commission on Labor in the late 1990s, said the landlord’s charges were untrue. 

“We are certified to smoke marijuana,” she said, adding that they are allowed to smoke for medical reasons. She said they do not sell drugs and that the only money exchange that took place on the property was a $10 sale of her brother’s bike.  

Curry maintains that the couple has fixed up hundreds of bicycles and that they leave spare parts in his trash bin. 

Delacour, who has lived in Berkeley for 37 years and co-founded the Peoples’ Park movement in 1968, said the landlord has been trying to kick the family out since the end of rent control in 1998. 

“Think about it,” he said. “If Gina (who is 40 years old) never moves, he knows that would cost him about $500,000 in rent money.” 

The couple pays $790 monthly for rent, but the market value of the unit is far higher. 

Sasso knows Curry from before they lived at the property, but the relationship between them has grown increasingly bitter. 

The couple accuses Curry of harassing the family into vacating the apartment. “He has poisoned our plants,” Delacour said.  

In retaliation the couple staged a protest. 

“We picketed in front of the house and put ‘William Curry has to go’ flyers on our car and street posts,” said Sasso. The couple later held an anti-Curry rally at their home. 

They believe the eviction charges are Curry’s attempt to get back at them for the protests. 

Curry denied all charges of harassment and called the couple’s protests, “another piece of an unreasonable situation.” 

The trial in Alameda County Superior Court began on Thursday and is scheduled to continue next week.  


Union, owners agree on minor issues

By Ronald Blum, The Associated Press
Friday August 09, 2002

NEW YORK – Players and owners agreed to a $100,000 increase in baseball’s minimum salary Thursday, making more progress on minor issues as labor negotiations head into a key weekend. 

Faced with the possibility the union’s executive board might set a strike date when it meets Monday in Chicago, both sides got three items out of the way and prepared to deal with larger issues. 

They set the minimum at $300,000 starting next year, and agreed to increases in the benefits plan that allow most 10-year veterans who played after 1970 to earn pensions of about $160,000 annually, the federal maximum. Also, they agreed to shorten the period for teams to fund deferred salaries. 

A day after baseball players ended decades of opposition to mandatory drug testing by agreeing to be checked for illegal steroids, management worked on a counterproposal it intended to present Friday. 

Increased revenue sharing and a luxury tax on high payrolls — the key economic issues — were not discussed. 

Houston became the latest team to authorize the union’s executive board to set a strike deadline. Players, however, haven’t reached a consensus on whether a date should be set. 

“It depends on what potentially happens the rest of this week, hoping that progress continues to be made,” Boston’s Tony Clark, the AL player representative, said after players from his team met with union head Donald Fehr. 

Management labor lawyer Rob Manfred said negotiators intended to work through the weekend. Until now, talks have been limited to weekdays. 

“Whenever you are doing an agreement, there are points that become focus points in terms of attempting to reach an agreement to avoid this or that happening,” Manfred said. “Clearly, the parties have focused on this meeting Monday as a point in the process. We’ve worked hard against that deadline. Both sides have.” 

Management was pleased with the union’s agreement to test for illegal steroids. The proposal calls for each player on a 40-man roster to be given an unannounced test in 2003 and 2004. 

While the players’ proposal was limited to illegal steroids, management proposed a far-more extensive testing program last February. Owners also would test for other performance-enhancing drugs, such as the testosterone-booster androstenedione, which Mark McGwire used during his 70-homer season in 1998. 

Management proposed three tests annually for performance-enhancing drugs and one test a year for so-called “recreational” drugs like cocaine. The union’s plan does not include testing for “recreational” drugs. 

Both sides say they have made progress on revenue sharing. Owners originally proposed increasing the amount of local revenue each team shares from 20 percent to 50 percent, and to redistribute money in the pool evenly to teams rather than give larger portions to those with the least revenue. 

It appears likely that management’s desire for a luxury tax on high payrolls will determine whether baseball will have its ninth work stoppage since 1972. 

Owners proposed a 50 percent tax on the portions of payrolls above $98 million, which would have cost big-spending clubs like the New York Yankees more than $20 million this year. Management hopes the big spenders would cut payroll to avoid paying high taxes. 

In addition to agreeing to a new major league minimum, negotiators approved an increase in the minimum for minor leaguers appearing on 40-man rosters for two or more seasons. It will be $50,000 next year, up from $40,500. Both major and minor leaguers will get a two-year cost-of-living adjustment for the 2005 season and a one-year cost-of-living adjustment for 2006.


Fair housing, fair process for all

Rhiannon Berkeley
Friday August 09, 2002

To the Editor: 

The fact that the housing element of the city’s general plan was rejected by the state comes as little surprise considering the allegations, which the city hasn't denied, that the housing element that grew from three years of public participation and was adopted by the City Council last December was not the same housing element that was submitted to the state for review in May. It's doubtful that any lawsuits could spring from deficiencies in the city's report. Projects that strictly conform to the city's zoning ordinance are allowed by right and aren't subject to additional citizen review or comment or to council approval. 

The uproar and protests surrounding recent housing projects stem from the frustration of neighbors who have been ignored through months of planning and fund raising for projects that don't conform to either the spirit or the letter of the general plan or zoning ordinance. Those who dare to point out the violations are labeled NIMBYs and “classist” while tenants of large scale low income housing developments are further isolated from the general public. Single building addresses are redlined by insurance agents and credit bureaus, adding to the stigma of being poor. The city donates millions to purchase lots, develop plans, and complete projects and also provides project-based Section 8 to a couple of pet nonprofit corporations. With no regulation or oversight, repairs can be neglected while tenants face the loss of their housing subsidy if they complain. This is how tenements are born. 

The city needs to stop paying the full cost of projects that don't comply with the zoning ordinance, and they need to stop the finger-pointing and name-calling aimed at anyone who protests. The city needs to come up with a fair and equitable housing program that doesn't warehouse low income tenants but allows them to become part of the greater public where no one knows that they’re poor just because of where they live. The city needs to respect the actions of the council and not make changes to adopted plans after the vote; but most of all, the city needs to acknowledge the rights and responsibilities of the public to read, understand and comment on any actions that might affect them. 

 

Rhiannon 

Berkeley 


Traffic monitoring system pleases Bay Area planners

By Karen Gaudette, The Associated Press
Friday August 09, 2002

OAKLAND — In about a month, traffic sensors being installed along San Francisco Bay area highways will be able to track a quarter million drivers along their commutes. 

Proponents say the $37 million addition to the region’s electronic toll system will give motorists real-time information about some of the nation’s worst road congestion via cell phone, radio or Internet. Traffic planners say they will be able to gather crucial data on problem areas. 

But the new “TravInfo” program is raising fears that drivers’ privacy will be invaded. 

“I personally am a little creeped out by it,” said interior designer Heidi Hirvonen-White, who crosses the Golden Gate Bridge between Tiburon and San Francisco. “In today’s society it seems like any sort of code or whatnot can be broken.” 

Similar to systems in Houston and the New York region, the Bay area’s FasTrak program already eases waits at toll plazas by enabling motorists to pay with electronic sensors Velcroed to car windshields. 

Now, radio-based sensors mounted on highway signs every few miles will record the times that FasTrak-equipped cars pass by. The only way to avoid triggering the sensors in nine Bay Area counties is to stash the transponder in its accompanying Mylar bag. 

Project leaders at the Metropolitan Transportation Commission say they’re not interested in individual drivers’ movements and have gone to great lengths to protect privacy, including encrypting the serial number of each transponder. 

Authorities promise to keep this data separate from the identities of FasTrak users and information needed to make automatic monthly deductions from their bank or credit card accounts. 

“We’re not tracking or trying to follow any individual car, just the overall traffic flow,” TravInfo project manager Michael Berman said. 

TravInfo is only the latest example of the growing phenomenon of remote monitoring. Many rental fleets and trucking companies already use satellite positioning systems to track cars and cargo. 

Companies promote similar products for keeping tabs on kids, Alzheimer’s patients or cheating spouses. 

Washington is also promoting locator technology. By October, the Federal Communications Commission wants cell phones equipped with locator technology to help emergency responders find callers, and even track users’ road speeds. 

Transponder data has already been used in court. 

In 1997, E-ZPass records helped show where kidnappers took New Jersey restaurant millionaire Nelson Gross, whose BMW crossed the George Washington Bridge into Manhattan, where his beaten corpse was found. 

The MTC — along with its partners, the California Highway Patrol and the state transportation department — has received no requests from law enforcement to tweak the system so drivers could be pursued, Berman said, adding, “I think if they were to request it, we would say no. That’s not our job.”


Oakland shooting brings city’s murder toll to 69

Daily Planet Wire Service
Friday August 09, 2002

 

OAKLAND – The Oakland Police Department reported that homicide detectives were at the scene of a shooting that sent one victim to the morgue and another to the hospital in critical condition Thursday night. 

The homicide is the city's 69th of the year.  

Officers were called at about 9 p.m. to the area of 79th and Bancroft avenues, where they discovered the two shooting victims. 

A police spokesman said it appeared that that the victim who was fatally shot was a woman, and that the victim who was wounded was a man. 

A Highland General Hospital nursing supervisor said a male victim from the Bancroft Street shooting was in surgery in critical condition. 

No suspects have been identified, the police said.


Latinos will learn basics of running for office

Daily Planet Wire Service
Friday August 09, 2002

Running for elected office and campaigning strategies for young  

Latinos will be the topics of a three-day training session that will be held at Oakland's Chabot College beginning Friday. 

The regional campaign training will be offered by the educational fund of the National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials.  

The training will bring together campaign experts and state and local lawmakers to train more than 50 participants on topics ranging from the organization of a political campaign to fundraising and the development of a campaign message. 

Oakland City Council President Ignacio de La Fuente, who is participating in the event, says it is important for Latinos to become familiar with the ins and outs of politics. 

"For the emerging Latino communities in Alameda and Contra Costa counties to be involved in helping set policy agendas at all levels, they must become sophisticated about campaigns and the political process,'' De La Fuente said.


WorldCom Inc. uncovers another $3.3 billion in improper accounting

By Matt Moore, The Associated Press
Friday August 09, 2002

NEW YORK — Bankrupt telecommunications firm WorldCom Inc. said Thursday it has uncovered another $3.3 billion in bogus accounting, adding to the $3.85 billion fraud it revealed in June. 

The newest discovery was made as the company reviewed its books for 1999 and 2000, with most of it tallied in 2000, the Clinton, Miss.-based company said. 

The fraudulent accounting already revealed occurred in 2001 and the first half of 2002. The additional fraud would bring the total of phony accounting at WorldCom to some $7 billion. 

As a result, WorldCom will restate its financial statements for all of 2000. The company had already said it would restate its financials for all of 2001 and the first quarter of 2002. 

WorldCom also said it will likely write off $50.6 billion in goodwill and other intangible assets to reflect the reduced value of the acquisitions it has made. 

When the company made its initial disclosure in June, it said it would go back and review financials from prior years. 

In a statement Thursday, the company said it will continue its internal investigation and that investors and creditors should be aware that additional amounts of improperly reported pretax income and earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization “may be discovered and announced.” 

Arthur Andersen LLP had been WorldCom’s auditor until May. KPMG LLP is now auditing WorldCom’s financial statements for 2000-2002. Until that is finished, the total impact won’t be known, the company said. 

WorldCom, the once high-flying long-distance and Internet services company, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection July 21. It was the biggest such filing in U.S. history, with the company listing $107 billion in total assets and $41 billion in debts. 

Last week, two former executives — chief financial officer Scott Sullivan and controller David Myers — were charged with hiding the nearly $4 billion in expenses and lying to investors and regulators in a desperate bid to keep the company afloat. 

