The Week

Erik Olson
          JOZELLA AND ERNESTINE at the Alzheimer’s Services of the East Bay. The program stands to lose its monthly payments from the state until the budget is approved.
Erik Olson JOZELLA AND ERNESTINE at the Alzheimer’s Services of the East Bay. The program stands to lose its monthly payments from the state until the budget is approved.
 

News

Budget Impasse Threatens City

By DAVID SCHARFENBERG
Friday July 04, 2003

The state Legislature’s failure to pass a budget on time is creating short-term financial headaches for public and private agencies in Berkeley and could lead to the temporary closure of a local community college and the elimination of vital health care services if the stalemate lingers into the fall, according to education and health care officials. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Friday July 04, 2003

FRIDAY, JULY 4 -more-


Steal This Paper

Becky O'Malley
Friday July 04, 2003

Just after we took on the job of resurrecting the Berkeley Daily Planet, Mayor-elect Tom Bates got some bad publicity for trashing copies of the Daily Californian which endorsed his opponent. Wags opined that if he’d recycled them instead, it would have been less shocking to Berkeley. Friends suggested to us that the first edition of the revived Planet should be headlined “Steal This Paper,” homage (for those of you too young to remember) to yippie Abbie Hoffman’s “Steal This Book.” The idea made us laugh, but we didn’t use it. -more-


Arts Calendar

Friday July 04, 2003

FRIDAY, JULY 4 -more-


People’s Park Garden Grows its Own Way

By MEGAN GREENWELL
Friday July 04, 2003

On the south end of People’s Park, California indigenous plants meld with living sculptures, dinosaur tracks and Andean potatoes due to the work of a group of volunteer gardeners. -more-


Marina Victim Still Critical

By DAVID SCHARFENBERG
Friday July 04, 2003

The man police pulled from the bay at the Berkeley Marina early Monday morning was severely beaten, not shot as originally believed, and still recovering from severe head injuries at Oakland’s Highland Hospital Thursday afternoon, police said. -more-


Letters to the Editor

Friday July 04, 2003

FREEMAN MEMORIAL -more-


Teens Find Summer Jobs Hard to Come By

By MEGAN GREENWELL
Friday July 04, 2003

The state jobless rate for teens has climbed to 19.8 percent, the highest in a decade, and those looking for jobs this summer are finding that even the low-level job market, usually open to students, has been saturated by adults. -more-


Senior Medi-Benefits Clarifies Confusing Health Care System

By CAROL DENNEY
Friday July 04, 2003

Arleen Goodwin and Joan Kloehn founded the small Berkeley nonprofit Senior Medi-Benefits in the mid-eighties hoping to assist seniors with the paperwork generated by illness, so that people whose medical bills and insurance claims were piling up would get some help. People assumed that such nightmares would slowly recede as health providers joined networks with interconnected billing, and more claims would be submitted electronically. -more-


Berkeley Beauty Will Represent California in Miss America Race

By MEGAN GREENWELL
Friday July 04, 2003

A divinity student at Berkeley’s Pacific School of Religion (PSR) was crowned Miss California last weekend, winning $12,000 and a trip to the storied Miss America pageant. -more-


Lawrence Lab Infill Project Threatens Creek, Wildlife

By PHIL PRICE
Friday July 04, 2003

For more than 10 years, I have been proud to be employed by Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL). Although I know that some in the community object to some of the lab’s actions, I have generally been pleased with the lab’s activities over the past decade, have enjoyed my time there, and I know that our research has been top-notch. -more-


UC Lecturers Get Pay, Seek Respect

By DAVID SCHARFENBERG
Friday July 04, 2003

Despite signing a new contract that provides University of California lecturers with pay hikes and increased job security, some instructors are still feeling vulnerable and undervalued by a system that caters to tenured and tenure-track professors. -more-


Family Housing Hard to Find In New Crop of Apartments

By ROB WRENN Special to the Planet
Friday July 04, 2003

This is the second in a three-part series on Berkeley’s housing boom. The final installment will be published next Friday. -more-


Affordable Housing Succeeds for Disabled

By ANGELA ROWEN
Friday July 04, 2003

When Erick Mikiten, the architect who designed the recently opened Adeline Street Apartments, set out for the Bay Area in the late 1980s to attend UC Berkeley’s graduate school for architecture, he didn’t count on the scramble ahead of him. -more-


AC Transit Board Reduces Berkeley’s 17 Bus Line

Megan Greenwell
Friday July 04, 2003

Despite pleas from riders not to cut bus lines, the AC Transit board of directors voted Wednesday to reduce or eliminate service on 74 lines throughout the East Bay, a plan that includes scaling back Berkeley’s 17 line. -more-


