The Week

Jakob Schiller: 
          
          Fifty thousand demonstrators filled the streets of San Francisco Saturday to mark the one-year anniversary of the Iraq war.%
Jakob Schiller: Fifty thousand demonstrators filled the streets of San Francisco Saturday to mark the one-year anniversary of the Iraq war.%
 

News

Police Dog Plan Moves Toward Possible PRC Approval

By Matthew Artz
Tuesday March 23, 2004

The Police Review Commission could sign off Wednesday on a controversial plan to welcome two German shepherds to the Berkeley Police Department—the first crime fighting dogs in the city since the 1930s. -more-


Berkeley Protesters Join Iraq March

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Tuesday March 23, 2004

With signs in their hands, buttons on their bags and plenty of sunscreen smeared all over their exposed areas, Berkeley residents turned out en masse Saturday in San Francisco for a protest march marking the one-year anniversary of the United States invasion of Iraq. The protest was also organized to voice continued opposition to the U.S. occupation of that country. -more-


Council Takes a Look At Ballot Tax Redux

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Tuesday March 23, 2004

Four months after a tax revolt stopped plans to ask property owners to dig a little deeper, the City Council will have to decide yet again just how much it wants to test taxpayer largess. -more-


PowerBar Founder Maxwell Dies

By RICHARD BRENNEMAN
Tuesday March 23, 2004

Brian Maxwell, founder of the Berkeley-based PowerBar corporate empire and a major benefactor of UC Berkeley, died Friday of a heart attack after collapsing on the steps of the San Anselmo post office. Maxwell was 51. He is survived by his spouse and six children. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Tuesday March 23, 2004

TUESDAY, MARCH 23 -more-


Power Outages Hit Downtown Business District

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday March 23, 2004

Three times in the last two weeks, hours-long power outages blacked out large sections of downtown Berkeley, angering merchants and raising concerns among city officials. Almost a thousand downtown electricity customers lost power twice in separate incidents over the course of two days. -more-


Special Ed Puts BUSD in the Red

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Tuesday March 23, 2004

Confusion over a special education fund has plunged Berkeley schools back into debt and left district officials and the administrator of the fund trading accusations of blame. -more-


Local Activists Face Off in Creationism Debate

By RICHARD BRENNEMAN
Tuesday March 23, 2004

With the battle over teaching evolution in America’s schools erupting yet again, two Berkeley activists stand at the vanguard of the opposing sides on the legal, legislative, and mass media battlefields of the nation. -more-


From Susan Parker: King, Ace and Mack Never Needed Toothpaste

Susan Parker
Tuesday March 23, 2004

Now that my husband Ralph is home from a 51-day stay in Kaiser’s ICU, there are some things I need to catch up on. I took our car to the mechanic for a tune-up, and our dog to the veterinary clinic for the same. -more-


Police Blotter

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Tuesday March 23, 2004

Girl Scout Justice -more-


Letters to the Editor

Tuesday March 23, 2004

FOR KERRY -more-


GRAND JURY INVESTIGATION

Dan F. Lee
Tuesday March 23, 2004

GRAND JURY INVESTIGATION -more-


Private School Students Face Bias In Math Placement Tests

By Toni Martin
Tuesday March 23, 2004

It’s spring again, time for math placement tests at Berkeley High. The math department requires that any Berkeley student who did not attend a Berkeley public school in eighth grade take a placement test which measures their knowledge of Algebra I as taught in the Berkeley Middle Schools in order to earn a place in Honors Geometry. Students coming from a Berkeley Middle School are allowed to enter Honors Geometry if they achieved an A or B in Honors Algebra I and have the recommendation of their teacher. -more-


Letters on the Sidewalk Are Today’s Artifacts

By Sven Ouzman Special to the Planet
Tuesday March 23, 2004

I receive messages from below, rather than from above. The sidewalk speaks to me in shades of olive green. Sound like a Berkeley story? Berkeley and beyond … -more-


Berkeley Sewing Class Combines Old and New

By ZELDA BRONSTEIN Special to the Planet
Tuesday March 23, 2004

Is sewing the next big thing? -more-


Arts Calendar

Tuesday March 23, 2004

TUESDAY, MARCH 23 -more-


Tropical Plants Give Sexy Scent To Berkeley’s Shattuck Avenue

By RON SULLIVAN Special to the Planet
Tuesday March 23, 2004

For a few weeks in spring, the downtown part of Shattuck Avenue gets a tropical feel as the pittosporum trees bloom. The heavy, sleepy orangeblossom scent descends from the high-pruned trees and evokes Waikiki or some unlikely urban citrus grove, and lays a sexy benediction on Berkeley’s nightlife. -more-


