The Week

Jakob Schiller:
          
          A canine patrol detractor makes her point at Wednesday’s PRC meeting.
Jakob Schiller: A canine patrol detractor makes her point at Wednesday’s PRC meeting.
 

News

Seniors Protest Council Budget Cuts

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday March 26, 2004

The City Council laid the groundwork at last Tuesday night’s meeting for an austerity budget certain to dent city services and maybe taxpayer wallets as well. To do so, however, they had to run a gamut of senior citizens protesting proposed cuts to the city’s senior programs. -more-


PRC Shifts, Rejects Police Dog Plan

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Friday March 26, 2004

After hearing from a substantial group of community members opposed to the use of police dogs by the Berkeley Police department, the Berkeley Police Review Commission (PRC) voted 6-3 Wednesday night to reject a plan to put two German shepherds on the force. -more-


School District Fails to Protect Bullying Victim at MLK

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday March 26, 2004

No one denies that Dominique Reed is getting bullied. The question is, why is she getting punished for it? -more-


Berkeley This Week

Friday March 26, 2004

FRIDAY, MARCH 26 -more-


New Website Explains University Avenue Planning

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday March 26, 2004

Robin Kibby hasn’t forgotten the day last July when she walked into her first Berkeley planning meeting and spoke out against a proposed five-story apartment complex on University Avenue that would tower over the home she had recently bought. -more-


Neighbors, City Split Over University Ave. Rezoning

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday March 26, 2004

The battle over development on University Avenue heated up Wednesday night when city planners presented proposed new zoning rules for the avenue at a public hearing of the Planning Commission. -more-


Bush’s Rising Tide is No Help for The Boatless

By SEAN GONSALVES AlterNet
Friday March 26, 2004

Residents living in towns along the river were ordered to evacuate by the National Guard. -more-


Strategy Shift: Why Kerry May Choose A Latino VP

By PILAR MARRERO Pacific News Service
Friday March 26, 2004

He’s the popular Democratic governor of a southwestern state, with the unlikely advantage of being an experienced international diplomat. He was born in California, but spent his childhood in Mexico City. He speaks real Spanish—not the spanglish kind—and has been nominated three times for the Nobel Peace Prize. He’s a political moderate with charisma and charm. -more-


UnderCurrents: A Typical Night in East Oakland: A Police Tale

J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR
Friday March 26, 2004

Two black men were sitting in the dark on the brick wall across from our house the other night. It was late, in the middle of that odd, late-winter heat spell of a few weeks ago. A police officer rolled around the corner in his car, saw the men, was immediately suspicious. Normally there’s nothing going on down our street that causes a police presence late at night, but lately the police have been hot-spottin’ out here, checking through the area to make sure nothing’s going on. The cop slowed down to a stop in front of the two men. One of the men turned and said in a low voice to the other, “Watch him shine his light over here.” And so the cop did, pointing his piercing spotlight into the two black men’s eyes, blinding them. They squirmed and squinted, ducking their heads a little and putting up their hands against the glare. They knew better than to look away. You want to really arouse a cop’s suspicion? Try to get out of the way when he’s shining a light in your eyes. That’s a quick trip to the back of the police car. -more-


Crowden Reverie Not Open to Public

Friday March 26, 2004

In our March 19 story on the death of Berkeley music teacher Anne Crowden, the Daily Planet reported a March 28 musical reverie in her honor to be held at the Crowden School. Sallie Arens, Crowden School Board chair, has informed the Planet that the perf ormance, which is intended to create a DVD, is closed to the public. -more-


Letters to the Editor

Friday March 26, 2004

JOHN KERRY -more-


Bates, Stoloff and UC: Dean to the Extreme?