The accounting fraud that occurred in 2000 is said to differ from the techniques used in 2001 and 2002, according to a report Thursday by the financial news network CNBC. 


FERC says state has contract deals with 5 generators

The Associated Press
Friday August 09, 2002

WASHINGTON — California has reached agreement with five more energy companies to revise long-term power contracts negotiated during the state’s energy crisis, the federal official overseeing the negotiations said Wednesday. 

Curtis L. Wagner, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission’s chief administrative law judge, provided no details of the settlements, which he said are being put into writing. Tulsa-based Williams Cos. said last month it was one of the companies nearing an agreement on the long-term contracts. 

But California officials wouldn’t confirm Wagner’s announcement. 

Steve Maviglio, spokesman for Gov. Gray Davis, said the state has no comment on Wagner’s report. “We’re making progress and we look forward to more talks.” 

The state also is negotiating with eight other companies to cut the costs of some of the $43 billion in contracts signed when power prices were high. Wagner said he is giving the state and the companies the rest of August to agree to rework the contracts. Wagner initially set this week as the deadline for negotiations. 

The state signed 56 long-term power deals last year at the height of the power crisis. The California Department of Water Resources began buying energy in January 2001, after three utilities amassed billions of dollars in debts due to high wholesale costs and couldn’t buy energy for their customers. Davis has credited the long-term deals with taming the market and providing reliable supplies. 

But as power prices declined from more than $300 per megawatt hour to under $40 this year, California filed complaints with FERC, alleging the contracts were signed under duress.


State housing affordability continues downward spiral

The Associated Press
Friday August 09, 2002

LOS ANGELES— The number of Californians able to afford their own homes decreased 5 percentage points compared with a year earlier, bucking a national trend of greater affordability, according to an industry report released Thursday. 

The percentage of households in California able to afford a median-priced home in June was 27 percent, according to the California Association of Realtors. 

On a month to month basis, the figure declined 1 percentage point, from 28 percent in May, CAR said. 

Across the country, 55 percent of households could afford to buy a median priced home, up from 54 percent in June 2001. 

The San Francisco Bay area remained one of the most exclusive regions in the country, where just 17 percent could afford to own, down from 19 percent a year ago. 

Ownership also grew more expensive in Los Angeles, where 31 percent of households could afford their own home, down from 35 percent in June 2001. 

The high desert region is still the most affordable region of the state, where 66 percent can afford ownership, down from 67 percent in 2001. 

The median price of a single family detached home was $324,370 in June, up 21.3 percent from $267,410 a year earlier, CAR said. 


HOME & GARDEN: Making your dorm room livable

The Associated Press
Friday August 09, 2002

Ask parents who’ve seemingly lugged every item their college-bound child owns into a dorm room and you hear the same moan: why did we bring so much stuff and how can it possibly fit into such a small space? 

The “College Packing Season” is a few weeks away but its not too early for parents and students to make the first big college decisions about what and how much to take. 

According to Melissa Birdsong, director of trend forecasting and design for Lowe’s Home Improvement Warehouse, you can pass this entrance exam to create a functional yet aesthetically pleasing room. “Usually freshmen take too much because they feel they have to have everything,” she says. “In cramped space like a dorm, less is really more. The trick is to stay organized from the beginning.” 

Learn what you can about the room. Ask the college for room dimensions, floor and closet layouts, existing shelves, and bed sizes, including clearance between the bed and the floor. The college may limit how the room can be set up, modified or adorned. Nails and pins in walls, permanent fixtures, and halogen lamps are usually no-nos. Low tack tape for posters won’t pull off paint. Colleges won’t allow you to paint over the neutral colored walls. 

Call your assigned roommate. “It’s a good idea to coordinate with your roommate,” advises Birdsong, “because aside from first introductions, you can avoid duplicate refrigerators, microwaves and televisions.” 

Pack belongings with arrival and storage in mind, says Birdsong. Stow stuff in plastic containers that go from the car directly for use in the room. Clear plastic makes for easy identification of contents. Shallow yet elongated bins are ideal beneath beds. Stackable units with pullout drawers double as night tables. The real payoff happens at the end of school: items stored won’t need repacking in other boxes for the trip home. 

Huge walk-in closets? Forget it. High shelves and a single clothes bar are the norm. Hang a second rod below the existing bar for extra hanger space. Clear plastic bins fit readily on closet shelves. Most closets are not well lighted, so a battery-powered, wall-mounted light is necessary. Plastic shelving that’s not too deep can work wonders in a closet or narrow wall space. 

Don’t forget floor and table lamps. Cover extension cords that traverse floor space with duct tape. In the days when students move in, stores see a spike in purchases of Ethernet cords which are necessary to hook student PCs to the school computer network. Twenty-five feet will reach most network connections. 

Buy a phone with a built-in answering machine and portable handset. It’s all the better if it has two lines and can handle two receivers. Calling cards are good options to college long- distance fees. 

Room function is one thing, but so are creature comforts. Birdsong says incoming students need homey touches to create their own sense of space. Memorabilia is big with kids, so bring along a bulletin board and enough picture frames to feature friends, family and pets. A 6-by-9- foot area rug atop vinyl tile cuts noise and makes the room cozier. “Large pillows with arms and a back rest are good for reading. Kids find afghans, coverlets and a favorite old blanket make a bed their little corner of the world,” says Birdsong. 

Some new roomies even color-coordinate bedding or drape mini-lights around bookcases and desks for a warm glow when room lights are off. 

There’s another truism about college: what came in clean will become dirty — fast. Fill a plastic tray with cleaning items and a hand-held vacuum to corral dust bunnies. Don’t forget a laundry basket. Shampoo, conditioner and soap belong in a plastic shower caddy. 

A small tool kit is indispensable. Stock it with a power drill and bits, hammer, duct tape, measuring tape and scissors. 

But packing for college isn’t a hard and fast science. 

“The first time away for kids is really full of anxiety, and they feel they just need to take everything they own,” says Birdsong. “Encourage your student not to overdo it because if they really need something, they can get it later. It’s not the end of the world if they overdo it, but it sure is easier to move out at the end of the year (if they don’t).” 


Gardeners: Make friends with ladybugs

By Lee Reich, The Associated Press
Friday August 09, 2002

“Ladybug, ladybug, fly away home ...” goes the children’s rhyme, and that’s just what ladybugs that you purchase for your garden might do. Well, not exactly fly away home, but fly away, at any rate. 

Convergent lady beetles — the ones usually offered for sale — hibernate by the millions in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada mountains. They are scooped up, packaged, and shipped all over the country. But the beetles feast before their nap, so when they awaken they mostly want to fly — away. 

Once they become hungry again, they relish such plant pests as aphids, mealybugs, scale insects, whiteflies, and mites. Each adult beetle wolfs down as many as fifty aphids a day. The females lay more than a thousand eggs in two months, which hatch into cute larvae that look like little alligators and gobble up to 25 aphids a day. 

Although they eat voraciously when hungry, the effectiveness of even naturally occurring lady beetles is limited. This is because the beetles do not clean their plates, so to speak. They take off to greener pastures before they have really knocked out a pest population. 

You can increase the effectiveness of naturally occurring lady beetles by making your yard more attractive to them. Do this with food. You might offer an artificial food such as Wheast, a commercially available yeast and sugar mixture, putting it out on a tray or spraying it on a post or plants. You also can attract lady beetles by growing such plants as alfalfa, goldenrod, morning glory, and euonymous. Convincing naturally occurring lady beetles to stick around is more effective than importing lady beetles from the Sierra Nevadas. 

The adult beetles are not very effective at controlling pests on houseplants indoors, because they are attracted to the light of windows, where they congregate and die. The larvae, which cannot fly, are effective indoors, though. Either find some to bring indoors, or else bring in a leaf with lady beetle eggs attached. The eggs are in clusters of five to 50 on the underside of a leaf, and each egg is yellow and attached at its end. 

Purchasing cartons of lady beetles to release outdoors does have one benefit: It dissuades gardeners from spraying pesticides for the justifiable fear of killing the lady beetles. Even if the released beetles do fly away, other beneficial insects can hang around and do their job when they aren’t killed by pesticides. 


The fee is legal but the tactic isn’t

Car Talk: by Tom and Ray Magliozzi
Friday August 09, 2002

After buying a new car (a Toyota Tundra), I feel ripped off. Just when I was feeling good about the deal (we agreed to a price just 5 percent above invoice), the guy added on an "advertising fee" just as we were signing the papers. Four hundred bucks! When I asked what this was, he said "Everybody pays for this." So, feeling like we had no recourse, we dutifully signed the papers. Both my husband and I woke up the next morning thinking about that stupid fee and wondering just what it is?? Does everyone who buys a car pay for this, or are we being penalized because we didn't want any add-ons, like undercoating? -- Pamela 

TOM: Well, the fee is legitimate, Pamela. But the way the guy snuck it in at the last minute is kind of slippery, if you ask me. I'd say that earned him his plaid pants and white belt for the week. 

RAY: Dealers do pay a fee of about 1 percent of the car's price to cover advertising costs. Some dealers choose to simply fold it into their cost for the car, and with that higher cost in mind, they negotiate a higher price with you. Others separate it out and pass it along as a stand-alone fee. And some dealers will even negotiate the fee. 

TOM: But what your salesman did was not nice. He negotiated a price for the truck, and then, at the last possible minute, said, "Oh, by the way, I'm going to charge you another $400." 

RAY: If he were a more decent chap, he would have told you up front that you could have the truck for 5 percent over invoice, plus the taxes (legit), the destination charge (also legit), the document fee (also legit) and the advertising fee. He would have told you the dollar amounts of each of those fees, at which point you probably would have said, "What's an advertising fee?" 

TOM: He could have explained it to you then, and you wouldn't have felt ambushed right at the end. 

RAY: If a salesman tried that on me, Pamela, I would have walked out on the deal. Personally, I resent being surprised at the last minute like that. And I would have hoped that would have sent a message to the salesman that, perhaps, he'd remember in the future. But I understand that without enough information, and having already invested several hours in the transaction, you decided to go ahead with it. 

TOM: That's why it's important to ask before you agree on a price if there are any other charges or fees that are not included in that price. Then jot them down and add them up so that when the papers are filled out, there are no surprises. 

RAY: So the advertising fee is not a "made-up" fee, Pamela. You didn't get ripped off in the traditional sense. But, in my opinion, he did pull a fast one on you, and I'd remember that the next time you, your friends or your family are deciding which dealer to go to for your next vehicle.  


Doctor who examined Stayner’s methods often criticized

By Brian Melley, The Associated Press
Friday August 09, 2002

SAN JOSE — Yosemite killer Cary Stayner thought about killing himself but didn’t plan to carry it out. 

Stayner said in a multiple choice questionnaire that he was disgusted with himself, he didn’t enjoy things the way he used to, and that he had many failings, Dr. Joseph Wu testified Thursday at Stayner’s triple murder trial. 

Wu, clinical director at the University of California, Irvine Brain Imaging Center, said on cross-examination that Stayner had some signs of depression, but he didn’t conclude the confessed killer was depressed when he examined Stayner’s brain two years ago. 

Prosecutor George Williamson was trying to show that brain scans Wu conducted were unreliable because the positron emission tomography technology, or PET scan, can be ineffective on depressed patients. 

Wu has testified that abnormalities in the front of Stayner’s brain could make him more prone to violence and aggression. 

Stayner’s lawyers contend their client was insane when he killed Carole Sund, 42, her daughter, Juli, 15, of Eureka and their friend Silvina Pelosso, 16, of Argentina. 

Stayner, 40, could get the death penalty if convicted of murdering the three while they were guests at the Cedar Lodge outside the gates of Yosemite National Park in February 1999. 

