The Week

Matthew Artz/Daily Planet Staff
          Tim, a homeless Berkeley resident, camps out at Civic Center Park during National Homeless
          Awareness Week.
Matthew Artz/Daily Planet Staff Tim, a homeless Berkeley resident, camps out at Civic Center Park during National Homeless Awareness Week.
 

News

Homeless camp sets up shop

By Matthew Artz Daily Planet Staff
Thursday November 21, 2002

Looking for a place to sleep Tuesday night, about 20 local homeless people set up a tent city in Civic Center Park – the first of its kind since 1987. -more-


Calendar

Thursday November 21, 2002

Thursday, Nov. 21 -more-


A compliment for Barak

Rachel M. Schorr Berkeley
Thursday November 21, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


St. Mary’s downs the Cardinals

By Catherine Howard Special to the Daily Planet
Thursday November 21, 2002

The St. Mary’s High girls volleyball team bounced back from their disappointing loss to Albany High to sweep the Clear Lake Cardinals 15-4, 15-13 and 15-5 in the first round of the North Coast Section Division IV playoffs. -more-


Student actors stage a circus

By Robert Hall Special to the Daily Planet
Thursday November 21, 2002

ing up to Henry James, the subtle illuminator of sensibilities. It happens in “Signs of Life” by Canadian playwright Joan Schenkar, now in a Department of Dramatic Arts production at Durham Studio Theater on the UC campus. -more-


City and Scouts square off over gay rights

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet Staff
Thursday November 21, 2002

Loud stereos

Deena Evans Berkeley
Thursday November 21, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Upshaw activated and could play Sunday

By Janie McCauley The Associated Press
Thursday November 21, 2002

ALAMEDA — Oakland Raiders defensive end Regan Upshaw, the team’s sacks leader last year who’s recovering from knee surgery, might play again this season after all. -more-


Protest doesn’t ruffle former Israeli leader

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet Staff
Thursday November 21, 2002

Former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak blamed Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat for the collapse of peace talks at Camp David in 2000 and said he foresees a lengthy, worldwide fight against terror in a UC Berkeley speech Tuesday night. -more-


Mercury poisoning is no shock

Bill Walker,Todd Steiner
Thursday November 21, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Stanford knocks off No. 11 Xavier

Staff
Thursday November 21, 2002

STANFORD — Julius Barnes scored 14 points, including two free throws with 27 seconds left, and Stanford ran out the clock to upset No. 11 Xavier 63-62 in the quarterfinals of the Preseason NIT on Wednesday night. -more-


New York Times execs address campus concerns

By Kurtis Alexander Daily Planet Staff
Thursday November 21, 2002

The top brass of the New York Times asked critics at a UC Berkeley forum this week to reexamine their political leanings before accusing the 150-year-old, landmark newspaper of having a political bias. -more-


Flinging anecdotes

Mark Tatz Oakland
Thursday November 21, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Schott, Yokers named first team All-Pac-10

Thursday November 21, 2002

California senior forward Laura Schott and junior midfielder Kim Yokers have been selected to the first team All-Pac-10 team by the conference coaches today. Senior midfielders Carly Fuller and Brittany Kirk earned honorable -more-


Bush challenges NATO allies to stand firm against Saddam

By Ron Fournier The Associated Press
Thursday November 21, 2002

Athletics to open in Japan

By Ronald Blum The Associated Press
Thursday November 21, 2002

Stanford launches journalism internship

Thursday November 21, 2002

STANFORD — A new internship honoring slain Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl is designed to give Stanford University students an opportunity to work overseas and emulate his stories and ideals. -more-


State military personnel deployed to Gulf

Thursday November 21, 2002

CAMP PENDLETON — Several hundred Marines in charge of planning and running a 45,000-member force head this week to the Persian Gulf region as the U.S. military prepares for a possible war on Iraq. -more-


Hewlett-Packard’s quarterly profit tops expectations

By Michael Liedtke The Associated Press
Thursday November 21, 2002

California Supreme Court enters deregulation fray

By David Kravets The Associated Press
Thursday November 21, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — The California Supreme Court agreed Wednesday to decide whether power regulators unlawfully authorized a utility to use money generated by record-high electric rate hikes to pay its debts. -more-