Deputy Superintendent Announces Resignation From BUSD Post

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday March 19, 2004

Just as its balance sheets finally approach equilibrium, Berkeley Unified School District is losing its top numbers cruncher—the man universally credited with helping to erase a $6.5 million deficit and getting the district out of the red for the first time in three years. -more-


Berkeley Music Teacher Dies in Scotland

By BECKY O’MALLEY
Friday March 19, 2004

Anne Crowden, the beloved music teacher who founded the Crowden School in Berkeley in 1983, died Monday morning in her birthplace of Edinburgh, Scotland, of pancreatic cancer. She was 76. Berkeley composer John Adams, in a 1997 tribute, said that Crowden used “her enormous energy and powers of persuasion to create a place where children from all economic backgrounds could immerse themselves in music while enjoying the highest levels of academic schooling.” A violinist herself, passionate about chamber music, she started her school with eleven junior high school children in a church basement. -more-


Disabled Community Hopes Touch-Screen Voting Continues

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Friday March 19, 2004

Berkeley resident Karen Rose did not have to hire someone to accompany her to the voting booth during the March primary and read the ballot to her. With no one looking over her shoulder, Rose was able to vote without having to reveal to anyone else who she voted for. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Friday March 19, 2004

FRIDAY, MARCH 19 -more-


Tenants Complain About Ocean View Management

By JAVACIA N. HARRIS Special to the Planet
Friday March 19, 2004

It was about a year ago, according to Ocean View Gardens tenant Desiree Lambert, that water began to drip from her living room ceiling whenever it rained. One day the drip from the weak spot turned into a pour. In December of 2003, the weight of the water sent plaster crashing onto her sofa, leaving a hole in her ceiling the size of a basketball. -more-


Council Deadlocks On Public Election Finance

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday March 19, 2004

Berkeley’s mayor and eight city councilmembers, who all together spent a total of approximately $456,000 to get elected to their present terms, failed to reach a consensus Tuesday on presenting a ballot measure to voters that would shift at least some of those expenses to the public. -more-


Police Blotter

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday March 19, 2004

City of Berkeley Issues Rabies Alert

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Friday March 19, 2004

The City of Berkeley has issued a rabies alert after a bat infected with rabies was removed from the 2300 block of Warring Street on Monday. -more-


11-M: A New Symbol in the Lexicon of Terror

By MARCELO BALLVE Pacific News Service
Friday March 19, 2004

The terror attacks in Madrid have done more than put Europe on warning and shake up Spain’s politics. Because of deep historical and emotional ties to Madrid, the entire Spanish-speaking world now feels directly implicated in the 21st century dilemma of how to respond to terrorism. Struggling to make sense of the deadly bombing that struck the traditional heart of Hispanic culture, Spanish-language media on both sides of the Atlantic adopted their own typographical shorthand for the catastrophic event: 11-M. -more-


A Teenager Looks At Oakland’s Murderous Row

By Rosie Nguyen Pacific News Service
Friday March 19, 2004

Editor’s Note: A 14-year-old Oakland, Calif., resident who’s father was shot to death interviews her friends about what they think causes all the violence in “Tha Town.” -more-


Oakland Mural Destroyed

Friday March 19, 2004

On Friday afternoon of last week, apparently without warning to Burbank administrators, workers from the Oakland Unified School District’s central office demolished a portable building and the mural that had decorated it for several years. The work was done in full view of students present for after-school activities. State Administrator Randolph Ward said later that the portable had long been scheduled for demolition, and its destruction had nothing to do with the possible pending closure school. -more-


When it Comes to Trade Deficits, The U.S. is The Town Drunk

By ROBERT B. REICH Featurewell
Friday March 19, 2004

The U.S. government just released the first trade figures for this year, showing a whopping $43.1 billion deficit for January – an all-time high. More than a quarter of that was with China, whose trade deficit with the United States expanded to $11.5 billion. During the normally staid annual Senate hearing March 9 on trade policy, Republican members pushed Robert Zoellich, the U.S. trade representative, to be tougher on China. That’s what a lot of Democrats want, too. Think again. -more-