Wu said his methods often come under scrutiny by prosecution consultants when he testifies in death penalty cases. Prosecutors plan to present an expert next week to counter his testimony. 

Wu said he testified a few years ago that of 20 to 30 accused murderers he examined, all had brain abnormalities. Since then, he said he has found a couple with normal brains. 

Wu could not provide actual numbers, but asked about his last 100 legal cases, he said, “I know we have found some normal scans.” 

Wu said he compared Stayner’s brain to images of what he considers to be 56 normal brains. He said the control group was made up of people who responded to a newspaper ad who said they were physically and mentally healthy. Wu said he believed them. 

“It’s possible there may have been some who slipped in who may have not been normal,” Wu said. 

Dr. Monte Buchsbaum of the Mt. Sinai School of Medicine in New York testified that he agreed with Wu’s findings that Stayner had diminished brain activity in the region that controls impulses and plans actions. 

But on cross-examination, Buchsbaum said he had no idea how Stayner behaved around the time of the killings. 

The prosecution has relied on Stayner’s detailed confession to show that he methodically carried out the killings and then worked hard to cover up the crimes. Witnesses who worked with Stayner said he was normal. 

Judge Thomas Hastings told jurors in Santa Clara Superior Court that evidence in the guilt portion of the trial may conclude Wednesday. 

If Stayner is convicted of murder, his lawyers would then present their insanity defense in a second phase of the trial.


State commission approves state funds for plan to end PG&E bankruptcy

By Angela Watercutter, The Associated Press
Friday August 09, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — The Public Utilities Commission has approved the use of state funds in the forming of a partnership to get California’s largest utility out of bankruptcy. 

The PUC decided Thursday to allow commission funds to pay expenses for global investment banking and capital markets firm UBS Warburg while it creates a plan to handle the bankruptcy finances of Pacific Gas and Electric Co. 

The PUC suggested in June that PG&E pay the firm’s fees — $3 million upon U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Dennis Montali’s approval and an additional $6 million if the firm arranged and obtained the state’s financing. But Montali ruled the utility was not liable for the expenses. 

It is uncertain what the partnership with UBS Warburg could cost, said Gary Cohen, general counsel for the PUC, although UBS Warburg gave a rough estimate of $100,000 to $200,000. He said the estimate is lower than the original fees assessed to PG&E because UBS Warburg is willing to take a chance the state’s plan will be approved and its out-of-pocket expenses will be reimbursed. 

Energy regulators hope that partnering the utility with UBS Warburg would boost support on Wall Street for its reorganization plan for PG&E. 

“They are crucial element in our ability to establish that our plan is feasible,” Cohen said. 

Montali will consider which reorganization plan to approve at a trial set to begin Nov. 12. 

If Montali approves the PUC’s plan, the regulators would rely on UBS Warburg to organize the sale of PG&E stock and arrange any additional financing the company would need to pay its $13.5 billion debt. 

Thousands of PG&E creditors currently are voting on a pair of plans for the utility’s future — the state’s plan and one by PG&E. Both sides claim the other’s plan is fatally flawed. The creditors must support or reject them by mid-August to help Montali determine which, if any, offers the best means by which they’ll be paid. 

PG&E, which filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in April 2001, hopes to regain its good credit by transferring transmission lines, power plants and other assets away from state oversight and into three new companies that would be regulated by the federal government. Analysts say that would allow the utility to borrow more money to pay its debts, since it would escape state control over how much it can charge for electricity. 


Body of slain Wall Street Journal reporter arrives in Los Angeles

By Paul Wilborn, The Associated Press
Friday August 09, 2002

LOS ANGELES — The body of Daniel Pearl, the Wall Street Journal journalist kidnapped and slain by Islamic militants, arrived in Los Angeles on Thursday, a family spokesman said. 

The body was flown to this country on a Cathay Pacific flight that arrived at Los Angeles International Airport at 2:53 p.m., said James Lee, a spokesman for Pearl’s parents, who live in a suburb of the city. 

The family intends to plan a private funeral service in the next week. Lee declined further comment, citing the family’s desire for privacy. 

Pearl, 38, was kidnapped Jan. 23 in Karachi while working on a story about links between Pakistani Islamic extremists and Richard C. Reid, who was arrested in December on a flight to Miami with explosives in his shoes. 

Pakistani aviation officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the flight carrying Pearl’s body left Karachi at 1:30 a.m., with stops in Bangkok and Hong Kong. 


Who wants a vehicle that screams "LOOK AT ME"?

By Bruce Hotchkiss © AutoWire.Net
Friday August 09, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO: If Tiffany's were in Borneo, this is how you'd get there. Okay, of all the useless SUVs in the world, this is the most. Who really needs an SUV with a 5-liter, SOHC V8 putting out 292 rip snorting horsepower? Who really wants an SUV that looks like the box its more cultured brethren came in? Who really wants a vehicle that simply screams "LOOK AT ME"? Lord help me, I do.  

This is perhaps the most absurd vehicle running around the Streets of San Francisco. Looking like a military vehicle with a great paint job, chrome and fancy wheels, the Mercedes-Benz G500 really is not suited to everyday duty. You can just tell that it wants to be out doing some grunt work in the hills. Or climbing the side of a building like Spiderman. Which it just might be able to do with its 336 lb-ft of torque twisting its way to all four corners through the magnificent 5-speed automatic transmission. And just in case the tires begin to slip just a little, even though it's got Full Time 4-Wheel Drive, you can lock each and every differential (all three) with just the flick of a switch without ever having to get out of the vehicle. 

I don't think I've ever, no I know I've never, driven a vehicle that garnered as much attention as the G500. People stared, people pointed. People knew what it was! A toll taker on the San Mateo Bridge keep people waiting behind me so she could ask a million questions, including how I got so lucky as to be driving it. 

The G-Class is based off a military vehicle. That's why it looks like one. As far as vehicles go, its design is ancient. But Mercedes-Benz is not stupid. When an independent importer showed there was a profit to be made with the Gelandewagen (really, that was the name before it was shortened to G-Class), Mercedes decided to sell a few themselves. So they civilized the beast and gave us the G500. 

What's civilized? Dual zone auto climate control, power telescopic and tilt multifunction steering wheel, a great GPS Navigational system, cruise control, heated front and rear seats, power sunroof (big enough to stand on a seat and wave to the crowd from), leather seats, privacy glass (so no one can see what you're doing in there), rain sensors for the wipers (neat stuff, turn the switch to intermittent and it automatically adjusts the speed according to the amount of rain), and a killer stereo with a CD changer. 

Okay, there is a slight down side. It gets terrible mileage. I mean it's rated at 14-mpg highway and you'd have to be a saint to get that. But who really cares? Not me. The G500 was amazing. It really held the road. Heck it even cornered halfway decent. Yeah, so it cost $74,945 plus tax and plates, but it had one feature that was well worth the cost of admission. The name "Mercedes-Benz", engraved in both the front door sill plates, was illuminated in a beautiful soft blue light and set against the Obsidian Black paint. Now that's Class.


NC committee votes to ban Quran reading assignment

The Associated Press
Friday August 09, 2002

RALEIGH, N.C. — A state legislative committee voted to ban the use of public funds for a University of North Carolina reading assignment on the Quran unless other religions get equal time. 

The House Appropriations Committee voted Wednesday while it was putting together a $14.3 billion state budget. Some committee members attacked university officials over the plan to teach freshmen about the holy scriptures of Islam. 

“If you stop and think about what 9/11 meant to this country — homeland security, guards everywhere,” said Rep. Wayne Sexton, a Republican from Rockingham. “Just think of what it costs to protect ourselves from this faction, and here we are promoting it.” 

The committee voted 64-10 to bar UNC-Chapel Hill from using public funds for its assignment to new students to read about a book on the Quran unless it gives equal time to “all known religions.” 

The book, “Approaching the Qur’an: The Early Revelations” by Michael Sells, is assigned reading for about 4,200 incoming freshmen and transfer students this month. 

New students may decline to read the book but must write an essay explaining their decision. Students are scheduled to discuss the book Aug. 19 in small groups. 

The reading assignment has sparked intense criticism, and a lawsuit is pending in federal court. The lawsuit, filed by three unidentified UNC-Chapel Hill freshmen and a conservative Christian organization, contends the students’ First Amendment right to religious freedom is being violated. 

School officials have said that the subject is timely and informational and that the reading requirement is not intended to promote Islam. 

“It’s unfortunate that people have misinterpreted this reading assignment as a form of indoctrination,” school Chancellor James Moeser said. 

For it to be approved, the proposal passed by the committee must go the full House and Senate and then to the governor. 


Catwalk collapse spills guests into aquarium shark tank

By Brett Martel, The Associated Press
Friday August 09, 2002

NEW ORLEANS — Ten aquarium visitors, including four children, fell into a shark tank and thrashed around in terror for up to 15 minutes with the animals swimming beneath their kicking feet before they were pulled out. 

No one was seriously hurt, though one of the children, a 2-year-old girl, later woke up screaming in the night. 

The visitors fell in Wednesday night when a catwalk over the water collapsed. 

One of the onlookers, 8-year-old Amanda Kruse, said most of the sharks scattered, but she saw one cruising underneath the panicked guests. 

“Its lips were peeled back and its teeth were showing,” Amanda said. 

Officials at the Aquarium of the Americas were investigating what caused the accident at the Gulf of Mexico exhibit, which includes about 24 nurse sharks and sand tiger sharks. The aquarium Web site warns visitors: “You’ll be glad you’re on the outside looking in.” 

The catwalk is normally reserved for staff but was opened for a behind-the-scenes tour for aquarium members. When it buckled, the group was thrown into the 20-foot-deep, 400,000-gallon tank. 

“All of sudden I heard something go bam, and the long catwalk split in half right in the middle and it dropped everybody straight into the water,” said Dan Rooney, whose two daughters, 2-year-old granddaughter and 5-year-old nephew plunged in. 

Daughter Allison Rooney, 21, told CNN: “Ironically, the man was telling us that if anybody ever fell into the water, that the sharks are well-fed and that they would scatter. ... Well, not even two seconds later, sure enough the whole thing just collapsed.” 

The water level is about 3 feet below the slick edges of the glass-walled tank, so there was no way for those inside to pull themselves out without help. Many clung to the mock oil platform in the center of the tank. Adults tried to hold small children above the water, splashing around and scattering sandals, makeup kits and brochures inside the tank. 

“The water is clear so you could see the sting rays and sharks swimming beneath them,” Dan Rooney said. “I know the sharks are well-fed, but with all that splashing you wonder if their hunter instincts are going to kick in.” 

Like many of those who fell in, Erin Rooney, 14, was scraped by the barnacle-encrusted support poles of the mock oil platform. 

“It happened so fast I didn’t really think about the sharks at first, I just wanted to get out of the water,” said Erin, who is Allison’s sister. “I never wanted to go near the sharks, and the worst part is I was scared to go on the catwalk and people were making fun of me for not wanting to go on it.”


Bailing out AC Transit?

By Chris Nichols, Special to the Daily Planet
Thursday August 08, 2002

East Bay bus agency wants
parcel tax on November ballot
 

 

This November, East Bay residents will likely be asked to approve a five-year parcel tax for cash-strapped AC Transit. 

The tax revenues, estimated to be $7.5 million, would help offset the bus agency’s $30 million budget shortfall, transit officials said. The money would not go toward the expansion of any services, but merely help avoid service cuts, officials explained. 

Under the proposed parcel tax, property owners in northern Alameda and Contra Costa counties from Richmond to Hayward would pay an additional $24 per year. 

The agency currently runs more than a dozen routes through Berkeley and serves approximately 235,000 East Bay riders. Other than a slight dip in ridership last December, AC Transit officials say ridership has been steady this year and may be on the rise. Their problem is lack of funding. 