Senate approves buyback plan for groundfish fishery

Thursday November 21, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — The Senate on Wednesday approved a plan to reduce the number of people fishing for groundfish on the West Coast, in an attempt to provide some relief to the beleaguered fishery and those who make their living off it. -more-


Judge sentences teens to jail for vicious beatings

Thursday November 21, 2002

SAN DIEGO — Rejecting calls for lengthy prison terms, a judge sentenced three teenagers to county jail Wednesday for severely beating five Mexican laborers in an attack prosecuted as a hate crime. -more-


Mayor Dean says goodbye

By Matthew Artz Daily Planet Staff
Wednesday November 20, 2002

For a woman who stands at less than five feet tall, Mayor Shirley Dean has been a towering presence in Berkeley politics for more than a quarter-century. -more-


‘Smart growth’ just a fad?

Jane Powell Berkeley
Wednesday November 20, 2002

To The Editor: -more-


Calendar

Wednesday November 20, 2002

Wednesday, Nov. 20 -more-


Castro Valley sweeps away Berkeley’s NCS hopes

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Wednesday November 20, 2002

The Berkeley High girls volleyball team ended its season on a sour note on Tuesday, falling to Castro Valley High in straight games, 15-3, 15-10, 15-6, in the first round of the North Coast Section Division I playoffs. -more-


New start for Wheeler trials

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet Staff
Wednesday November 20, 2002

UC Berkeley has agreed to grant pro-Palestinian protester Roberto Hernandez a new student conduct hearing, acknowledging concerns about the legality of UC police videos, reports and testimony used in his current hearing. -more-


Sierra Club elections

Michael Katz
Wednesday November 20, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


After 20 years, The Play lives on

By Greg Beacham The Associated Press
Wednesday November 20, 2002

From the moment Kevin Moen ran over Gary Tyrrell in Memorial Stadium’s end zone in 1982, the man with the football and the man with the trombone have been inseparable in college football lore. -more-


City may up tax on tobacco

Matthew Artz Daily Planet Staff
Wednesday November 20, 2002

To keep cigarettes out of the hands of underage smokers, City Council moved one step closer Tuesday to imposing fees on local tobacco merchants. -more-


Rerouting BART

Bill Whitney Emeryville
Wednesday November 20, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Bears to host playoff

Staff Report
Wednesday November 20, 2002

The fifth-ranked Cal men’s soccer team received a first round bye for the NCAA Championships and will host a second round game Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. at Edwards Stadium. The Golden Bears will face the winner of a University of San Diego-UC Santa Barbara first-round match. -more-


Deadlock in UC clerical dispute

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet Staff
Wednesday November 20, 2002

The University of California has declared a formal impasse in contentious contract negotiations with its 18,000 library assistants, childcare workers and other clerical employees, setting the stage for state intervention in a 19-month-old labor dispute centered on wages and workplace safety. -more-


Cow pies in parks

Karen Klitz Berkeley
Wednesday November 20, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Federal commission questions campus admissions policies

By Mark Sherman The Associated Press
Wednesday November 20, 2002

Unexpected showers at Civic Center

By Melissa McRobbie Special to the Daily Planet
Wednesday November 20, 2002

Dozens of city employees were forced to evacuate the Civic Center building at 2180 Milvia St. Tuesday when a broken water main caused a small flood. -more-


Noted newsman McDowell dead at 97

The Associated Press
Wednesday November 20, 2002

WALNUT CREEK – William C. McDowell, a newspaper publisher who sold the family business when he joined the Navy and later became an executive at United Press International, has died. He was 97. -more-


Possible 100th murder still under investigation

Daily Planet Wire Service
Wednesday November 20, 2002

OAKLAND – Questions still surround the death of an Oakland woman found Friday afternoon by her husband who was later arrested for a parole violation. -more-


Oakland shooting victim runs over to Berkeley

Wednesday November 20, 2002

A Berkeley man was in stable condition after he was shot in the stomach shortly after 4 p.m. Tuesday in Oakland, according to Oakland Police. -more-


Berkeley non-profit chief ends his attempted race-relations mission

The Associated Press
Wednesday November 20, 2002

CINCINNATI – Alan Kalmanoff, the man appointed to oversee police-community relations as Cincinnati recovered from race riots in 2001 resigned Wednesday after city officials complained that his bills were excessive. -more-


