The Week

Skaters Return to Park After Toxic Clean-up
Skaters Return to Park After Toxic Clean-up
 

News

Skaters Return to Park After Toxic Clean-up

By JOHN GELUARDI
Tuesday June 10, 2003

The Berkeley Skate Park, quiet for months after toxics were found at the site, filled again with skaters this past weekend. -more-


Skeoch’s West Berkeley Sculpture Garden Seeks To Reveal Naked Truth

By FRED DODSWORTH Special to the Planet
Tuesday June 10, 2003

From the large ceramic sun adorning the façade of her home-studio to the naked sculptures that border the stairs and driveway, to the full-blown sculpture garden and that blossoms in the backyard, it's clear Kit Skeoch is not one to restrain her impulses. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Tuesday June 10, 2003

TUESDAY, JUNE 10 -more-


Letters to the Editor

Tuesday June 10, 2003

PROTECT CREEK -more-


Ongoing Exhibitions

Tuesday June 10, 2003

ACCI Gallery, “Midstream” -more-


New Principal Christa Bails After Just a Month

By DAVID SCHARFENBERG
Tuesday June 10, 2003

In the latest high-level shake-up at Berkeley High School, newly appointed principal Patricia Christa abruptly resigned Thursday, stunning parents, teachers and administrators. -more-


District Must Work With Area Residents To Plan School Move

By PAUL SHAIN
Tuesday June 10, 2003

On April 7, the Berkeley Unified School District (BUSD) informed local residents of Superintendent Michelle Lawrence’s desire to move the Berkeley Adult School from its University Avenue location to the currently vacant Franklin School. The district wants the School Board to approve the move in July and begin construction in September 2003. -more-


Arts Calendar

Tuesday June 10, 2003

TUESDAY, JUNE 10 -more-


AC Transit Threatens to Cut Service, Eliminate Transfers

By MEGAN GREENWELL
Tuesday June 10, 2003

Bus transfers, discount cards and student passes may be eliminated because of AC Transit’s projected budget deficit of $40 million. -more-


After Slow Start, Task Force Finally Hears Public Input

By SHARON HUDSON
Tuesday June 10, 2003

The mayor’s Task Force on Permitting and Development has been meeting every two weeks since Feb. 28 to “investigate options for improving and rationalizing the permitting process, while continuing to guarantee appropriate public input.” Although many task force members are much more interested in shortening the process than in “improving” either the process or the resulting developments, and are even contemptuous of “public input,” a persistent audience of citizen observers reminds them that the public cannot be wholly ignored. I am pleased to report that the task force’s early NIMBY-bashing has gradually dissipated, and an excellent discussion of public input occurred, for the first time, on June 6. -more-


City Council Considers Fine Hike to Offset Deficit

By JOHN GELUARDI
Tuesday June 10, 2003

City Council may raise most parking fines by 30 percent Tuesday in an effort to offset next year’s $4.7 million budget deficit. -more-


City to Honor Charlie Betcher

Tuesday June 10, 2003

City Councilmember Dona Spring has sponsored a recommendation to name June 17 Charles Betcher Day in honor of the retired hospital administrator’s indefatigable work on city and county commissions and committees. -more-


Ignoring Warnings, Seniors Take It Off

By MEGAN GREENWELL
Tuesday June 10, 2003

Despite administrative threats of disciplinary action, an estimated 35 Berkeley High School seniors took part in the annual “Senior Streak” on Monday. -more-


Zoning Board to Determine Fate of Durant Victorian

By ANGELA ROWEN
Tuesday June 10, 2003

The battle between preservationists and would-be housing developers over the fate of a 19th-century Victorian home at 2526 Durant Ave. is expected to heat up in the next few weeks, as the city puts the final touches on the project’s environmental impact report (EIR) and considers whether to issue a permit allowing developers to replace the historical Ellen Blood house with a 31,000-square-foot, five-story development that will include two retail establishments and 44 units of housing. -more-


Seniors Graduate Friday Evening; Ceremony Takes Place at Greek Theater

Tuesday June 10, 2003

About 650 seniors will cross the stage Friday at Berkeley High School’s graduation ceremony. -more-