The proposed parcel tax is vital for preventing service cuts and maintaining the flow of traffic in Berkeley, confirmed Peter Hillier, Berkeley’s assistant city manager for transportation. 

AC Transit board members are scheduled to vote tonight on whether to put the tax initiative on the ballot. Approval is expected. 

News of the parcel tax follows fare increases for AC Transit riders approved this spring. Single fares for one-way bus rides will rise from $1.35 to $1.50 starting Sept. 1. 

Many residents in transportation-conscious Berkeley say paying a bit more for mass transit is worth it. 

“I would be willing to pay a little bit extra for the convenience,” said Amartya De, a junior at UC Berkeley. 

Others, though, say AC Transit should have foreseen the shortcoming in revenue and planned accordingly. 

Transit officials say the reason for their financial straits is unexpectedly low sales tax revenues which fund much of their operation. More than $304 in sales tax revenue was expected after Measure B passed in the 2000 general election. But with the economic slowdown, officials say the sales tax revenue simply hasn’t materialized. 

“What drove us to recommend the tax was our current revenue shortfall due to reduced tax revenues,” said Jim Gleich, deputy general manager of AC Transit. 

The agency collects 20 percent of its revenue through bus fares, with the remainder coming through government subsidies.  

Officials at the agency see the proposed parcel tax as only a short-term fix. Gleich said the agency will cover its budget for the current fiscal year but “beyond that we’re in serious trouble financially.” 

Instead of cutting services during the recent economic slowdown, as many other transit agencies have done, AC Transit opted for creative financing plans and trying to reduce expenditures. 

AC Transit is currently considering two route changes in Berkeley to make services more efficient: The agency may cut a portion of the number 9 line servicing north Berkeley and could add a number 19 line running from El Cerrito’s BART plaza to west Berkeley, city transportation officials said. 

Given the size of next year’s deficit, however, AC Transit may be forced to make some service cuts. “We can’t avoid it in perpetuity,” said Gleich. 

Berkeley’s Hillier says that AC Transit should not only get more money from locals, but from sources outside the region as well. 

“[AC Transit] should be at the top of the list for receiving financial support from the state and federal government,” he said. “It’s sad that we don’t support them more.” 

Today’s public hearing is scheduled for 5 p.m. at 1600 Franklin Street, 2nd floor, in Oakland. 

 

Contact reporter at chris@berkeleydailyplanet.net


Maio supporting Albany’s interests over Berkeley’s?

Marie Wacht
Thursday August 08, 2002

To the Editor: 

 

I was very surprised and distressed by an Aug 3-4 article in the Daily Planet regarding the narrowing of Albany’s Marin Avenue. Councilmember Linda Maio is stated to apparently be in support of the city of Albany regarding this issue rather than the Berkeley constituents who have elected her to support our city. 

I have lived in Berkeley for several years and have owned a home on Gilman Street for the last five years. During these five years, there have been at least three traffic accidents within a two block stretch, and neighbors have rallied, without City Council support, to evaluate the traffic and to try to ameliorate the traffic hazards. 

There has been talk of planning ferry commute at the racetrack at the foot of Gilman Street, as well as finally making the Berkeley train station a hospitable and functional place. But I haven’t seen or heard any talk of the impact on Berkeley residents, especially those living on main traffic and safety corridors, such as Gilman and Hopkins streets. 

May we please ask our councilwoman to support Berkeley residents, before supporting Albany residents, as our mayor has done. Or please move to Albany so that we can elect someone who truly respects and cares about the citizens of north Berkeley. 

 

Marie Wacht 

Berkeley


Cake guitarist looking forward to homecoming

By Andy Sywak Special to the Daily Planet
Thursday August 08, 2002

Berkeley graduate McCurdy can’t wait to play the Greek 

 

It’s every musician’s dream to play the biggest venue in the town he grew up in. This Saturday, Berkeley High graduate Xan McCurdy will live that dream, as he revisits the stage where in the late 1980s he received his high school diploma. This weekend, he will take to that very stage with a guitar strapped over his shoulder. 

As part of the Unlimited Sunshine tour, McCurdy’s band Cake will perform their upbeat, quirky rock numbers at the festival next to the likes of the Flaming Lips, Kinky, the Hackensaw Boys, De La Soul and Modest Mouse at the Greek Theater.  

The Berkeley Daily Planet spoke with McCurdy before the tour’s first show in St. Louis. 

 

Daily Planet: Is (the Unlimited Sunshine Tour) one of the biggest crowds you’ve played for? 

McCurdy: Well, it’ll be the biggest crowd that sort of feels like a crowd that’s on our side. We’ve played festival shows where you’re on the bill with these other large rock bands who are popular at the moment, and those have very large crowds, but they’re people who aren’t necessarily there to see us. Sometimes they even get upset that we aren’t more heavy metal. 

Daily Planet: I thought you guys are pretty popular? 

McCurdy: Well yeah, but it’s easy to feel discouraged, even when there’s a crowd of 20,000 people. Sometimes it’s hard not to feel discouraged if a hundred of them don’t like you. 

Daily Planet: It’s pretty amazing how many musicians grew up in Berkeley and went to Berkeley High. 

McCurdy: Who are you talking about, Kevin Cadogan, Charlie Hunter?  

Daily Planet: Joshua Redman too... When you went to BHS did you play in bands, play around town? 

McCurdy: I did.  

Daily Planet: Did you play with (former Third Eye Blind guitar player) Kevin Cadogan at all? 

McCurdy: I never played with Kevin Cadogan no. I only smoked pot with Kevin Cadogan... I had this band called the Assortments... and we played sixties covers and some songs by the Jam and the Specials. I think we may have only played once at a party and at the Berkeley Square. Sort of like a weird mod band.  

Daily Planet: When did you join Cake exactly? 

McCurdy: Cake has four records out and I joined near the end of the third one (1998’s Prolonging the Magic) so I played a little bit on the third one but I joined right in time to tour for that record. I played two years for that record and then did this last record.  

Daily Planet: The guitar stuff on the last album is very active. Do you write the lead parts or does John (McCrea guitarist/lead singer) come up with them and teach them to you? 

McCurdy: I come up with my parts. Sometimes John walks in to the rehearsal space and he says, “Look here I’ve got this riff...” 

Daily Planet: What’s a song off the last album which would be an example of that? 

McCurdy: “Comfort Eagle.” That’s his riff, that’s the whole song. And so that’s what he had going on, that’s what he wanted to do with it. But you know “Love you Madly”? That’s all mine. He didn’t know what to do. The way it usually works is John shows up to rehearsal studio with three chords, a lyric and a melody. 

Daily Planet: That’s rock n’roll. 

McCurdy: And it’s vague but he doesn’t know what the hell to do with it after that point. And then he’ll sit there and play it and whatever we try and go for, then we go for it. And as far as songwriting, anyone can go for it... The way we’ve been assembling songs lately is really democratic. It’s like, “Wow, that’s cool, let’s do what they’re doing.” 

Daily Planet: I didn’t know you wrote “Love you Madly.” 

McCurdy: No, I just wrote the parts. He had the vocal and the two chords and the melody. Everyone else comes up with their parts. I’m not a songwriter. I spent years playing with my good friend Bart Davenport who was the songwriter – we played together since sixth grade, and I was the guitar player and we sort of let that dynamic go where I worked on playing guitar and he sang and did songwriting. I’m bummed I didn’t pay more attention to (songwriting) way back in the day. I like writing parts. I don’t have any lofty goals of trying to express a heavy lyrical sentiment. I sort of feel like I’d rather come up with incredibly groovy stuff that rocks on guitar – that’s enough to satisfy me. 

Daily Planet: What modern guitarists or bands do you admire the most? 

McCurdy: Well, I like all the Berkeley guys. Eric McFadden, Bart Davenport is a really great guitar player too. I always come up with a mental block about other bands. 

Daily Planet: So back to the festivals. Did you have a good time playing Coachella? 

McCurdy: Yeah, Coachella was cool. Festivals are always difficult. For us, we’re not a band that can throw a wall of Marshall stacks on and crank it to 10 and scream and it works. We’re kinda more rinky-dinky where it’s sort of like levels have to be right. Things have to interlock and work. Sometimes our keyboard line sounds funny if the guitar isn’t quite in the mix right with it. Festivals are hard to because you’re outdoors and you don’t get a soundcheck. You just run out on stage and hope that it all works out.  

Daily Planet: Does it? 

McCurdy: Most festivals you sit there and listen to one Pearl Jam rip-off band after another. Fifteen in a row, in a hundred degree weather. And kids love it. Loving everyone of them. And you’re just like, “Wow, man. How did I get here?”  

Daily Planet: But then, you guys are playing a festival. 

McCurdy: Well, yeah, there you go, what’s up with that? They are hard. Because of large crowds like that, where you don’t know if people really like you, you have to concentrate on trying to make good music for your own pleasure while you’re playing. 

I mean I’m being really hard on myself and the band when I talk like this because we’re damn good… but to try and make good music at a festival is really difficult. It’s difficult not for us but difficult for everybody. Usually the people who enjoy doing festivals the most are the people haven’t done it very much, because it’s just a visceral thrill to see all those bodies out there. It’s the party thing. But I think for most people it wears off pretty quickly.  

But if you’ve got your own show that’s got a bazillion people, that’s a little different. If they paid to see you, it’s more your party. And that becomes more like a family. Maybe some people would call that preaching to the converted but I don’t. I like surrounding myself with my friends with people I dig.  

Daily Planet: You’re gonna be playing the same place you graduated high school. How does that feel? 

McCurdy: Yeah, I’ve never played the Greek, man, I’m thrilled by it. I can’t tell you how excited I am. Any musician who grew up in Berkeley is pretty excited to play the damn Greek.


Out & About Calendar

Staff
Thursday August 08, 2002


Friday, August 9

 

Community Skin Cancer Screening Clinic 

11 a.m. to 2 p.m. 

Markstein Cancer Education Center, Summit Campus, 2450 Ashby Avenue 

Skin cancer screenings offered to people with limited or no health insurance. By Appointment only. 

For more information or to make an appointment call 869-8833 

 


Saturday, August 10

 

Avotcja's Birthday Bash 

7:30 p.m. 

Mama Bear's Books, 6536 Telegraph Avenue 

Poetry, music and dance in celebration of poet Avotcja Jiltonilro's 61st birthday. Reservations are suggested. 

428-9684 

$10 donation 

 

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  

548-3333 

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 

 

Tree Stories 

2 to 4 p.m. 

Ecology Center, 2530 San Pablo, Berkeley 

Come join us as author Warren David Jacobs reads from his book "Tree Stories." 

548-2220 x233 

Free 

 


Sunday, August 11

 

Kiwanis Club of Berkeley: A Classic Taste of Italy 

4 to 7 p.m. 

St. Mary Magdeline Church, Fellowship Hall. Berryman St. Berkeley 

Spaghetti dinner and auction to raise money for children's programs. 

527-3249 

Kids $5, Adults $15 

 

Free Radio Berkeley Benefit 

7 to 10 p.m. 

Benefit for new Free Radio Berkeley home. Speakers include Berkeley City Council member Kriss Worthington, Andrea Buffa of Media Alliance and Pierre Labossiere of the Haiti Support Group.  

533-0401, www.freeradio.org  

$15 to $25, sliding scale 

 

 

Hands-on Bicycle Repair 

11 a.m.-noon 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

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

527-4140 

Free 

 

“Into the Arms of Strangers: Stories of the Kindertransport” 

2:00 p.m. 

Berkeley-Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St., Berkeley 

Screening of Oscar-winning documentary about child holocaust survivors who were sent, without their parents, out of Austria, Germany, Poland and Czechoslovakia to Great Britain. 