Weekend War Protests Planned in SF

Bay City News
Friday March 19, 2004

San Francisco police are letting people know today that the downtown area may be subject to congestion and delays—particularly for drivers—due to anti-war protests starting Friday morning. -more-


UnderCurrents: What Ward Connerly Did and Did Not Say

J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR
Friday March 19, 2004

UC Regent Ward Connerly deserves some mention, both for something he recently said, and for something about which he was pointedly silent. -more-


Letters to the Editor

Friday March 19, 2004

JEFFERSON SCHOOL -more-


To Make the World Safe From Landmines

By RITA MARAN
Friday March 19, 2004

It’s a firm belief of mine—and I can’t help but believe that my Berkeley neighbors share it as well—that people in neighborhoods other than where I hang out are as entitled to walk down their neighborhood streets in safety, as I am in my neighborhood. If that other neighborhood happens to be located in Kabul’s busy streets, or near Cambodia’s rice paddies, or in any of the thousands of neighborhoods in the 71 countries around the world where over 100 million landmines are buried, that doesn’t change my far-off neighbors’ entitlement to walk in safety. It’s just that in fact they can’t—and don’t—not in their neighborhood. -more-


Thoughts on IRV

Marc LeBlanc Member, Citizens for Approval Voting
Friday March 19, 2004

IRV WITH PAPER BALLOTS -more-


Bearden’s Berkeley Mural Returns Home (Almost)

By PETER SELZ Special to the Planet
Friday March 19, 2004

The large mural, Berkeley—the City and Its People, which for more than 30 years has graced the City Council chamber, can now be seen in the fine Romare Bearden retrospective at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. -more-


Krazy Klezmer the Highlight of Jewish Festival

By BEN FRANDZEL Special to the Planet
Friday March 19, 2004

For many generations, the Jewish musicians of Eastern Europe played the raucous, emotionally charged dance music called klezmer. They absorbed the Slavic, Gypsy and Turkish musical styles of their neighbors into their own music and invested their playing with a soulful intensity. This coming week, as the Berkeley Jewish Music Festival (BJMF) begins its annual celebration of Jewish music from around the world, the focus will be on klezmer, celebrating its passing from one generation to the next and its connection to Berkeley itself. -more-


A Year-Round Guide to Maintaining Your Home

By LINDA FORMICHELLI Featurewell
Friday March 19, 2004

Just like your family, houses are full of things that need annual (and sometimes more frequent) checkups. Gutters crack, septic tanks leak, and furnaces stop working. Keep the following list on hand to remind yourself which household appliances and fixtures you can check yourself, which need professional attention, and approximately how much you’ll have to spend on maintenance and repair. -more-


Arts Calendar

Friday March 19, 2004

FRIDAY, MARCH 19 -more-


China Camp: A Spectacular Marin County Getaway

By KATHLEEN HILL Special to the Planet
Friday March 19, 2004

China Camp State Park at Marin County’s Point San Pedro is hidden a few miles behind the Frank Lloyd Wright Marin Civic Center and faces east across the southwestern tip of San Pablo Bay. Having passed the Marin Civic Center hundreds of times, I never even noticed the state’s brown directional sign to China Camp until last Sunday. -more-


Opinion

Editorials

Editorial: Objecting to “Objectivity”

Becky O'Malley
Tuesday March 23, 2004

San Francisco Chronicle Editor Phil Bronstein has added another corollary to the paper’s Greater Eunuch theory of press objectivity by taking two staffers who had the nerve to marry one another off the part of their city hall beat which involved reporting on same-sex marriage. And yes, they were same-sex, in case you couldn’t guess. -more-


Editorial: First Year Thoughts

Becky O'Malley
Friday March 19, 2004

It’s been just about a year since we started gearing up in earnest for the first issue of the new Berkeley Daily Planet. Anniversaries inevitably prompt deep thoughts about the meaning of life. Who are we, why are we here, now, doing this? And increasing ly, in the age of hot media, we think, why a newspaper? My friend the journalism professor, who told me this was going to be a lot of fun, has been here for the week. She taught a class last semester that entailed supervising students putting out one issue of a tabloid, and she is now much more realistic about the amount of work involved. We had dinner with another younger friend who hopes to launch a quarterly magazine, and he’s full of (probably warranted) optimism, typical of the pre-publication mood. -more-