By ZELDA BRONSTEIN
Friday March 26, 2004

When Tom Bates was running for mayor, he never said that, if elected, he would ensure that Shirley Dean’s supporters would take over the Planning Commission. But that’s exactly what just happened. -more-


Fighting to Save What We Have on University Avenue

By Kirpal Khanna
Friday March 26, 2004

The University Avenue Association (UAA) applauds the City Council and the Planning Commission for doing the zoning overlay for the University -more-


Film Documents Return to Site of Guatemalan Massacre

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Friday March 26, 2004

At 29, Iowa housewife Denese Becker went to Guatemalan to re-discover her past. She knew she was returning to dig up the roots of a horrific story that left both her parents dead, making her an orphan at the age of 9. What she didn’t know was that her trip would spark a movement to expose the perpetrators of one of the bloodiest events in Guatemalan history, and to help bring them to justice. -more-


BHS Graduate Brings Country Back to Berkeley

By PAUL KILDUFF Special to the Planet
Friday March 26, 2004

Traditional country music is played on acoustic instruments like mandolins, not wailing pedal steel guitars. That fact alone puts its practitioners so far outside the genre’s mainstream Nashville stronghold that they might as well live in, well, the Bay Area. That’s just fine with Berkeley’s very own home grown country music legend Laurie Lewis—she’s been an outsider most of her life. “Even though I’ve grown up in a city, I’m a country girl,” says Lewis. “Farms in Berkeley? You bet!” -more-


Five Reasons To Get a Pre-Approval Letter

By RUSS COHN Special to the Planet
Friday March 26, 2004

Most home buyers know they should get a mortgage pre-approval letter from a lender before they begin seriously shopping for a home. But the reasons for this advice aren’t always clear, and buyers sometimes are dismayed by the amount of paperwork involved. Here is some of the reasoning behind the advice: -more-


Organic Garlic Bulbs Ideal For Early Spring Garden Planting

Garlic With Fresh Tomatoes
Friday March 26, 2004

Pour one or more tablespoons of olive oil into a microwavable glass bowl. Peel and slice several garlic cloves into the bowl, cover with a plate, and microwave until soft, two or three minutes. Meanwhile, toast thick slices of sourdough bread. Spread the toast with the garlic-oil mixture. Top with slices of ripe and juicy beefsteak tomatoes, season to taste with salt and pepper, and start the day feeling very well pleased with life.  -more-


Organic Garlic Bulbs Ideal For Early Spring Garden Planting

By SHIRLEY BARKER Special to the Planet
Friday March 26, 2004

One can get away with planting garlic in early spring in Berkeley if one has no desire for any part of it besides green tips, not a bad idea at all. Green tips are speedily grown in March, just when we crave spring greens, and make a pleasant change from green onions, adding sparkle to salads and sauces with less strength than the mature bulb. Simply separate a bulb into cloves and set a dozen of them into a one-gallon pot of potting soil. Because the bulbs will not mature, little space is needed. Water if the earth becomes dry. In a week green shoots will appear, and harvesting can begin soon after. -more-


Arts Calendar

Friday March 26, 2004

FRIDAY, MARCH 26 -more-


Big Scream Means Big Fun at Arts Magnet Garden

By YOLANDA HUANG Special to the Planet
Friday March 26, 2004

“Here comes the big scream,” said Kate Obenour. Just outside the garden at Arts Magnet, Rupert Lopez, the reading teacher, stood on one side of the fence holding a long hose. On the other side was a large crowd of students, almost everyone in the yard. Mr. Lopez flipped the nozzle and a fan of water sprayed over the kids. The scream rose. “Yesterday, I heard that scream three blocks away while I was home for lunch,” said Kate. The kids were now waving their arms, and jumping up and down, begging for more. “Are we having fun or what?” asked Kate. -more-


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-


Opinion

Editorials

Editorial: True Self Defense

Becky O'Malley
Friday March 26, 2004

Our opinion pages have received a number of letters regarding Israel’s recent assassination of a Hamas leader. They’re from all over Northern California, written in a variety of styles by obviously concerned citizens, but they have a common outline and theme: what’s wrong with assassination in self-defense? Since most of the writers don’t seem to be Daily Planet readers, we’ve sent this stock response: -more-


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-