Still Classic After All These Years

By SUSAN CERNY Special to the Planet
Tuesday June 10, 2003

While Berkeley is noted nationally, even internationally, for its turn-of-the-20th-century architects such as Bernard Maybeck and their creative and innovative residential designs, Berkeley also has a large number of house types that could simply be referred to as common. -more-


Confessions of a Pack Rat

From Zac Unger
Tuesday June 10, 2003

My baby, just a mere speck of a thing, a child smaller than most honest housecats, has, in the space of a few brief, non-ambulatory months, managed to acquire enough crap that we’re on the verge of being forced to move our queen-bed onto the balcony. I’m not exactly sure where the stuff comes from, but I do know that it just keeps coming. We’ve got more blankets than an Arctic rescue team, most of them handmade with love. We try to cycle them over the sleeping baby for photo-ops, and we can usually get about 40 good snaps before she wakes up and makes it clear that it’s 90 degrees in her room, she’s already wearing three hand-embroidered onesies and she didn’t want a blanket in the first place. The baby herself could still fit quite comfortably inside my left snowboot, but she’s got an entire steamer chest full of blocks and toys and stuffed animals all eagerly awaiting their call to active duty. -more-


High School to Install Public Address System

Megan Greenwell
Tuesday June 10, 2003

Berkeley High School will soon have its first full public address system. Younger-Wunar, Inc. last month won the contract to install speakers this summer. -more-


King Middle School Shines With Renovations

By JOHN KENYON
Tuesday June 10, 2003

For many years, people driving up Rose Street toward the delights of North Shattuck have habitually averted their eyes while passing Martin Luther King, Jr. Middle School, an unmistakable “old landmark” that looked more like a minimum-security prison than a place of enlightenment for boys and girls. To be sure, some wonderful things were happening behind the dingy facade, a special one being the school’s organic vegetable garden sponsored by the famous restaurateur Alice Waters. But from the street, the dark brown—unbreakable—plastic windows and shabby stucco walls symbolized perfectly a prevailing Dickensian squalor. -more-


Board of Education Approves Shift to Small Schools by 2005

By DAVID SCHARFENBERG
Tuesday June 10, 2003

The Berkeley Board of Education unanimously approved a plan last Wednesday to shift half of Berkeley High students into small schools by the 2005-2006 school year, but raised questions about whether the school will be able to make the switch amid changes in leadership. -more-


Ceremony Honors High School Students

By MEGAN GREENWELL
Tuesday June 10, 2003

More than 200 Berkeley High School students received certificates of excellence from Mayor Tom Bates Tuesday, June 3, in the seventh annual student recognition ceremony. -more-


Police Blotter

By JOHN GELUARDI
Tuesday June 10, 2003

Weekend Bank Robbery -more-


E-Mail Fraud at County School District

By DAVID SCHARFENBERG
Tuesday June 10, 2003

A county school board member has charged that someone sent out an email under his name which he didn’t write. -more-


Neighbors Fight Expansion at 3045 Shattuck

Angela Rowen
Tuesday June 10, 2003

Neighbors of a mixed-use project at 3045 Shattuck Ave. haven’t given up their fight for a public hearing. -more-


Winged Suitors Fill the Park, Each With His Own Song

By JOE EATON Special to the Planet
Tuesday June 10, 2003

Toward the end of April, soon after the fall of Baghdad, I was in Tilden Park on a rare dry Saturday watching hostilities of a different kind. The black-headed grosbeaks were back from their wintering grounds in western Mexico and setting up territories for the nesting season. All the grosbeaks I saw were males; the females might have been due in a second wave, or may just have been staying out of sight. -more-


Summer Noon Concerts in Downtown Berkeley

Tuesday June 10, 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-


Culture and Commerce Clash in West Berkeley

By JOHN GELUARDI
Friday June 06, 2003

Surrounded by worn chasing hammers, punches and gravers that were made by her father, jeweler Susan Brooks sat at a cluttered workbench and shaped a thin piece of sterling silver with short, precise hammer strikes. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Friday June 06, 2003

FRIDAY, JUNE 6 -more-


Letters to the Editor

Friday June 06, 2003

THE REAL PROBLEM -more-


Berkeley Bowl Staff Pushes to Form Union

By DAVID SCHARFENBERG
Friday June 06, 2003

For 26 years, the Berkeley Bowl grocery store has provided customers with a taste of everything Berkeley—organic fruit, upscale orange juice, tattooed cashiers and baggers working their way through college. Now, shoppers are getting a dash of another local flavor: labor strife. -more-