Fourth suspect charged in killing of transgender teen

The Associated Press
Wednesday November 20, 2002

FREMONT – A fourth suspect in the beating and strangling death of a Newark transgender teen has been charged with murder, almost a month after Eddie “Gwen” Araujo was killed at a party when it was discovered the youth was male instead of female. -more-


Redwood City cops on leave after detainee dies in custody

The Associated Press
Wednesday November 20, 2002

REDWOOD CITY – Seven police officers were placed on administrative leave Monday after a man they subdued with restraints and pepper spray during an arrest died in their custody. -more-


Bay Area Briefs

Wednesday November 20, 2002

Bank of America announces layoffs in Bay Area -more-


Study says tobacco companies target blacks

By Colleen Valles The Associated Press
Wednesday November 20, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO – Two University of California researchers say their review of industry documents shows tobacco companies have tried to boost their presence in the black community by targeting groups such as the NAACP, giving money and cultivating beneficial relationships. -more-


Condit’s career in Congress derailed by ties to Levy

By Mark Sherman The Associated Press
Wednesday November 20, 2002

WASHINGTON – Despite years of work on agriculture and intelligence issues, Rep. Gary Condit is destined to be remembered for his relationship with a young woman found slain in a park. -more-


Former trader says natural gas index prices manipulated

By Jennifer Coleman The Associated Press
Wednesday November 20, 2002

SACRAMENTO – A former employee of a natural gas trade journal and energy trader told California lawmakers Monday the daily lists of gas prices were manipulated to boost prices. -more-


Salon.com launches new ad program that waives reader subscriptions fees

By Michael Liedtke The Associated Press
Wednesday November 20, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO – Fighting for survival, online magazine publisher Salon Media Group Inc. has introduced an unusual advertising program that waives subscriptions for readers willing to wade through an interactive commercial. -more-


GOP asks judge to release voters names in close race

The Associated Press
Wednesday November 20, 2002

FRESNO – A cliffhanger state Assembly race has moved into the courtroom, with Republicans and Democrats fighting over the release of the names and addresses of 154 provisional voters. -more-


Study: County bad on violence, good on prevention

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet Staff
Tuesday November 19, 2002

Soaring assault rates and a large number of self-inflicted wounds make Alameda County one of the most dangerous areas in the state for young people. But the county does a better job than most in providing after-school programs, job training and other violence prevention programs, according to a new study. -more-


The glass half empty

Brit Harvey Berkeley
Tuesday November 19, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Calendar

Tuesday November 19, 2002

Tuesday, Nov. 19 -more-


Rios–Sotelo: Winning big, running long

By Dean Caparaz Daily Planet Correspondent
Tuesday November 19, 2002

Gabriela Rios-Sotelo doesn’t have her mentor around anymore but has become a leader in her place. -more-


Judge goes easy on Reddy son

By Matthew Artz Daily Planet Staff
Tuesday November 19, 2002

Vijay Lakireddy, 32, was sentenced to two years in a minimum security prison Monday for his role in a family operation to smuggle young Indian girls into the country for sex and cheap labor. -more-


The Greens this election

David Heller Berkeley
Tuesday November 19, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Raiders avenge last year’s postseason loss to Pats

By Janie McCauley The Associated Press
Tuesday November 19, 2002

ALAMEDA — For once, it was the Oakland Raiders who got the ball and kept hold of it as the clock slowly ticked away. -more-


Cal’s bowl ban stands

By Greg Beacham The Associated Press
Tuesday November 19, 2002

The NCAA upheld its one-year bowl ban on California’s football team Monday, but restored nine scholarships it revoked in June after an investigation into academic fraud and other infractions. -more-


A kinder, gentler BART

Charles Smith Berkeley
Tuesday November 19, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


It’s college basketball season again

The Associated Press
Tuesday November 19, 2002

Alabama hasn’t been regarded this highly in 25 years. -more-


Need for runoff uncertain in District 8

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet Staff
Tuesday November 19, 2002

With absentee ballots counted, 8th District City Council candidate Gordon Wozniak has inched closer to winning an outright victory in the Nov. 5 general election and avoiding a runoff against his nearest competitor, UC Berkeley graduate student Andy Katz. -more-


Music man speaks

Russ Ellis Co-chairperson, Tom Bates for Mayor
Tuesday November 19, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Justice Dept. wins wiretap powers