848-0237 

$2 suggested donation 

 

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 

2 p.m. to 7 p.m. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

Derby Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way  

Sample 35 different Tomato varieties 

548-3333 

Free 

 

Berkeley Camera Club Weekly Meeting 

7:30 p.m. 

Northbrae Community Church, 941 The Alameda 

Share photos with other photographers 

(510) 525-3565 

Free 

 

Nuclear War: Then and Now, Part II 

The Decision to Drop the Bomb on Hiroshima 

7 p.m. 

Friends' Meeting House, 2151 Vine Street 

Screening of two network documentaries on the subject. 

705-7314 or BerkMM@Earthlink.net 

Free 

 


Wednesday, August 14

 

Holistic Exercises Sharing Circle  

3:30 to 6:30 p.m.  

wrpclub@aol.com or 595-5541 for information 

Holistic Practitioners, Teachers, Students & Anyone who knows Holistic exercises take turns leading the group through an afternoon of exercises. 

$20 for six-month membership 

 


Thursday, August 15

 

Power for the People 

7 p.m. to 9 p.m. 

Ecology Center, 2530 San Pablo Ave.  

A forum on public power, solar power and community control of energy. Speakers include Paul Fenn, Director of Local Power and publisher of American Local Power News and energy economist Eugene Coyle. 

548-2220 x233 

$5 to $15, sliding scale 

 

Tapping into the Hidden Job Market: Networking & Informational Interviewing 

Noon to 1 p.m. 

YWCA Turning Point Career Center, 2600 Bancroft Way 

Cal Martin will speak on networking and informational interviewing.  

848-6370 

$3 at door 

 

Unique Presentation Styles 

Noon to 1 p.m. 

State Health Toastmasters Club, 2151 Berkeley Way 

Learn to use the unique attributes of your personality to improve your public speaking skills. Visitors must preregister. 

595-1594 

Free 

 


Friday, August 16

 

Deasophy: Wisdom of the Goddess 

7:30 p.m. 

Redwood Gardens Community Room, 2951 Derby St., Berkeley 

Max Dashu presents a slide show on Goddess cosmologies and female creators from a global perspective. 

654-9298 or maxdashu@LMI.net 

$7-15 donations 

 

 


Saturday, August 17

 

Berkeley Alliance of Neighborhood Associations (BANA) Meeting 

9:l5 a.m. to ll a.m. 

Live Oak Park, Fireside Room, l30l Shattuck Ave. 

Citywide meeting concerning local issues. All are welcome. 

849-46l9 or mtbrcb@pacbell.net 

 

Cajun & More Festival 

10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. 

Civic Center Park, Center St. at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way 

4 live bands, crafts fair, outdoor dance floor, micro-brewery beer, Cajun food and free Cajun dance lessons. 

548-3333 

Admission is free 

 

Tour for Blind, Low-Vision Library Patrons 

10:30 a.m. to noon 

Berkeley Public Library, Central Branch 

3rd Floor Meeting Rm, 2090 Kittredge St. 

Tour of the new central branch for blind and low-vision patrons. 

981-6121 

Free 


Basketball’s a means to an end for Harris

By Chris Nichols, Special to the Daily Planet
Thursday August 08, 2002

Former pro gives Berkeley
players a chance to shine
 

 

For Doug Harris, playing basketball opened up a lot of doors. Though the Berkeley High graduate and current Executive Director of Athletes United for Peace stresses that the game of basketball is not an end in itself, he says the lessons learned on the court can last a lifetime. 

After a successful career as a professional basketball player overseas, Harris has committed himself to giving back to the community he grew up in. 

In charge of AUP, the Berkeley-based nonprofit promoting peace, education and friendship, Harris works directly with local high-risk youth, affording them the opportunity to both play basketball and learn a few of life’s most important lessons. 

“Sports, and in particular basketball, afforded me an opportunity to see the world when I was playing. Travelling and experiencing other cultures and other lifestyles was the best education I ever experienced in life. You can’t learn nothing like that in school, I don’t care what school, they don’t teach that,” Harris explained. 

As one of AUP’s many components, the Berkeley Latenight Basketball Program has since 1993 served as an alternative for young people seeking to distance themselves from a life of crime, drugs and gang activity. The program, funded by the city of Berkeley, organizes leagues year-round including the current outdoor summer session league taking place at People’s Park. 

Working in cooperation with UC Berkeley, which owns the park property, Harris says the summer session has been special so far because of the leadership shown by a few of the older participants. 

Didese Simpson, who has been involved with Latenight for the past eight years and a member of the summer session’s Scrilla team, says patience and teamwork are critical. As a team leader, the 27-year-old Simpson offers advice to many of his younger teammates. 

“Basically, I talk to my players. If they start arguing I tell them, ‘Look, don’t worry about it. You can’t sit here and argue, it’s just a game.’ You just got to get ready for the next play. As an older player I learned how to stay together and don’t fall apart,” Simpson said. 

According to Harris, the leadership component of Latenight Basketball keeps the program running, keeping the league from turning into chaos. 

“In Latenight Basketball, if you’re not on your p’s and q’s there can be an assault. It can be very volatile. That’s why I have to be there to lay down the law. If anybody’s ready to be fighting, we’re athletes united for peace,” Harris said. “These guys come in thinking this is street ball or any old street league, we don’t represent that. The moment that they start cuttin’ up and trippin’, they got to come and see me and I’m 6-8 and 300 pounds and I’m not standing for it. The guys understand that, that I’m no nonsense when it comes to basketball.” 

Both Harris and officials from the city of Berkeley agree that sports programs are important. However, even more significant are sports programs that combine playing games with educational resources.  

“Sports programs are helpful,” said Berkeley Mayor Shirley Dean. “They give kids a chance to let off energy and something constructive to focus on, but they have to be combined with something a little more to be effective.” 

Unlike many other strictly sports programs, Latenight offers its participants appointment counseling, career guidance, workshops and rap sessions to discuss topical issues as a group before each game. 

“These people can go to the park and play basketball. These young people out here need guidance. They need people to steer them in the direction where they’re going back to school, going to college. They need people to help them, give them that extra added push to help them get a job,” Harris said. “Sometimes all it takes is somebody to talk to them, a little counseling to get them back on the right track. To me, that’s what we’re there for. The basketball is just to lure them in.” 

For Berkeley High graduate Joel Tolbert, a long-time participant of Latenight, setting a good example sends an important message to many of the younger participants. Taking night classes at Laney College and working during the day, Tolbert says that just showing up to games each week teaches consistency and instills a sense of responsibility among participants. 

“This is about giving young people some direction, teaching them how to depend on each other, how to handle themselves and helping them get in the job market,” Tolbert noted. 

Past participants in the Latenight program include El Cerrito High’s Drew Gooden, recently selected as the fourth overall pick in the NBA draft by the Memphis Grizzlies, and Berkeley’s Justin Davis, a current Stanford basketball star. 

While of course not all participants move on to the NBA or even college ball, the measure of success for the Latenight program can be found more in the community than on the courts, according to Harris.  

“I can’t go anywhere around community without seeing kids from my program. It’s the biggest joy in the world for a kid to come up and give me a report on how he’s doing in terms of his school work in college. It’s the best feeling in the world”


State to help city with flawed housing plan

By Matthew Artz, Daily Planet Staff
Thursday August 08, 2002

State regulators who rejected Berkeley’s affordable housing plans earlier this month said Wednesday they expect that the city will ultimately win state approval. 

“This is a community that is trying to build affordable housing,” said Judy Nevis of the state Department on Housing and Community Development. 

Berkeley is required by law to plan for the creation of 1,269 new units of affordable housing by 2007. But state regulators ruled that the city’s plan to meet this goal, set forth in its housing element, constrained new development and lacked specific information explaining how it will meet the quota. 

The state’s ruling brings the housing element back to city staff and the Planning Commission for revisions. The document was sent to the state for approval in December and represented three years of work by city officials. 

Planning commissioners were predictably disappointed by the state’s ruling. 

“How could they do this to Berkeley?” said Commissioner Gene Poschman. “We do more for affordable housing than any other city, yet we are given the worst time.” 

Nevis said that Berkeley’s lack of available land for development makes it more difficult for the city to comply with state standards. She noted that while other cities can designate vacant lots for affordable housing, Berkeley does not have that luxury. 

To cope with its lack of available land, Berkeley has enacted several laws to encourage the development of affordable housing. The city requires all new residential developments with more than four units to guarantee that at least 20 percent of the units will be rented to residents earning below the median income. 

Nevis commended this law, but said Berkeley must propose additional strategies for planning affordable housing. 

“The state tries not to be directive and say you have to do it this way,” Nevis said. “We have to respect what the local community is able to do.” 

State officials said they will offer city planners suggestions on how to best develop affordable housing at a meeting in early September. 

The housing element has been a source of contention even before the state ruling. 

Last month, planning commissioners criticized city staff for changes made to the housing element’s appendix. They said that revisions that were supposed to be only technical in nature conflicted with policies laid out in the body of the document. 

City planners insisted that the appendix was purely background information and did not alter established policies. 

After reading the state’s letter of decision, Zelda Bronstein, chair of the Planning Commission, noted that the state’s letter treated the appendix no differently than the body of the element. 

“It seems clear to me from reading the letter that contrary to what the staff is saying the appendix is not merely a technical document. It is a policy statement.” 

Bronstein said that the planning commission will review the contents of the appendix in addition to addressing state concerns when it meets in September. 

Both planning commissioners and city staff said it was too early to estimate when the city would be able to resubmit the document for approval. 

Berkeley is now in violation of state housing element law. Without a valid element Berkeley could lose out on state housing grants and find itself more susceptible to lawsuits from developers who want to skirt zoning laws. 

Berkeley is not alone in having its housing element rejected. According to Nevis, only about 68 percent of California cities have a valid housing element, and many cities have their initial housing element rejected. 

 

Contact reporter matt@berkeleydailyplanet.net 


City has heard enough about AT&T

Paul Blake
Thursday August 08, 2002

To the Editor: 

 

In the July 29 article addressing the City Council’s vote to “deny consent” to AT&T Broadband to transfer control of its cable operation to AT&T Comcast, there is no mention that the citizen group that gathered the information in support of the denial has been disbanded upon the recommendation of the city manager’s office. The task force will be replaced by the Technical Advisory Group (TAG) which will not be open to the public. 

The council-appointed task force on telecommunications was established in 1999 as a way to provide community input on a telecommunications master plan for the city of Berkeley. A central point in the master plan is the city’s relationship with AT&T. The task force has worked for more than a year conducting community ascertainment and workshops as well as evaluating the existing franchise and preparing the list of non-compliance issues in preparation for the eventual negotiations with AT&T. The Telecom report prepared by the task force is available on the city of Berkeley web site.  

Since denial of the transfer, the city has opened negotiations with AT&T based on task force findings that were supported by the City Council. However, these negotiations will no longer benefit from citizen input because the dissolution of the task force has extinguished the only voice that Berkeley citizens have in negotiating an agreement that will impact telecommunications in our city for years to come. 

It is vital that the city as stewards of a public service, for which subscribers pay dearly through franchise fees, should be encouraging the continued input of its citizenry. The task force feels that it is critical that citizens participate in negotiation preparations. The task force urges citizens to contact their council members regarding their needs, problems, and interest in cable service and programming. 

 

Paul Blake 

Chair of the task force on telecommunications


Long’s heroic catch saves Koch’s bacon

By Howard Ulman, The Associated Press
Thursday August 08, 2002

Centerfielder robs Ramirez of game-winning
homer with two out in bottom of the ninth
 

 

BOSTON – Terrence Long reached over the right-center field wall into the Boston bullpen to rob Manny Ramirez of a three-run homer with two outs in the ninth inning to preserve the Oakland Athletics’ 3-2 win over the Red Sox on Wednesday night. 

