The Week

CAMPANILE clock stands still for renovations.
CAMPANILE clock stands still for renovations.
 

News

Critics Charge Bad Air Poisons Housing Proposal

By JOHN GELUARDI
Tuesday June 03, 2003

A proposal to build a multi-service homeless complex in West Berkeley has stirred debate over whether it is appropriate to build housing for the poor in an area with known environmental problems. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Tuesday June 03, 2003

TUESDAY, JUNE 3 -more-


Planning for the People

Tuesday June 03, 2003

That loud whooshing sound you heard rising all over Berkeley last Thursday afternoon was the collective sigh of relief when citizens learned that Deputy City Manager Phil Kamlarz is going to try to straighten out the Planning Department. Phil (everyone is on a first name basis with him) is one of the best-liked, and also (and not always the same thing) one of the most respected people in the city administration. His sharp pencil has saved the city budget in ways that seemed miraculous for years, though this year might be more of a challenge. -more-


Arts Calendar

Tuesday June 03, 2003

TUESDAY, JUNE 3 -more-


School Says Streak is Too Much to Bare

By MEGAN GREENWELL
Tuesday June 03, 2003

As the school year draws to a close, dozens of members of the Berkeley High School class of 2003 are preparing to take part in a tradition less formal but just as storied as the classic rites of prom and commencement. -more-


Letters to the Editor

Tuesday June 03, 2003

URBAN SPACE -more-


Davis Praises Controversial Campus Expansion

By ANGELA ROWEN
Tuesday June 03, 2003

At a groundbreaking ceremony last week for what will be the second largest building on the UC Berkeley campus, Gov. Gray Davis poured out praises for the imminent construction of the Stanley Biosciences and Bioengineering Facility. -more-


Your Rights: Use ‘Em or Lose ‘Em

By RACHEL NEUMANN AlterNet
Tuesday June 03, 2003

When I was growing up, there was a popular bumper sticker, seen mostly on the back of old VW vans, that said: “What if there was a war and nobody came?” -more-


Drunk Driver Kills Motorist On Interstate 80

Daily Planet staff and Bay City News reports
Tuesday June 03, 2003

A San Pablo woman was arrested and charged with felony drunk driving and vehicular manslaughter after a man was killed when she drove into his stopped car on Interstate 80 near the Ashby interchange. -more-


Neighbors Know, Planners Only Guess

By CAROL DENNEY
Tuesday June 03, 2003

In the interests of understanding, if not influencing, an odd set of proposals for our neighborhood emanating from the “Office of Transportation,” my neighbors and I attended the South Oceanview neighborhood traffic management meeting held Tuesday, May 27, and enjoyed a most entertaining presentation. -more-


Time Catches Up With 89-Year-Old Icon

By DAVID SCHARFENBERG
Tuesday June 03, 2003

Time stopped Monday at exactly 8 a.m. -more-


Composers Gather for Edge Fest

By BEN FRANDZEL Special to the Planet
Tuesday June 03, 2003

For four days this weekend, Cal Performances and UC Berkeley’s music department celebrate contemporary music and give it a push forward with the first biennial Edge Fest. -more-


Police Blotter

By JOHN GELUARDI
Tuesday June 03, 2003

Summer Noon Concerts in Downtown Berkeley

Tuesday June 03, 2003

The Downtown Berkeley Association (DBA) presents Summer Noon Concerts 2003, a unique series of nine free concerts, Thursdays at noon in June & July, beginning June 5th. From Rhythm & Blues to Brazilian capoeira, these concerts at the Downtown Berkeley BART Plaza (Shattuck Ave. at Center St.) are a showcase of the culturally rich performing arts in Berkeley. This outdoor summer celebration of Berkeley-based musicians & dancers is just a small sampling of the performing arts happening nightly in clubs, cafes, schools, theaters and concert halls in Downtown Berkeley. -more-


Berkeley High Student Wins Times Photo Competition

By MEGAN GREENWELL
Friday May 30, 2003

When Berkeley High School junior Allison Roberts entered the New York Times Magazine high school photography contest, she did it only because it was required for a grade in her photography class. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Friday May 30, 2003

FRIDAY, MAY 30 -more-


Not in My Back Yard

Friday May 30, 2003

Full confession: I live on a Transit Corridor in a house without a backyard, so I sympathize with people who complain when their blocks are designated as urban sacrifice zones. Many of Berkeley’s Transit Corridors (translation: bus routes) have actual humans living right on them, or near them. The Amazing South Shattuck Flying House in the last Planet, though on the 43 bus route in a commercial zone, is surrounded by homes. Streets like my street became Transit Corridors in the first place because residents of Neighborhoods (translation: side streets) didn’t want cars (or, godforbid, buses) mucking up their lovely blocks. The barrier explosion of the early seventies re-routed all that nasty traffic onto just a few streets (MLK, Ashby, Sacramento, Sixth, University, San Pablo, Shattuck), and their residents were told to shut up and smell the diesel. -more-


Arts Calendar

Friday May 30, 2003

FRIDAY, MAY 30 -more-


New Director Kamlarz Promises to Stabilize Planning Department

By JOHN GELUARDI
Friday May 30, 2003

City Manager Weldon Rucker has asked Deputy City Manager Phil Kamlarz to run the city’s troubled Planning Department temporarily. -more-