By Curt Anderson The Associated Press
Tuesday November 19, 2002

WASHINGTON — The Justice Department moved swiftly Monday to take advantage of a court ruling broadening its ability to track suspected terrorists and spies using wiretaps and other surveillance techniques. -more-


Downtown creek is one step closer

By Matthew Artz Daily Planet Staff
Tuesday November 19, 2002

Berkeley has taken the lead on an ambitious project that, if realized, could have downtown sporting more trout than students. -more-


Body found in Bay confirmed from party boat

Daily Planet Wire Service
Tuesday November 19, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO – Marin County medical examiners confirmed Monday they identified a body found floating between Angel Island and Alcatraz last week as that of a Swiss citizen who apparently was thrown from a party boat last month. -more-


College admissions up

By Steve Giegerh The Associated Press
Tuesday November 19, 2002

Colleges and universities across the United States stepped up their recruiting efforts to offset dwindling numbers of high school graduates over the two decades ending in 1999, a study by five leading educational institutions reported Monday. -more-


Court blocks detention challenge by Afghan prisoners of war

By David Kravetis The Associated Press
Tuesday November 19, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — A federal appeals court blocked a legal challenge to the detention of the 600 or so Afghan war prisoners being held at Guantanamo Bay Naval Base, giving the Bush administration a major victory in its war on terrorism. -more-


South Bay worker strike shuts down courthouses

By Maria-Belen Moran The Associated Press
Tuesday November 19, 2002

SANTA CLARA — About 600 Santa Clara Superior Court workers walked off the job Monday, forcing the closure of two courthouses and prompting an injunction trying to force some back to work. -more-


Bay Area Briefs

Tuesday November 19, 2002

Alarming number of rapes -more-


Ice cream makers reduce ’the brick’ to less than half-gallon

By JOHN CURRAN The Associated Press
Tuesday November 19, 2002

By JOHN CURRAN -more-


Naptster’s assets sold

The Associated Press
Tuesday November 19, 2002

SANTA CLARA, — Software maker Roxio is poised to snap up the remaining assets of the now defunct song-swapping company Napster for $5 million in cash and 100,000 warrants to purchase Roxio common stock, the company announced Friday. -more-


Wal–Mart, Iraq hurt market

The Associated Press
Tuesday November 19, 2002

NEW YORK — Wall Street pulled back Monday as investors tried to extend six weeks of blue chip gains but were stymied by war concerns and a tepid Wal-Mart outlook. -more-


California’s GOP future may rest in the ‘Terminator’

By Erica Werner The Associated Press
Tuesday November 19, 2002

LOS ANGELES — He has been a genetically engineered twin and a pregnant man, a barbarian and a spy, a kindergarten cop and a killer. Now some Republicans are casting Arnold Schwarzenegger as the next governor of California. -more-


Mayors meet to find solutions to energy, security issues

By Ron Harris The Associated Press
Tuesday November 19, 2002

SANTA CLARA — Mayors from several U.S. cities gathered Monday at a conference to hash out energy issues with a focus on the future of the tumultuous deregulated market. -more-


Tree saved from sprawl

By Lisa Leff Associated Press Writer
Tuesday November 19, 2002

LOS ANGELES — Four hundred years after it put down roots in what would become Southern California, a giant oak was offered a move Monday to save its life by getting it out of the path of a four-lane road to the latest outpost of suburban sprawl. -more-


Oakland faces telling murder toll

Monday November 18, 2002

OAKLAND – A 55-year-old woman died after a scuffle in her home, Oakland Police said, and they are investigating the death as a homicide. -more-


Arizona claims wild victory over bewildered Bears

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Monday November 18, 2002

Last week, there were rumors several Arizona players would boycott Saturday’s game against Cal after a near-mutiny against head coach John Mackovic. But in the end, it was the Cal secondary that didn’t show up to play. -more-


A vote against the rent board

Saul Grabia Berkeley
Monday November 18, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Calendar

Monday November 18, 2002

Monday, Nov. 18 -more-


Gay rights groups on defense at Cal game

By Matthew Artz Daily Planet Staff
Monday November 18, 2002

Golden goal ends Bears’ season

By Dean Caparaz Daily Planet Correpondent
Monday November 18, 2002

STANFORD – Last week, Stanford midfielder Marcie Ward said that Sunday’s NCAA tournament match with Cal would “be more exciting than the football [Big] game.” She was probably right. -more-