Long’s catch helped A’s reliever Billy Koch escape a jam for the second straight inning. Koch walked Johnny Damon and Trot Nixon with one out in the ninth before striking out Nomar Garciaparra. Ramirez, who hit his 19th homer of the year in the fourth, then sent a drive to center. 

A security guard in the Red Sox bullpen had his arms raised in celebration before Long made his running catch to give Koch his 28th save in 33 chances. 

Koch then ran out to shallow center to give Long a grateful hug. Several other A’s ran out to celebrate the center fielder’s catch. 

With two outs in the eighth, Koch allowed a run-scoring single to Shea Hillenbrand. But with runners at first and third and two outs he retired Brian Daubach on a groundout to first. 

Jermaine Dye hit a two-run homer and Aaron Harang (4-2) allowed one run and three hits in 5 2-3 innings and left with a 2-1 lead. 

The Athletics’ fourth straight win tied them with the Red Sox for second place in the AL wild-card race, two games behind Anaheim, which played the Chicago White Sox. 

Dye’s sixth-inning homer, his 12th of the year, followed a two-out error by third baseman Hillenbrand and made both runs unearned. The A’s made it 3-1 in the seventh on a walk to Ramon Hernandez and singles by Scott Hatteberg and Miguel Tejada. 

Tejada, whose 24-game hitting streak ended Tuesday, went 1-for-5. 

Boston took a 1-0 lead on Ramirez’s leadoff homer in the fourth, his 19th. 

John Burkett (10-5) rebounded from his worst start of the season when he allowed eight runs in 1 1-3 innings of a 19-7 loss at Texas. In his previous start, he pitched a four-hit shutout against Baltimore in his only complete game of the year. 

He pitched well Wednesday, allowing one earned run and six hits in 6 2-3 innings. 

But Harang, who had no decision in his previous five starts, was better. He allowed one runner in each of the first three innings on a single and two walks but none got past first base. 

In the fifth, with two outs and runners at first and second, he got Ramirez to ground into a forceout. In the seventh, Ricardo Rincon struck out Trot Nixon after Johnny Damon’s two-out triple. 

Boston led 1-0 with two outs and no runners on in the top of the sixth. Then Eric Chavez reached on Hillenbrand’s second error in two games and Dye followed with his homer. 

In the eighth, Koch replaced Chad Bradford after Ramirez’s one-out single. Cliff Floyd struck out, but Jason Varitek walked and Ramirez scored on Hillenbrand’s hard single that just eluded third baseman Chavez. 

Notes: Varitek went 0-for-3 with three strikeouts and a walk. ... The A’s were 1-for-8 with runners in scoring position and are just 8-for-49 in their last six games. ... Floyd went 0-for-3 with a walk and is 0-for-6 in two games at Fenway Park since Boston obtained him from Montreal last week. He was 7-for-13 in his other four games, all at Texas. ... The Red Sox made several spectacular catches of their own on Wednesday. CF Damon ran to deep right-center to catch Dye’s second-inning drive, then raced in for a sliding catch on Hatteberg in the third. RF Nixon reached into the stands on the foul side of the right-field line to catch David Justice’s fly ball in the sixth.


Oakland follows Berkeley’s lead on living wage law

By Ethan Bliss, Special to the Daily Planet
Thursday August 08, 2002

Last month, Berkeley leaders put pressure on marina restaurant Skates by the Bay to pay its employees a “living wage” – an attempt to make the Bay Area’s high cost of living more bearable. This month, the city of Oakland is following suit. 

Oakland’s Port Commission passed a resolution Tuesday requiring dozens of airport and seaport tenants on city property to pay their workers a “living wage” regardless of the tenants’ current lease status. 

Many tenants had been dodging Oakland’s current living wage ordinance by maintaining month-to-month leases with the city, which exempted them from the ordinance. Until Tuesday’s resolution, only tenants with long-term leases were obliged to pay “living wages.” 

“After carefully reviewing the living wage charter amendment, it has become clear that the spirit of the law strongly indicates the need to take this step,” said Frank Kiang, Port Commission board president. 

Oakland’s living wage ordinance for city tenants went into effect in March when Oakland voters passed Measure I. 

As a result, businesses that operate on Oakland property are required to pay their employees $10.78 an hour when health benefits are not offered. In Berkeley, the “living wage,” which was approved in 2000, is $11.37 an hour when health benefits are not offered. The state minimum wage is $6.75 an hour. 

“There was a loophole in the [Oakland] law that businesses were taking advantage of,” said Amaha Kassa of the East Bay Alliance for Sustainable Economy. “We essentially closed the loophole.” 

In July, the Berkeley City Council gave the city manager’s office approval to move forward with the enforcement of the living wage ordinance at Skates by the Bay. The city can either terminate the restaurant’s lease or file a lawsuit.  

Arguments in Berkeley and Oakland are similar on both sides of the living wage law. Advocates of the “living wage” argue that it helps workers afford the area’s high cost of living. Many employers, though, say it reduces their ability to provide good customer service and prices, and eliminates the possibility of paying part-time workers.


Baseball players agree to test for steroids

By Ronald Blum, The Associated Press
Thursday August 08, 2002

Union gives in on hot topic, but no penalties
have been established for positive results
 

 

NEW YORK – Baseball players ended decades of opposition to mandatory drug testing Wednesday by agreeing to be checked for illegal steroids starting next year. 

Under the proposal, which addresses one of the key issues in contract talks, players would be subjected to one or more unannounced tests in 2003 to determine the level of steroid use. If the survey showed “insignificant” use, a second round of tests would be set up in 2004 to verify the results. 

If more than 5 percent of the tests were positive in either survey, players would be randomly tested for two years. 

The union did not say what penalties, if any, would be levied against players who test positive for steroids. 

“We had an obligation to bargain on it. It was a serious issue,” union head Donald Fehr said. “It took a lot of time and effort and thought.” 

Rob Manfred, the owners’ top labor lawyer, characterized the proposal as “very significant.” 

“It is the kind of proposal that will put us very easily on the path to a very timely agreement,” he said. 

He said a counterproposal could be ready as early as Thursday. The plan the owners put forth in February called for far more extensive testing. Players would be tested three times a year for steroids and other performance-enhancing drugs, and once a year for illegal drugs such as cocaine. 

Former MVPs Jose Canseco and Ken Caminiti admitted steroid use earlier this year, and Canseco estimated that up to 85 percent of all major leaguers took muscle-enhancing drugs during the years he played, 1985 to 2001. 

“As players, we want to be able to clear our name from what Caminiti and Canseco said,”se debated whether or not to have drug testing,” Dodgers player rep Paul Lo Duca said. “We want it. It’s no big deal to us. It’s going to be a pretty strict test, and that’s the way it should be.” 

The NFL and NBA test players for steroids and illegal drugs. The NHL has a policy similar to baseball’s, testing players only if there is cause. For example, a player could be tested if he is convicted of a crime involving drugs or enters rehab. 

Under the baseball union’s proposal, players could also be tested for illegal steroids if teams showed “reasonable cause.” 

“It is not a watered-down type of proposal,” Colorado third baseman Todd Zeile said. “It is a legitimate proposal to try and do something.” 

Both sides also discussed minimum salary, benefits and debt control. 

The union’s executive board is to meet Monday in Chicago and could set a strike date for what would be baseball’s ninth work stoppage since 1972. 

Players fear that without a contract to replace the deal that expired Nov. 7, owners would change work rules or lock them out after the World Series. The union wants to control the timing of a potential work stoppage, preferring late in the season, when more pressure is on the owners.


Lawrence Lab custodians upset

By John Geluardi, Special to the Daily Planet
Thursday August 08, 2002

Citing dangerous work conditions and a heavy workload, about 30 Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory custodians used their lunch hour to wear bright union T-shirts, waive placards and chant labor slogans at the entrance of the lab.  

The custodians gathered at the intersection of Hearst Avenue and Highland Place. They carried signs that read “LBNL workers deserve fair workloads” and solicited support from passing motorists in the form of honked horns. 

The custodians said the lab needs to hire at least 20 new custodians to meet safe and effective staffing levels. According to a union spokesperson, at least two custodians have been injured so far this year and one was injured last year while carrying out tasks that were not in their job description.  

According to Ray Viray, who has been a custodian at the lab for 12 years, the majority of custodians are assigned work areas as large as 70,000 square feet. Union representatives said the Association of Higher Education Facilities Officers, an international association that monitors the quality of educational facilities, recommends only 30,000 square feet of office space be assigned to a single custodian.  

“And that’s office space,” Viray said. “We are responsible for maintaining areas that contain biohazards, radioactivity and machine shops and these places require special training and attention.” 

Lab spokesperson Ron Kolb said management has been meeting with the custodians and their union, Local 3299 of the American Federation for State and County Municipal Employees, on a monthly basis trying to resolve the situation. 

“We signed a union contract in January, which they are working from now,” he said. “What that contract calls for is the union and management to set up committees to discuss the issue and that’s what we have been doing.” 

Kolb said management has been meeting with the union on an average of every four to six weeks.  

But the custodians say that despite the meetings, management has only arranged for four new custodians in the coming fiscal budget.  

“These figures do not even take into consideration the fact that a large number of LBNL custodians have recently, or are about to, retire,” a union press release read. “Apparently management does not seem to be taking the ongoing custodial injuries seriously.” 

However, Kolb argued that worker safety is a top lab consideration and that management was doing everything possible within the constraints of its budget. 

“We insist on a safe workplace,” he said. “If there’s an unsafe condition, the custodians should work with their supervisor to find a solution to the problem.” 

The custodians and their union representatives are scheduled to meet with LBNL management again on Aug. 14.


News of the Weird

Staff
Thursday August 08, 2002

The show must go on,
even in the dark
 

SANTA FE, N.M. – There were no sets, the orchestra was stuck on stage and performers had to change by flashlight. But the show went on. 

A power outage caused by two bull snakes that slithered into a switching gear didn’t stop the Santa Fe Opera from performing Tchaikovsky’s “Eugene Onegin” Monday night. The electricity came on part-way through the opera. 

The snakes’ interruption made for “an interesting evening of theater” for the 2,100 people who attended, said Tom Morris, the opera’s director of administration. 

A generator provided some electricity for the theater, but the orchestra — which usually is lowered electrically beneath the stage — was stuck in the middle, blocking the way for sets. 

Performers prepared in a wardrobe area lit by lanterns and flashlights. Battery-powered lanterns were placed in nine bathrooms. Bartenders used flashlights. 

The snakes weren’t so lucky. The voltage at the site of the equipment “can be fatal to humans so the snakes probably didn’t have a chance,” said Don Brown, a spokesman for the Public Company of New Mexico. 

A similar outage after an opening night performance 17 years ago was caused by a rodent that chewed through a power cable and “didn’t survive the experience,” Morris said. 

 

Senior citizen parachutes
from bridge
 

TWIN FALLS, Idaho – Jim Guyer let go of the railing on the Perrine Bridge, gave a hearty push with his legs and fell into history. 

Guyer, 74, became the oldest person to parachute from a span with Friday’s jump from the bridge 486 feet over the Snake River. 

“It was terrific, I got to do a 360-degree turn after the chute opened and everything,” Guyer said while relaxing after his jump. 

The jump could qualify him for a spot in the Guinness Book of Records. 

“I used to think, ’Man, when I’m 50, I’ll be too old for this crazy stuff,”’ said Tony Herring, 42, of Rock Hill, S.C., a friend who accompanied Guyer. “I can’t think that with him around.” 