Hot Times in Fleece

From Susan Parker
Friday July 04, 2003

“Let me get this straight,” said my brother, leaning across the table and looking at me with a bit of interest for the first time in 42 years. “When you go to New York City you stay with a kid you taught in fourth grade? Have I got that right?” -more-


Suspect Eludes Police In Border Area Chase

By ANGELA ROWEN
Friday July 04, 2003

Since the wave of shootings that began in mid-June, Berkeley police have been working with community members to try to track down suspects in the recent shootings, with neighbors providing anonymous tips to the department’s violence suppression team. -more-


The Mysterious Maneuvers of Mayor Brown

J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR
Friday July 04, 2003

If you were anywhere near Oakland City Hall this week—or near a news broadcast, for that matter—it was impossible to miss the buzz around the abrupt firing of City Manager Robert Bobb, and the just-as-sudden, simultaneous resignation (supposedly for personal reasons) of Parks And Recreation Director Harry Edwards. -more-


South Berkeley Artists Plan to Shine in Mural

By MEGAN GREENWELL
Friday July 04, 2003

The south wall of the Grove Liquor Store on the corner of Martin Luther King Jr. Way and Ashby Avenue will soon serve as an artistic representation of South Berkeley—a collaboration between neighborhood activists and nearby Epic Arts Studio. -more-


Democracy Not Goal of Hong Kong March

By YOICHI SHIMATSU Pacific News Service
Friday July 04, 2003

Hong Kong—An hour before the anti-government rally in Causeway Bay, a district crammed with elegant Japanese department stores, boutiques and clubs, I was having dim sum with friends. They were all dressed in black, the color of protest on July 1, the sixth anniversary of Hong Kong's Handover to mainland China. -more-


Mock Antennae Annoy Neighbors In North Berkeley

By ANGELA ROWEN
Friday July 04, 2003

A North Berkeley resident who wants to stop the city’s plan to install cell phone antenna on the roof of Starbucks Cafe is badgering the city to take down the mock antennae that have been erected on top of the building. -more-


Operation Sidewinder Will Fail To Eradicate Iraqi Dissidents

By WILLIAM O. BEEMAN Pacific News Service
Friday July 04, 2003

Attacks on American troops in Iraq are not letting up. The Bush administration blames “Saddam Hussein Loyalists,” and has launched a military offensive, Operation Sidewinder, to root out these supposed American enemies. But Sidewinder so far has been a bust, as an organized body of Saddam Loyalists is proving to be as difficult to find as weapons of mass destruction. -more-


Zoning Adjustments Board Approves Blood House FEIR

By ANGELA ROWEN
Friday July 04, 2003

The Zoning Adjustments Board last Thursday approved the final environmental impact report (FEIR) for the Durant Street Apartments, removing another hurdle in developer Ruegg & Ellsworth’s efforts to demolish the historic Ellen Blood House in order to construct 44-unit, mixed-use project. -more-


Police Blotter

By DAVID SCHARFENBERG
Friday July 04, 2003

“Hot Prowl” burglary -more-


Summer Noon Concerts in Downtown Berkeley

Friday July 04, 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-


Remembering Kevin Freeman

By ANGELA ROWEN
Tuesday July 01, 2003

About a dozen people marched Saturday from People’s Park toward the Berkeley Fellowship of Unitarian Universalists on Cedar Street in memory of Kevin Freeman, the longtime Berkeley transient who allegedly was murdered by his cell mate in Santa Rita Jail in May. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Tuesday July 01, 2003

TUESDAY, JULY 1 -more-


More Light, Less Heat Needed

Becky O’Malley
Tuesday July 01, 2003

“We are trying to build an organization to counter the ‘dumb growth’ positions of what the defeat of Measure P told us is a distinct minority of Berkeley residents. The subtle propaganda of the revived Daily Planet is clearly fanning the flames—and adding an ugly note of personal defamation that should remind us demagoguery is not reserved just to the Bush administration.” -more-


Arts Calendar

Tuesday July 01, 2003

TUESDAY, JULY 1 -more-


Police Rescue Shooting Victim At Marina Shore

By DAVID SCHARFENBERG
Tuesday July 01, 2003

A gun shot victim hoisted from a rocky embankment at the Berkeley Marina early Monday morning was in critical condition at Oakland’s Highland Hospital Monday afternoon, authorities said. -more-