U.S. nuclear policy questioned

Phoebe Anne Berkeley
Monday November 18, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Troubled city searches for answers

By Daffodil Altan Special to the Daily Planet
Monday November 18, 2002

OAKLAND – Flags flew quietly at half-mast last week in Alameda County for Oakland homicide victim number 97 – high school student Tamellia Cobbs, who was shot to death in East Oakland last Monday. -more-


Panthers fall to Piedmont, still get NCS berth

By Catherine Howard Daily Planet Correspondent
Monday November 18, 2002

As the St. Mary’s High Panthers took their two final timeouts of the regular season on Saturday with five seconds remaining in a tied game, they could only hope that Piedmont kicker Evan Lindenmayer would stay true to form. The junior kicker had not made a field goal all season, and had been inconsistent in his attempts to convert extra points. -more-


Hydrogen buses need more study

Jim Mellander El Sobrante
Monday November 18, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Accused lawyer for terrorist talks

By Judith Scherr Special to the Daily Planet
Monday November 18, 2002

Lynne Stewart’s attorney tells Stewart she’s a client from hell. -more-


Berkeley High earns fifth seed in playoffs

Monday November 18, 2002

The Berkeley High football team was given the No. 5 seed in the North Coast Section 4A playoffs on Sunday. The Yellowjackets will face No. 4 Hayward on Saturday at 7 p.m. In an unusual twist, Berkeley will get a home game despite being the lower seed, thanks to its status as a league champion. Hayward came in second in the HAAL this season. -more-


Berkeley cops shoot robber

Monday November 18, 2002

A Berkeley police officer shot an armed suspect Friday in a botched robbery of a south Berkeley hair salon. -more-


Feinstein says FBI hasn’t answered questions about UC investigations

Monday November 18, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO – Sen. Dianne Feinstein says she wants a congressional hearing to find out whether the FBI used unlawful methods of obtaining information from the UC Berkeley five decades ago, a newspaper reported Sunday. -more-


Students will learn about Iraq at new Oakland teach-ins

Monday November 18, 2002

OAKLAND – Students in kindergarten through 12th grade will learn about the proposed war in Iraq at 1960s-style “teach-ins,” the school board decided Wednesday night. -more-


Report: California schools may be vulnerable in major quake

Staff
Monday November 18, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO – More than 7,500 of the state’s public school buildings may be vulnerable to collapse in a major earthquake, a new study has found. -more-


BART art brings color to commute

Monday November 18, 2002

Fourth suspect arrested in transgender youth slaying

By Margie Mason The Associated Press
Monday November 18, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO – A fourth suspect has been arrested in the beating and strangling of a Newark transgender youth killed at a party last month after it was discovered the teen was male instead of female, police announced Sunday. -more-


Student drug testing trend creates campus industry

Monday November 18, 2002

OSEVILLE – A split decision by the U.S. Supreme Court is fueling a hot new trend on school campuses — but one not particularly popular with students. -more-


PG&E yet another piece in state’s electric rate puzzle

By Karen Gaudette The Associated Press
Monday November 18, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO – They’ve trained for the past 19 months, scouring legal documents, calculating data, hunting for the best witnesses. Most have logged more hours at work than at home during the last few weeks. -more-


Students push for Cal football to join Claremont boycott

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet Staff
Saturday November 16, 2002

Before taking the field against the University of Arizona Wildcats today the Cal football team, as it does before every home game, spent a night at the exclusive Claremont Resort and Spa discussing strategy and focusing its attention on the game. -more-


An age-old tale of adultery

By John Angell Grant Special to the Daily Planet
Saturday November 16, 2002

Murder and big-time bloody mayhem are what Medea commits when her husband starts fooling around with another woman. Cal Performances opened an ingenious and powerful modern-dress rethinking of the Greek classic Thursday at Zellerbach Playhouse on the UC Berkeley campus. -more-


Calendar

Saturday November 16, 2002

Saturday, Nov. 16 -more-


Young’s big return finishes perfect regular season

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Saturday November 16, 2002

For 47 minutes, Sean Young was a goat. But he needed just 10 seconds to make himself a hero. -more-


Read for your news

Max Alfert Albany
Saturday November 16, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Land swap kick-starts playing fields