Guyer’s jump drew a small crowd of spectators to both sides of the bridge. Several motorists honked their horns and cheered as Guyer and his party prepared to go over. 

“I really hope what I did inspired some 75-year-old guys to come out here,” he said. “That’s the fun of it. Life is a game. Records are made to be broken.” 

 

You think you’re depressed?
She lost 2,000 pounds
 

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. – Irene was depressed. She ignored her paints and brushes; she stopped balancing tires on her head for fun; she was nauseated and ate dirt, and the only food that interested her was small cottonwood branches to control her upset stomach. 

She lost 2,000 pounds. 

But these days the five-ton Asian elephant at the Rio Grande Zoo is feeling much better, after recovering from the side effects of medications for tuberculosis. 

“It’s been a very gratifying, satisfactory effort to see an enormous, incredible animal like this, whose life was really threatened by this infection, do so well,” said Dr. Gary Simpson, medical director of the state Infectious Diseases Bureau. 

Tuberculosis was discovered in Irene in October 2000, and she was given massive doses of medications for over a year. The treatment ended in January and now she’s acting like herself again. 

The 38-year-old elephant never showed symptoms of the disease, but suffered from side effects of the drugs — the same ones human TB patients take. 

Irene also apparently didn’t like having her blood taken. “She tried to sit on me,” Richard said.


Berkeley celebrates night against crime

By Chris Nichols, Special to the Daily Planet
Thursday August 08, 2002

Part potluck and part crime prevention, Berkeley residents, city officials and public safety officers met Tuesday evening at various locations to celebrate the annual National Night Out Against Crime. 

The event, now in its 19th year, is designed to heighten crime- and drug-prevention awareness and strengthen neighborhood spirit and police-community relations. 

While specific crime issues vary from neighborhood to neighborhood, gathering together as a community can contribute to safety everywhere, said Lt. Cynthia Harris of the Berkeley Police Department.  

Drug activity has been a concern in parts of both south and west Berkeley recently, say police and city officials. However, the phenomenon is not citywide. In other sections of the city, traffic safety and disaster preparedness have been the focus.  

Residents near Halcyon Commons in south Berkeley gathered Tuesday evening to say hello to friends and neighbors, meet their beat officer and city councilmember and discuss important neighborhood concerns. 

“The focus is on having a good time,” said Nancy Carleton, co-chairperson for the Halcyon Neighborhood Association, celebrating its 10th Anniversary Tuesday evening. “It gives people a chance to brainstorm, sign petitions and meet their neighbors.” 

Traffic was their biggest concern. Residents and officials agreed that the area needs greater parking enforcement. 

In addition, neighbors discussed what has become a neighborhood eyesore at the 3000 block of Telegraph Avenue. Two vacant buildings, partially destroyed in a recent fire, have remained a haven for the homeless and graffiti over the past seven months, residents say. Though graffiti was recently painted over, neighbors complain that a wholesale change needs to take place at the site. 

For south Berkeley resident Susan Sirrine, who often brings her dog, Zazie, to Halcyon Commons, the event provided an opportunity to discuss the need for more dog-walking spots in the city. 

Central Berkeley residents, meanwhile, celebrated the evening event at the Berkshire, a local assisted living facility. 

Residents and staff members at the Berkshire, on Sacramento Street near Allston Way, say the crime prevention event has been a success each of the past three years. 

“Every year it’s gotten bigger and bigger. We wanted the residents here to be a part of the community. This gives them a chance to socialize and to ask questions of the police,” said Susan Melin, sales and marketing director of the 90-person residence. 

According to Melin, the neighborhood is relatively safe despite an occasional car burglary. 

Police, firefighters and mayoral candidate Tom Bates attended the evening event at the Berkshire, discussing topics from disaster preparedness to parking to the fall’s upcoming elections. 

“It’s a great opportunity to interact with various neighborhood groups,” said David Orth, assistant fire chief for the city. Deploying all nine fire trucks to different spots throughout Berkeley, the department instructed both young and old on fire safety tips. September and October constitute the city’s fire season, a major concern for residents in the hills of east Berkeley, according to Orth. 

Berkeley’s police department also participated in the crime awareness event. Beat officers attended neighborhood get-togethers listening to residents’ concerns. 

“It’s important for the community to feel some sort of empowerment. It’s a statement saying we’re not going to let our areas be victimized. I think it’s important to make that statement,” said Harris. 

Phil Guba, an 81-year-old resident of the Berkshire and clerical volunteer for the police department, said the city faces continued drug and crime issues while adjusting to a recent wave of retirements on the force. 

National Night Out involves more than 9,400 communities from all 50 states, U.S. territories, Canadian cities and military bases around the world. In all, 31 million people took part in the event, according to the National Association of Town Watch.


Oakland’s 68th slaying comes on the heels of anti-crime events

Daily Planet Wire Services
Thursday August 08, 2002

OAKLAND – The Oakland Police Department is investigating the city’s 68th homicide this year, as a 19-year-old man was shot to death Tuesday night. 

Raymond Bennett of Oakland was discovered on the 1700 block of Ninth Street about 10:15 p.m. Tuesday. Police say someone shot Bennett numerous times and fled the scene in a car. 

The killing came just hours after several gatherings in the city to celebrate National Night Out, and anti-crime program meant to encourage people to host street events to reclaim their neighborhoods. Oakland Police Chief Richard Word attended a National Night Out event in East Oakland near Mills College. Another event was held in a West Oakland park less than a mile from the scene of Bennett’s shooting.


Cheney pokes his head out for speech in San Francisco

By Alexa H. Bluth, The Associated Press
Thursday August 08, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO – Vice President Dick Cheney said Wednesday he’d like to serve a second term “if the president’s willing and if my wife approves.” 

Cheney, who has a history of heart trouble, said doctors also would need to give him the go-ahead. 

He expressed the same sentiments more than a year ago while announcing that he needed a heart pacemaker. Despite a year of good health reports, Cheney’s status for Bush’s 2004 re-election campaign continues to be a source of speculation. 

“I suppose two people are going to figure very prominently in that decision,” Cheney said when asked whether he would be on the ticket. “One is obviously the president. The other is my wife.” 

Fielding questions after an economic speech to the Commonwealth Club of San Francisco, Cheney said serving as vice president has been the high point of his professional life, but he noted that with public service “you become a target.” 

The Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating accounting practices of Halliburton Co. while Cheney led the oil firm. Hecklers interrupted his speech Wednesday, shouting “Cheney is a corporate crook.” 

Even with the downsides, Cheney said he was ready to serve again if Bush wants him. 

“He’ll have to make a decision by this time about two years from now when the convention rolls around in terms of deciding who he wants to have serve as his vice president in a second term,” Cheney said. “That will be his call and I’ll be happy to support whatever decision he chooses to make.” 

Later, he said, “If the president’s willing and if my wife approves and if the doctors say it’s OK, then I’d be happy to serve a second term.” 

Cheney, who has had four heart attacks, said he is feeling fine. 

“With respect to my health, it’s good. I have been probably better watched now than I have ever been,” he said. “I’ve got the doctor following me around every place I go. Literally when I get on the elevator there’s a guy there with a black bag.” 

Asked about Halliburton in San Francisco, Cheney said, “I have great affection and respect for Halliburton. It’s a fine company.” He refused to comment further, saying he did not want to be accused of trying to influence an SEC investigation. 

“If you are interested in the facts of the Halliburton Web site,” he said. 

But the Halliburton issue arose again during his speech, when several protesters who slipped into the hall disrupted his remarks about the economy and the war on terrorism. 

Cheney stopped and stood silently for several seconds as the women chanted. As Secret Service agents led protesters from the room, Cheney said “Thank you,” laughing slightly, and resumed his speech. 

The speech was part of a daylong swing through Northern California. Cheney also was to headline a fund-raiser in Fresno for Dick Monteith, a Republican state senator running for outgoing Democratic Rep. Gary Condit’s seat. 

Notably absent from Cheney’s visit Wednesday was a public appearance with California’s Republican candidate for governor, Bill Simon. Simon was scheduled to attend a fund-raiser in Burlingame Wednesday night, however the event is closed to the media. 

Republicans had hoped the Los Angeles businessman and first-time political candidate could help them unseat Democratic Gov. Gray Davis and help wrest California from Democrat’s grip. 

But Simon has been dogged by a string of scandals relating to his family investment firm, including a $78 million civil fraud verdict last week, and national Republicans have debated whether to back off.


Protestors rip vice president

Daily Planet Wire Services
Thursday August 08, 2002

Upon hearing Dick Cheney’s remarks about corporate responsibility halfway through his hour-long speech to 500 guests of San Francisco’s Commonwealth Club, five members of the activist group Global Exchange stood up, stripped an outer layer of business attire and revealed anti-Cheney T-shirts. 

“Cheney is a corporate crook,’’ four women and one man chanted before they were escorted out of the Fairmont Hotel’s grand ballroom. Cheney was the head of the Halliburton corporation when it adopted accounting practices that are currently being investigated by the Securities and Exchange Commission. 

San Francisco police say the five activists are being detained at the Central Police Station, but whether they will be cited for the disruption is yet to be decided. 

About 700 more protesters gathered outside the Fairmont Hotel Wednesday to voice concerns about national security policies and the vice president’s relationship with big business. A small contingency of Cheney supporters were shadowed by the seemingly peaceful group. Police say no arrests were made. 

This is the third time Cheney has spoken to the Commonwealth Club. The last time was in 1991 when he served as Secretary of Defense under President George Bush Sr. 

President George W. Bush addressed the Commonwealth Club in San Jose in April. 

After leaving San Francisco, Cheney headed to Fresno to speak at a fund-raising luncheon for congressional candidate Dick Montieth. He returned to the Bay Area for a private GOP fund-raiser in Burlingame Wednesday night. Burlingame police provided extra security for the vice president’s visit. 

Bill Simon’s staff say he will also be at the Republican event. The California gubernatorial candidate, who spoke in Oakland Wednesday, is also been under scrutiny lately for his own corporate ties.


Vacaville company trying to fight cancer with tobacco drug

The Associated Press
Thursday August 08, 2002

Small biotech firm
announces positive
results in battling
non-Hodgkins
 

 

VACAVILLE – A small Vacaville biotechnology company has announced positive results from an experimental cancer drug customized to each patient and manufactured in tobacco plants. 

Large Scale Biology Corp. said Tuesday that its non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma drug has completed the first phase of tests on humans and will proceed to the second phase. 

Company officials are hopeful that commercial release of the non-Hodgkin’s product could be complete in three years, said Robert Erwin, chairman and chief executive of Large Scale Biology. 

The non-Hodgkin’s drug would be among the first cancer therapies genetically tailored to individual patients. The drugs for the first phase of tests were grown in tobacco plants in the company’s Vacaville greenhouse. 

The company decided to use tobacco because it has special qualities for growing pharmaceutical proteins, replicating itself quickly, said Erwin. 

The drug is manufactured by taking a genetic sample of the patient’s cancer cells, cloning it, and using the gene to produce therapeutic proteins in a tobacco plant. 

Erwin said the process is faster and cheaper than the conventional method for making other custom-made medicines, which are produced by having cancerous cells reproduce in a lab. 

Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, an immune-system disease that strikes 55,000 Americans a year, is among the most deadly forms of cancer.


Privacy bill being resurrected despite high-profile failures

The Associated Press
Thursday August 08, 2002

Companies would be required to acquire
permission before selling customer info
 

 

SACRAMENTO – Despite two high-profile failures to pass financial privacy legislation within the last year, a bill that would require financial companies to get permission before selling personal information is being resurrected by Sen. Jackie Speier. 

Speier, D-Hillsborough, said she will reintroduce the measure this month as the Legislature enters the final days of its two-year session. 