Letters to the Editor

Friday May 30, 2003

RIGHT TO BE HEARD -more-


UC Senate Confronts New Rules In Debate for Academic Freedom

By DAVID SCHARFENBERG
Friday May 30, 2003

A controversy over a fall 2002 UC Berkeley course description that warned “conservative thinkers ... to seek other sections” has sparked a systemwide debate at the nine-campus University of California over one of academia’s most treasured concepts: academic freedom. -more-


Berkeley Way Neighbors Challenge NIMBY Label

By D’ARCY RICHARDSON
Friday May 30, 2003

If Charles Siegel (“NIMBYs Shout ‘It’s Too Big!’” May 23-26 edition) had bothered to talk with any of the actual neighbors of Patrick Kennedy’s proposed 1950 Martin Luther King, Jr. Way project, he would have discovered that we are not NIMBYs, but a group of reasonable people working to protect the character of our neighborhood and peacefully coexist with the project. -more-


Beth El Project Starts; Neighbors Keep Watch

By ANGELA ROWEN
Friday May 30, 2003

The demolition process has begun in the construction of the new Congregation Beth El synagogue, the 35,000-square-foot project that pitted the synagogue against neighborhood activists. -more-


Berkeley Way Neighbors Challenge NIMBY Label

By STEPHEN WOLLMER
Friday May 30, 2003

In reply to Charles Siegel’s commentary on the emerging opposition to Patrick Kennedy’s proposal to build 191 units of housing at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way and University Avenue: I am a resident of the 1800 block of Berkeley Way and I want to defend my neighborhood against the slander of Mr. Siegel, who attempts to brand us as suburban NIMBY whiners because we dare to challenge the “received” wisdom of the person he considers the only successful developer in town. -more-


In-Law Proposal Nears Vote

By ANGELA ROWEN
Friday May 30, 2003

The Planning Commission put final touches Wednesday on a proposal to allow more in-law apartments in the city. -more-


Rescue Team Finds Lost Hikers

Friday May 30, 2003

A Berkeley couple, reported missing Tuesday by a concerned parent when they did not return on schedule from a hike near Big Sur, were located by search and rescue teams later that day, according to the Monterey County Sheriff's Department. -more-


Mayor Jerry Brown’s No Caped Crusader

By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR
Friday May 30, 2003

The administration of Oakland Mayor Jerry Brown often totters on the edge of both absurdity and obscenity, sometimes threatening to split itself in half and fall on both sides simultaneously. Such a time, it seems, is when the mayor puts out word that he might be interested in running for the office of California attorney general. -more-


Did Top Iraqi General Ensure U.S. Success?

By PETER DALE SCOTT Pacific News Service
Friday May 30, 2003

One of Saddam Hussein’s top generals was not included in the U.S. card deck of 55 most-wanted Iraqis. Now stories are circulating in European, Middle Eastern and other foreign press that he was paid off to ensure the quick fall of Baghdad. -more-


Local Artists Welcome Public to Open Studios

By MEGAN GREENWELL
Friday May 30, 2003

Close to 200 Berkeley artists will display their work as part of the Pro Arts gallery’s East Bay Open Studios beginning this weekend. -more-


Roaming Sebastopol’s Antique Row

By KATHLEEN HILL Special to the Planet
Friday May 30, 2003

The quasi-rural stretch of the Gravenstein Highway south of Sebastopol is more adventurous to roam than the one-block Berkeley that Sebastopol has become. Forever looking behind trees for the radical chicken ranchers that once hid out here, I find current equivalents as antiques and collectibles dealers, cheese makers and tenders of flea markets and nurseries along the seven-mile “Antique Row.” -more-


Slam Poets Compete on Road to Final Four

By MEGAN GREENWELL
Friday May 30, 2003

Some of the biggest names in the world of East Bay spoken word went head to head at the Starry Plough on Wednesday in the first semifinal of the Berkeley Poetry Slam, a seven-month-long competition. -more-


Summer Noon Concerts in Downtown Berkeley

Friday May 30, 2003

The Downtown Berkeley Association (DBA) presents Summer Noon Concerts 2003, a unique series of nine free concerts, Thursdays at noon in June & July, beginning June 5th. From Rhythm & Blues to Brazilian capoeira, these concerts at the Downtown Berkeley BART Plaza (Shattuck Ave. at Center St.) are a showcase of the culturally rich performing arts in Berkeley. This outdoor summer celebration of Berkeley-based musicians & dancers is just a small sampling of the performing arts happening nightly in clubs, cafes, schools, theaters and concert halls in Downtown Berkeley. -more-


Opinion

Editorials

‘Julius Caesar’ Misses Mark

By BETSY M. HUNTON Special to the Planet
Tuesday June 03, 2003

You can’t win ‘em all. -more-


What Blair and Bragg Taught Us About Getting It Right

By CAROL POLSGROVE Special to the Planet
Friday May 30, 2003

What is authorship after all, I wondered, as I pondered Jayson Blair, formerly of the New York Times, surfing the Internet for juicy details for his stories. -more-