By Matthew Artz Daily Planet Staff
Saturday November 16, 2002

A deal struck to publicly acquire a swath of private Berkeley waterfront property could be a home run for local playing field advocates and environmentalists. -more-


Maher speaks up

By Jane Yin Special to the Daily Planet
Saturday November 16, 2002

“Sacrifice is not a bad thing,” said the opinionated and vociferous Bill Maher on how people should change in response to 9/11. He ardently reiterates this point and many others with vivid pictures and straightforward, thought-invoking prose in his new book “When You Ride Alone, You are Riding with Bin Laden.” Maher’s points are made through the book’s pictures of World War II-style U.S. propaganda posters, as well as 33 new eye-opening posters created to hoist American citizens to action against terrorism. He takes his book on a tour of the United States, which stops in Berkeley next Tuesday. -more-


Bears break playoff hex

By Dean Caparaz Daily Planet Correspondent
Saturday November 16, 2002

STANFORD – Cal finally won a postseason game in women’s soccer, and Laura Schott finally got her record. -more-


Housing and density

Gregory S. Murphy Berkeley
Saturday November 16, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Russian doctors take tips from Berkeley counterparts

By Matthew Artz Daily Planet Staff
Saturday November 16, 2002

Cal men win exhibition in OT

Saturday November 16, 2002

Noise offenders

Charles Pine Berkeley
Saturday November 16, 2002


Huskies upset men’s soccer

Saturday November 16, 2002

Parks or cattle fields?

Ralph Adams Berkeley
Saturday November 16, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Judge says banning non-citizens as baggage screeners unconstitutional

By Gary Gentile The Associated Press
Saturday November 16, 2002

LOS ANGELES — A federal judge issued a sweeping ban Friday on a section of the Aviation and Transportation Security Act that barred non-citizens from being airport security screeners. -more-


Berkeley's Creeks are mostly hidden

By Susan Cerny By Susan Cerny Special to the Daily Planet
Saturday November 16, 2002

Former EPA chief says Bush is too nice to polluters and business

By Colleen Valles The Associated Press
Saturday November 16, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Polluters are getting off way too easy under the Bush administration, according to the former chief of civil enforcement for the Environmental Protection Agency. -more-


Holiday savings war drop PCs to lower than ever prices

By Ron Harris The Associated Press
Saturday November 16, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — They’re still not free, but they’re getting closer. -more-


Pacific Bell asks PUC to double rates

Saturday November 16, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — California’s largest local phone service company has asked state regulators to more than double the rates it charges competitors to lease its phone lines, a change consumer advocates say could lead to fewer choices for customers. -more-


Tulare dairy herd slaughtered after bovine TB outbreak

By Kim Baca The Associated Press
Saturday November 16, 2002

Congressional Christmas tree cut from Oregon’s forest

By Jeff Barnard The Associated Press
Saturday November 16, 2002

TOKETEE, Ore. — Eleven-year-old Will Allen watched with a mixture of pride and regret Thursday as his favorite climbing tree was carefully cut to serve as the congressional Christmas tree in Washington, D.C. -more-


Cost of going to UC Berkeley likely to rise

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet Staff
Friday November 15, 2002

The nine-campus University of California, expecting millions in state funding cuts next year, may have to raise student fees by as much as 10 percent, officials said Thursday. -more-


Happy Recycle Day

Frank Locantore, director of the Woodwise project for Co-op America Washington, D.C.
Friday November 15, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Art vs. tyranny

By Robert Hall Special to the Daily Planet
Friday November 15, 2002

I had misgivings when I heard the title of Transparent Theater’s second play of the season – “Eternity Is in Love with the Productions of Time.” What a mouthful. I prayed that Transparent would unsort this knot of rhetoric and unravel its mystery by means of an absorbing play. -more-


Calendar

Friday November 15, 2002

Friday, Nov. 15 -more-


Player revolt at Arizona continues to fester

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Friday November 15, 2002

Terrorist threats hit closer to home

By Kurtis Alexander Daily Planet Staff
Friday November 15, 2002

Berkeley’s Alta Bates Medical Center was one of several Bay Area hospitals that responded Wednesday night to a vague FBI warning of a possible terrorist attack at local hospitals. -more-


Coffee talk

Jon B. Rogers president, San Francisco Bay Gourmet Coffee Co. San Leandro
Friday November 15, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Sacramento State players in hot water over cooking spray

The Associated Press
Friday November 15, 2002

HELENA, Mont. – Despite their best efforts, Sacramento State players have gotten themselves into a sticky situation. -more-


Small businesses work to stay afloat

By Matthew Artz Daily Planet Staff
Friday November 15, 2002

Owning a business is supposed to be the pinnacle of the American dream. But for many south and west Berkeley entrepreneurs in the midst of recession, being self employed has been a tough and lonely occupation. -more-


Political terror?