The bill would require financial companies to receive permission before selling personal information, such as bank balances and unlisted phone numbers, to outside marketing companies. 

Speier’s measure would also let financial conglomerates trade information among sister companies to market products, such as a Bank of America mortgage to a Bank of America credit card customer. But customers would be able to deny permission by sending in a form. 

Current law allows banks and insurance companies to have the power to sell personal information received from credit or mortgage applications without getting permission from their customers. These include phone numbers, bank balances and outstanding bills. 

Speier wants to stop that practice and allow customers to “opt in” if they want their information shared. 

A spokesman for Gov. Gray Davis said the governor is preparing to offer his own amendments to Speier’s privacy bill. Davis has said he wants to sign a privacy measure. But the Democratic governor worked behind the scenes with his Assembly allies last year to kill Speier’s bill. 

Davis then offered his own version, but that also died when consumer groups and corporations both refused to support it. 

Speier’s measure was defeated by nine votes last September and is now waiting for reconsideration. Speier and her Assembly allies are now quietly lobbying wavering members, many of them from Southern California and the Central Valley, who claim that the issue is more important to the Bay Area than to their own constituents. 

Consumer groups say the new measure probably needs at least one last push from Davis and state Assembly leaders. 

“Does the Assembly provide the leadership needed that this gets to the governor’s desk,” asked Shelley Curran, a lobbyist with Consumers Union in San Francisco, “or does the legislation never see the light of day?”


Opinion

Editorials

Company clones cows to produce medicine

By Paul Elias The Associated Press
Wednesday August 14, 2002

Four cloned calves genetically engineered with human DNA and currently grazing in Iowa could hold the key to creating herds of identical cows that produce medicines in their milk and blood. 

“Cows are ideal factories,” said James Robl, president of Hematech LLC, which hopes to profit from drug-producing bovines. “Cows are big and have a lot of blood and produce a lot of milk.” 

Hematech of Sioux Falls, S.D., and its partner on the project, Kirin Brewing Co., aim to harvest groups of disease-fighting human proteins — called “immunoglobulins” — in cows. The protein groups are produced daily when the body comes under attack from foreign agents, and they’re typically tailor-made to attack each invader. 

The immunoglobulins hold great promise as medicines to treat a whole range of invaders from anthrax to earache-causing viruses in infants. Doctors already use them to treat such maladies as tetanus, rabies and even some cases of infertility. 

Problem is, these proteins can’t be grown in labs and factories and are available only from humans donors, limiting their supply. 

In many cases, it’s impossible to even get specific disease-fighters from human donors. For instance, the only way to obtain anthrax-fighting immunoglobulins is to infect people and provoke an immune response. 

Hematech hopes to solve this problem by producing the proteins through purposely infected cows. 

Other scientists have already spliced human genes into animals in the burgeoning field of molecular pharming. But those efforts have been limited to splicing a single human gene to produce a single protein to fight a specific disease. 


News of the Weird

Staff
Tuesday August 13, 2002

Nothing in this name 

EL PASO, Texas — A police officer’s name nearly cost her her job. 

The problem was the way El Paso officer Christine Lynn O’Kane’s name appeared on her identification tag and e-mails: C. O’KANE. 

“When you put it together, it spells ’cocaine,”’ said police spokesman Al Velarde. 

O’Kane resigned from the El Paso Police Department on April 6, 2000, to take care of her ailing mother, the El Paso Times reported. She had a good service record, and her work file included a recommendation that she be reinstated if she reapplied in the future. 

But when O’Kane reapplied with the department months later, she found it no longer supported her reinstatement. 

Police management cited the “inappropriate” use of her name as the basis for their denial. 

O’Kane had been using “C. O’Kane” in e-mails including a goodbye message to co-workers she sent in April 2000. 

“In reading the (e-mail) header, it is clear that the intention was to refer to the drug cocaine,” states an April 2, 2001, e-mail from Assistant Police Chief Richard Wiles to the department’s personnel director. 

O’Kane appealed her case to the Civil Service Commission on May 24, 2001, and the commission supported her position. 

 

Convenient but limited 

CHARLESTON, S.C. — You’ve heard of dialing for dollars. Well, fans of the minor league Charleston RiverDogs can now dial for dogs. And fries. And beer. 

Under a new system the team is trying for the rest of the season, spectators can stay in their seats and order food and drink on their cell phones. 

Developed by a Canadian company, CellBucks allows fans to have concessions delivered right to their seats. Minor league teams in Buffalo, N.Y., and Bowie, Md., are also trying out the system. 

About 30 fans gave the system a try when it was first used Wednesday night. But some struck out because they hadn’t registered a credit card number and electronic-mail address first, Sharrer said. 

Phone orders are limited to a special 10-item menu of meals, including beer, for up to four people. Prices range from $6 to $26.50, including tax and tip. 


California jobless rate dips

By Simon Avery The Associated Press
Monday August 12, 2002

LOS ANGELES – California’s jobless rate dipped to 6.3 percent in July, down from a revised 6.5 percent a month earlier, as the state added 7,500 payroll jobs, officials said Friday. 

Most of the growth came from the government sector, which showed a net gain of 24,000 positions on a seasonally adjusted basis, according to the state’s Employment Development Department. 

The wholesale and retail trade sectors also added to their ranks, offsetting thousands of job losses in the manufacturing, services and construction industries. 

Economists were lukewarm about the decrease. 

“The economy is flat, it’s mirroring the national trend,” said Stephen Levy, director of the Center for Continuing Study of the California Economy. “For the (San Francisco) Bay area, it’s good the economy has stopped falling. For the rest of the state, it means we’re still waiting for a recovery.” 

The number of people unemployed in California decreased by 46,000 to 1.1 million, but the state jobless rate remained higher than the national figure. U.S. unemployment was unchanged at 5.9 percent in July. 

“The (monthly) decrease in the unemployment rate appears to reflect consumer confidence in the economy,” said Jeanne Cain, vice president of government relations for the California Chamber of Commerce, citing the additional 6,000 jobs in wholesale and retail trade. 

“But in terms of more significant growth, we are concerned about upcoming legislation,” she said. 

Legislative efforts to pass bills increasing payroll taxes and giving Indian communities veto power over some infrastructure projects could jeopardize the economy’s ability to rebound, she said. 

In addition, a projected $10 billion state deficit for budget year 2003-2004 could mean fewer government jobs, she said. 

Many of the 24,000 new public sector jobs reported in July were teaching positions. But experts anticipate job growth in public education will plateau or even decline in the coming months, as school budgets feel the pinch of the state budget shortfall. 

With the state employing about one of every seven California workers, the budget deficit is a “big deal” for the job market, Levy said.


Briefs

Saturday August 10, 2002

SONICblue chief ousted after  

challenging insider loans 

SAN JOSE — A tech company executive who demanded that his board members repay their sweetheart loans early or resign was himself fired after he went public with his ultimatum. 

SONICblue Inc. chief executive and chairman Ken Potashner said he was ousted Thursday after describing his boardroom confrontation to a newspaper. 

His immediate replacement, interim CEO L. Gregory Ballard, denied Friday that the loan dispute was behind the ouster but said the board would re-evaluate the loans now that investors are scrutinizing accounting at many companies. 

Loans to the SONICblue board members totaling more than $500,000 were not illegal when they were issued in June 2000, and the board later voted to not hold the directors personally liable if they default. 

Nor were such loans uncommon — server maker Sun Microsystems Inc. disclosed Friday it loaned $6.4 million to six executives and board members in 2001 and this year, of which $5.4 million was outstanding. 

Shipping lines want mediation  

in stalled talks with dockworkers 

LOS ANGELES — Negotiators for shipping lines that use West Coast ports called Friday for a third-party mediator to help restart stalled contract talks with dockworkers. 

The Pacific Maritime Association said mediation is the only solution unless the International Longshore and Warehouse Union presents a “serious” offer when both sides return to the table on Tuesday. 

The union’s contract expired July 1. The two sides have agreed to rolling 24-hour extensions through Tuesday. 

Joseph Miniace, president of the PMA, said mediation is essential to move talks along. During the past 10 weeks, the parties have met 28 times for a total of nearly 54 hours, he said. 

“How can you expect to get anything done like that?” he said. 

A spokesman for the ILWU called the mediation proposal a public relations ploy, saying negotiations have been ineffective because they have been undermined by government support of the PMA.


Rash of toddler falls sparks preventative reminders

Daily Planet Wire Service
Friday August 09, 2002

The recent spate of toddlers falling from windows in the Bay Area – including one last night – has prompted safety advocates to remind parents to be diligent and to use protective window guards that can ensure a measure of prevention. 

According to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, industry standards call for guards to be strong enough to prevent falls but also allow access for escape in the event of a fire. 

“People should be installing protective window guards,” commission spokesman Ken Giles said. “We strongly advocate their use.” 

Three Bay Area children have fallen from windows at least two-stories high in the last couple of weeks, including a young girl who toppled out of a San Jose apartment window in the 2800 block of McKee Road just before 9:30 p.m. Wednesday. The 2 1/2-year-old girl's fall was broken by some shrubs below the window and she is expected to recover, according to police. 

On Monday, an 18-month-old San Francisco girl fell three stories out of a bedroom window and died from her injuries the following day. Police have said the tragic fall was an accident. 

A third girl, a 10-month-old from Santa Clara, pushed through a window screen about a week ago, falling to the parking lot below. She is recovering from head injuries suffered in the fall. 

Giles said the Consumer Product Safety Commission announced new safety standards for window guards in 2000. A report detailing statistics for window-fall related deaths among children 10 years of age and younger revealed that 120 children, most under age 5, died in falls from 1990 to 2000. During the same period, more than 4,000 children were taken to emergency rooms for fall-related injuries. 

The commission urges families occupying multi-story homes to take advantage of protective guards and familiarize themselves with a few essential preventive measures. 

Giles said guards should be installed in rooms where any young child might spend time. Parents should also install locks that allow windows to open no more than four inches and never depend on screens alone. In addition, adults should open windows from the top and keep furniture that children can climb on away from windows.


History

Staff
Thursday August 08, 2002

Today’s Highlight in History: 

On Aug. 8, 1974, President Nixon announced he would resign following new damaging revelations in the Watergate scandal. 

On this date: 

In 1815, Napoleon Bonaparte set sail for St. Helena to spend the remainder of his days in exile. 

In 1876, Thomas A. Edison received a patent for his mimeograph. 

In 1942, six convicted Nazi saboteurs who had landed in the United States were executed in Washington, D.C.; two others received life imprisonment. 

In 1945, President Truman signed the United Nations Charter. 

In 1945, the Soviet Union declared war against Japan during World War II. 

In 1953, the United States and South Korea initialed a mutual security pact. 

In 1963, thieves made off with 2.6 million pounds in banknotes in Britain’s “Great Train Robbery.” 

In 1968, Richard M. Nixon was nominated for president at the Republican national convention in Miami Beach. 

In 1973, Vice President Spiro T. Agnew branded as “damned lies” reports he had taken kickbacks from government contracts in Maryland, and vowed not to resign. But he eventually did. 

In 1978, the United States launched Pioneer Venus II, which carried scientific probes to study the atmosphere of Venus. 

 

Ten years ago:  

The U.S. basketball “Dream Team” clinched the gold at the Barcelona Summer Olympics, defeating Croatia 117-85. The space shuttle Atlantis returned from a problem-plagued mission. AIDS activist Alison Gertz died in Westhampton Beach, Long Island, N.Y., at age 26. 

Five years ago:  

The Teamsters and United Parcel Service completed a second day of federally mediated talks, with neither side reporting progress toward ending a strike. 

One year ago:  

Former President Reagan’s daughter Maureen died at age 60. Mohammad Khatami was sworn in for a second term as Iran’s president.