Kamlarz is Not the Answer

Art Goldberg
Friday June 06, 2003

I do not share the Daily Planet’s great hope that Phil Kamlarz will turn the Planning Department around. As budget director and deputy city manager, Kamlarz has been one of the most powerful people in Berkeley city government over the past 20 years. As such, he has had a major say not only in hiring Carol Barrett, but also in the hiring of her last four of five predecessors. The major reason planning directors do not get along with Berkeley residents and commissioners is that they come here with an agenda. In the recent past, that agenda has been to build as much and as high as possible—the neighborhoods be damned. -more-


Underground Fuel Tanks Threaten Troubled Harrison Field Site

By JOHN GELUARDI
Friday June 06, 2003

The discovery of two submerged fuel tanks beneath the Harrison House Adult Shelter in West Berkeley means another environmental problem for the city-owned property and another cleanup cost for taxpayers. -more-


Even Raines’ Exit Won’t Salvage Times

By MICHAEL KATZ
Friday June 06, 2003

Icons are falling at The New York Times in the wake of its Jayson Blair plagiarism scandal. -more-


Cannabis Grower to Appeal

By FRED GARDNER Special to the Planet
Friday June 06, 2003

“Time served—one day!” -more-


Judge Delays Freeman Murder Trial; Psychiatrists Will Evaluate Defendant

By JOHN GELUARDI
Friday June 06, 2003

A superior court judge on Tuesday suspended criminal proceedings against Ryan Lee Raper until psychiatrists determine whether he is mentally competent to stand trial for the murder of Berkeley transient Kevin Lee Freeman. -more-


Police Raid Uncovers Bay Area Identity Theft Ring

John Geluardi
Friday June 06, 2003

Early Thursday morning 64 local, county and federal law enforcement officers served 12 search warrants at locations throughout the Bay Area in relation to a counterfeiting ring that may be responsible for the theft of $6 million. -more-


Yale Alumni Fall Under the Spell of Washington’s Magic Kingdom

By DAVID SUNDELSON Special to the Planet
Friday June 06, 2003

Before flying to Washington for my Yale class of ‘68 college reunion dinner at the White House, Lisa and I bought gifts for the Bushes. We picked up an “I love Berkeley” T-shirt for the President, complete with peace sign—he won’t get too many of those, we figured—and a book for Laura. -more-


Police Officers Throw Caution to the Wind for the Thrill of the Chase

By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR
Friday June 06, 2003

High-speed police chases resulting in injury and death, which have become something of an issue in Oakland over the past year, are also becoming a potentially explosive issue throughout the state of California. -more-


At 35, the Freight Finds Its Future in Tradition

By FRED DODSWORTH Special to the Planet
Friday June 06, 2003

Whether it’s been gone so long or always on your mind, the sound of “traditional” music is everywhere these days except on commercial radio. Then again, who listens to commercial radio? -more-


Arts Calendar

Friday June 06, 2003

FRIDAY, JUNE 6 -more-


Arts Calendar

Friday June 06, 2003

FRIDAY, JUNE 6 -more-


Local Director Profiles Gay Parents and Their Children

By SUSAN PARKERSpecial to the Planet
Friday June 06, 2003

On Tuesday, June 10, PBS Channel 9 will air “Daddy & Papa,” a film by Oakland independent filmmaker Johnny Symons. I caught up with Johnny and his partner William at their comfortable craftsman bungalow a few blocks from the Daily Planet office. Actually, I did more than catch up with them. I weeded their garden. (Like most wildly successful writers in the Bay Area, I do a little gardening, babysitting, housecleaning and light hauling on the side.) -more-


Summer Noon Concerts in Downtown Berkeley

Friday June 06, 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

Despite Davis’ Revised Budget Plan Berkeley Schools See Little Relief

By DAVID SCHARFENBERG
Tuesday June 10, 2003

Gov. Gray Davis’ plan to soften the blow to public schools by $700 million next year will have little effect on the Berkeley Unified School District, the district’s top budget official said last week. -more-


Third City Farmers’ Market Opens

By MEGAN GREENWELL
Friday June 06, 2003

Berkeley’s Gourmet Ghetto now has an organic option. -more-