Mal Burnstein Bates Campaign Treasurer
Friday November 15, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Gauchos are standing between Yellowjackets and perfection

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Friday November 15, 2002

The Berkeley High football team is just one win away from the school’s first perfect season in nearly 30 years. The weight that accomplishment isn’t lost on head coach Matt Bissell. -more-


UC regent warms up to racially-sensitive admissions policy

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet Staff
Friday November 15, 2002

Conservative activist Ward Connerly appeared to back off on a request for an independent study of the University of California's controversial, racially-sensitive “comprehensive review” admissions policy Thursday. -more-


Hydrogen power and the Jetsons

Greg Hoff Oakland
Friday November 15, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Military boots 6 gay Arabic linguists despite shortage

By Margie Mason The Associated Press
Friday November 15, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Nine gay linguists, including six trained to speak Arabic, have been discharged from a U.S. Army language institute despite the threat of war in the Middle East and a critical shortage of language specialists in the military and intelligence agencies. -more-


Stage and television designer dies

The Associated Press
Friday November 15, 2002

Henry May, the Emmy Award-winning set designer who collaborated with artistic luminaries such as Orson Welles and Leonard Bernstein, has died at a nursing home. He was 81. -more-


Suspects charged with murder appear in court

The Associated Press
Friday November 15, 2002

OAKLAND — Two parolees arrested in connection with the drive-by killing of a 15-year-old girl and the wounding of two boys in East Oakland on Monday were arraigned in Alameda County Superior Court Thursday. -more-


Californians want a single-family home

By Jim Wasserman The Associated Press
Friday November 15, 2002

For the second straight year, an overwhelming number of Californians told pollsters they prefer to drive alone to work and live in a single-family home, two desires that often confound lawmakers trying to steer growth back into cities. -more-


New sex charges filed against Yusef Bey

The Associated Press
Friday November 15, 2002

OAKLAND — Alameda County prosecutors Thursday filed an expanded set of felony sex charges against Yusef Bey, a leader in Oakland's Nation of Islam community. -more-


Former U.C. Berkeley chancellor remembered

By Olgar R. Rodriguez The Associated Press
Friday November 15, 2002

BERKELEY — Family, friends and University of California, Berkeley students remembered former Chancellor Chang-Lin Tien as a leader with infectious optimism and a professor with high expectations. -more-


Santa Cruz City Council says Patriot Act violates civil rights

Daily Planet Wire Service
Friday November 15, 2002

SANTA CRUZ — The city of Santa Cruz has joined Berkeley, Cambridge, Mass., and Denver, Colo. in opposing parts of the USA Patriot Act, passed by Congress last year shortly after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. -more-


Companies ink deals to distribute music from all five major recording labels

By Ron Harris The Associated Press
Friday November 15, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Pressplay and MusicNet signed deals Thursday that give both online music companies the licenses to distribute content from all five major record labels. -more-


Bay Area Briefs

Friday November 15, 2002

Blessing ceremony held in hospital -more-


Pelosi to lead House Democrats, aims for a more centrist economic program

By David Espo The Associated Press
Friday November 15, 2002

WASHINGTON — Rep. Nancy Pelosi, a California liberal, easily won election Thursday as leader of minority House Democrats and swiftly set a goal of crafting a “down the center” program for economic growth. -more-


Harry Potter film opens with record

By David Germain The Associated Press
Friday November 15, 2002

LOS ANGELES — Harry Potter’s got his work cut out for him to match his box-office grades from freshman year. -more-


Analyst says California facing $21.1 billion budget

By Alexa H. Bluth The Associated Press
Friday November 15, 2002

SACRAMENTO — California faces a budget deficit of more than $20 billion for the second straight year, Legislative Analyst Elizabeth Hill said Thursday. -more-