Letters to the Editor

Tuesday July 01, 2003

SHOOTINGS -more-


UC Stops TRiP Financing, City Closes Commuter Store

By DAVID SCHARFENBERG
Tuesday July 01, 2003

After 16 years of selling transit passes and helping locals navigate the Bay Area’s complicated web of trains and buses, the Berkeley Transit Rideshare and Parking shop, better known as Berkeley TRiP, closed its doors Friday. -more-


U.S. Case Against Iran’s Nuclear Program Should Be Viewed With Severe Skepticism

By WILLIAM O. BEEMAN and THOMAS STAUFFER Pacific News Service
Tuesday July 01, 2003

The furor in Washington over possible nuclear weapons development in Iran is fueled in part because Bush administration officials claim that Iran doesn’t need to generate nuclear power. They assert that Iran’s nuclear energy program is unnecessary given its oil reserves. Therefore, officials say, its nuclear plants must exist for weapons production. -more-


Area Firefighters Swiftly Extinguish Grass Fire Near UC Laboratory

By MEGAN GREENWELL
Tuesday July 01, 2003

A grass fire Saturday consumed an acre and a half off Centennial Drive, near the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) and the Lawrence Hall of Science, before being extinguished by Berkeley, Oakland and East Bay Regional Parks firefighters. -more-


Dean Vote Falls Short In MoveOn Primary

By ALEXIS TONTI
Tuesday July 01, 2003

Former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean nearly captured the MoveOn.org PAC’s endorsement for the Democratic presidential nomination. With almost 44 per cent of the vote, Dean came closest to the required 50 per cent majority, the political advocacy group announced Friday. -more-


Detaining Arabs and Muslims Creates False Sense of Security

By JIM LOBE Inter Press Service
Tuesday July 01, 2003

WASHINGTON — Measures taken by the U.S. against Arab and Muslim immigrants after 9/11 have not only failed to protect U.S. security, but may have made it more vulnerable, according to a major report released last week. -more-


Cuts in Prison Time Save State Money

By VINCENT SCHIRALDI Pacific News Service
Tuesday July 01, 2003

Policymakers in some very conservative places are moderating their approach to crime and punishment, but in California, which imprisons more people than any other state, politicians still think more prisons are better. -more-


Protesters Converge on Ag-Tech Convention

Tuesday July 01, 2003

The following is a report by the Pesticide Action Network Updates Service. -more-


News From The Latino Press

By MARCELO BALLVE Pacific News Service
Tuesday July 01, 2003

A More Friendly Route for Migrants: Into U.S. Via Canada -more-


Zola’s ‘Therese Raquin’ Dated, But Entertaining

By BETSY HUNTON Special to the Planet
Tuesday July 01, 2003

The Aurora Theater Company in downtown Berkeley has, for reasons that aren’t entirely clear, elected to end its 11th season with Emile Zola’s 19th-century warhorse, “Therese Raquin.” Possibly they’re presenting it because it gives their season subscribers a remarkably well-rounded set of plays for the year, running from farce to melodrama with several stops in between. Or maybe it’s just because it provides the actors with a particularly juicy set of scenes in which to show their chops. And these guys do, no question about that. -more-


‘Hulk’ Brings Payday, But Not Prestige, to Berkeley

By CHRISTIAN NEWTON Special to the Planet
Tuesday July 01, 2003

“The Hulk” lumbered into theaters last week and you know the drill: Mild-mannered nerd wears purple pants, gets angry, turns green, has a temper tantrum and, in this case, is eventually talked out of his manic phase by an Oscar-winning fox playing a scientist. -more-


Ringnecked Snake, a Welcome Neighbor

By JOE EATON Special to the Planet
Tuesday July 01, 2003

Even though gardening for wildlife is a popular trend, some Berkeleyans might be a bit disconcerted to learn that their gardens harbor venomous snakes. There’s no reason to panic, though. These snakes are only kind of venomous, and they’re basically on your side. No, really. -more-


Summer Noon Concerts in Downtown Berkeley

Tuesday July 01, 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

Cal Football Team Breaks Boycott, Stays at Claremont

By DAVID SCHARFENBERG
Friday July 04, 2003

Five months after pledging to boycott the Claremont Resort and Spa the UC Berkeley football team has signed up for a week-long stay at the hotel in August. -more-


Berkeley Line Spared in AC Transit Plan

Megan Greenwell
Tuesday July 01, 2003

The AC Transit Board of Directors appears poised to raise bus fares to avoid service reductions that would eliminate the 17 bus line in Berkeley and reduce service on nearly 50 other lines across Alameda and Contra Costa counties. -more-