Chip-maker AMD to cut 15 percent of workforce

By Matthew Fordahl The Associated Press
Friday November 15, 2002

SAN JOSE — Advanced Micro Devices Inc., battered by weak demand for computer chips and tough competition, said Thursday it will cut 2,000 jobs, or 15 percent of its work force. -more-


Failed online lender NextCard Inc. goes under

By Michael Liedtke The Associated Press
Friday November 15, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Failed online credit card issuer NextCard Inc. sought bankruptcy protection Thursday in a last-ditch attempt to come back as a financial services consultant. -more-


Pakistani executed for killing two in 1993 CIA rampage; security boosted

By Bill Baskervill The Associated Press
Friday November 15, 2002

JARRATT, Va. — A Pakistani man who killed two CIA employees in a 1993 shooting rampage outside the agency’s headquarters was executed Thursday as the State Department warned of global retaliation against Americans. -more-


Authorities raid rap label and homes, arrest three in murder conspiracy case

By Carri Karuhn The Associated Press Writer
Friday November 15, 2002

LOS ANGELES — Authorities on Thursday raided the record label and homes of rap mogul Marion “Suge” Knight, a figure in an East Coast-West Coast rap feud that some believe led to the killings of two major stars. -more-


’Grand Theft Auto’ puts vice on a nastier level

By William Schiffmann The Associated Press
Friday November 15, 2002

“Grand Theft Auto: Vice City” is the game your parents warned you about. -more-


FAA tests laser lights to prevent runway collisions

By Mary Pemberton The Associated Press
Friday November 15, 2002

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Laser lights are being tested at an Anchorage airport to help prevent pilots from making a sometimes fatal error — crossing in the path of other aircraft. -more-


St. Louisans try new birth control procedure

The Associated Press
Friday November 15, 2002

ST. LOUIS — Women in St. Louis will be among the first in the nation to try a new method of birth control approved by the government last week. -more-


Regent obtained files on Nevada students

The Associated Press
Friday November 15, 2002

LAS VEGAS — Nevada’s two public universities last year released the academic records of thousands students to a regent whose review of two files prompted calls for her resignation last month. -more-


Federal regulators deny petition to list overfished species as “threatened”

By Colleen Valles The Associated Press
Friday November 15, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — The federal government has denied a petition by environmentalists to list a type of Pacific red snapper as “threatened,” despite government estimates the population is at less than 4 percent of its unfished level and has a 50 percent chance of rebuilding in the next 170 years. -more-


Opinion

Editorials

School district handed new directives

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet Staff
Thursday November 21, 2002

School safety, a diverse teaching staff and a clear budget process were among the priorities that 100 community members laid out for the Berkeley Unified School District in a public planning meeting Monday night. -more-


Inspectors urge Iraqis to look for weapons

By Charles J. Hanley The Associated Press
Wednesday November 20, 2002

BAGHDAD, Iraq – The chief U.N. weapons inspectors, wrapping up a critical two-day visit, urged Iraqi officials on Tuesday to look again in their nuclear, chemical and biological “stocks and stores” to ensure they have no weapons-making to report. -more-


New police recruits ready for Oakland streets

The Associated Press
Tuesday November 19, 2002

OAKLAND — Two dozen recruits will soon hit the streets as Oakland Police Department officers — one of the first classes to graduate from the police academy since the department instituted reforms in the face of a series of scandals. -more-


Security guards foil El Al hijacking

By Esra Aygin The Associated Press
Monday November 18, 2002

ISTANBUL, Turkey – Security guards on Israel’s national airline El Al overpowered a man who tried to hijack a flight from Tel Aviv to Istanbul on Sunday. -more-


Berkeley group builds foundations

By Suzanne LaFetra Special to the Daily Planet
Saturday November 16, 2002

t takes the average immigrant 15 years to earn an income comparable to the average non-immigrant, according to the Berkeley-based New America Foundation (NAF). Sylvia Rosales-Fike, executive director of the Berkeley nonprofit, is helping immigrants, what she calls “new Americans,” speed up that process. -more-


Former weapons inspector says war with Iraq inevitable

The Associated Press
Friday November 15, 2002

PASADENA — Former United Nations weapons inspector Scott Ritter says the U.N. resolution to disarm Iraq makes war inevitable. -more-