The Week

Jakob Schiller:
          
          A scattering of students try the new Berkeley High School food court on its first day.
Jakob Schiller: A scattering of students try the new Berkeley High School food court on its first day.
 

News

Separate City Voting Could Cost Thousands

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Tuesday April 13, 2004

Berkeley Mayor Tom Bates recently threatened to explore alternative options to touchscreen voting machines if security problems aren’t worked out and the machines cannot ensure a secure and accurate vote. But City Clerk Sherry Kelly says that any switch would be an expensive project that might need approval from Berkeley voters before it could be implemented. -more-


Most Ignore New BHS Cafeteria

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Tuesday April 13, 2004

Berkeley High students—already bombarded with a potpourri of culinary choices—were greeted Monday with the most conveniently located entry into the no-holds barred competition for student lunch money: a new school cafeteria. -more-


Hotel Task Force Weighs Recommendations

By RICHARD BRENNEMAN
Tuesday April 13, 2004

As the Berkeley Planning Commission’s UC Hotel Task Force heads into its next-to-last session this afternoon (Tuesday, April 13), the 25 panelists are examining a sizable stack of suggestions. -more-


Bill Would Limit City’s Control Over In-Law Units

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Tuesday April 13, 2004

It’s Sacramento’s never ending tug-of-war. The Legislature tries to extend its control over local governments, while the affected localities scratch and claw to stop them. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Tuesday April 13, 2004

TUESDAY, APRIL 13 -more-


The Tehran Factor in Iraq’s Shi’ite Uprising

By JALA GHAZI Pacific News Service
Tuesday April 13, 2004

When Iran’s influential former president, Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani recently hailed the Shi’ite Muslim militia of wanted Iraqi cleric Muqtada al-Sadr as “heroic,” he might have been signaling that Iran is finally coming out from behind the scenes in the confrontation between the U.S. and al-Sadr that has left dozens dead. -more-


Police Blotter

By RICHARD BRENNEMAN
Tuesday April 13, 2004

Suspected crack dealers busted -more-


Satiric ‘Billionaires for Bush’ Expose President’s Policies

From Susan Parker
Tuesday April 13, 2004

I’ve never been active in politics. Growing up on the East coast in the ‘50s and ‘60s, my parents expected my brothers and me to agree with them on political issues. Anything less resulted in enormous shouting matches, hurt feelings, and veiled threats. Even today, now that my brothers and I are practically senior citizens ourselves, we don’t discuss political views with my elderly parents. If you aren’t Republican and in support of George Bush, if you neglect to attend church, or if you don’t believe prison is full of people who need to be kept out of sight and out of mind, then it’s best to keep your opinions to yourself. We drink cocktails and talk about sports and the weather. It’s better for everyone’s nerves and high blood pressure. -more-


Dealing With Bullies Requires More Than Mere Mediation

By LAURA MENARD
Tuesday April 13, 2004

Thanks to the Reed family and the Daily Planet for the willingness to publicly address bullying in our schools. I too have navigated the institutional and family requirements to educate, keep healthy and resilient a student harmed by bullying and violence. For those students who have the unfortunate experience of persistent and pervasive harassment and abuse their childhood is quite different than others. Many students will encounter taunting and harassment in school, and may become wiser and stronger from the experience, but for many others the reality is disturbing and the problem and solutions are not completely in their control. Aggression in our schools is a constant; dismissing or pretending otherwise interferes with taking the right actions. Blaming the victim is a device of the ignorant. -more-


UC on Collision Course With Traffic Jam

By ANDY KATZ, BRANDON SIMMONS and JESSE ARREGUIN
Tuesday April 13, 2004

What’s Berkeley like at rush hour? Traffic on Shattuck Avenue. Traffic on Ashby Avenue. Traffic on University Avenue. Berkeley’s major streets are at capacity, and are already clogged with traffic. This also affects commuters who take the bus, who are stuck in the same traffic. -more-


Young Local Choreographers Take Dancers From Hip-Hop To Ballet

By ROBYN GEE Special to the Planet
Tuesday April 13, 2004

A product of sheer hard work, self-discipline, and enthusiasm, the En Pointe Youth Dance Company’s spring show “Young Syncopations” brings together six pieces, each with a unique style of choreography. -more-


Urban Plans Etched in Acid: Ant Farm at BAM

By MICHAEL KATZ Special to the Planet
Tuesday April 13, 2004

Citizens: Please report to the Berkeley Art Museum (BAM) by April 25. That’s the last date to catch “Ant Farm 1968-1978” before it leaves on a five-city tour. For your own protection, don’t miss this retrospective of architecture, urban-planning, and media pranks. It’s thought-provoking, transparent, and great fun. -more-


Arts Calendar

Tuesday April 13, 2004

TUESDAY, APRIL 13 -more-


Eye-Pleasing, Fish-Stunning Horsechestnuts

By RON SULLIVAN Special to the Planet
Tuesday April 13, 2004

Red horsechestnuts are blooming now. It’s an interesting phenomenon: the rosy-red flowers are in great big stacks, but somehow easy to miss as you drive by. You walk by, or sit at a stoplight, and suddenly they’re astonishing. In a big mature tree like the handsome one at the southeast corner of Sacramento and Hopkins, the foliage is deep and thick enough to make the flowers less prominent to the fast-passing eye; in younger trees like those near the Berkeley Bowl, they’re like big candles on the twigs. -more-


Judge Approves School Diversity Plan

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday April 09, 2004

An Alameda County Superior Court judge Tuesday dismissed a challenge filed by the conservative Pacific Legal Foundation that threatened to undo Berkeley’s plan for integrating its schools. -more-


Protesters Return to Port in Peace

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Friday April 09, 2004

On the first anniversary of the bloody waterfront confrontation between Oakland Police and antiwar protesters, officers did their best to stay out of the way of several hundred anti-war protesters—including a large group from Berkeley—who demonstrated Wednesday along the docks of the Port of Oakland. -more-


Citizens Praise UC Hotel Project at Last Input Meeting

By RICHARD BRENNEMAN
Friday April 09, 2004

The Planning Commission’s UC Hotel Task Force’s final public input session Wednesday focused on the project’s likely impact on the downtown business community. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Friday April 09, 2004

FRIDAY, APRIL 9 -more-


Former BHS Standout, NFL Champion Dies at 46

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday April 09, 2004

Lawrence McGrew, a Berkeley High football standout who finished his NFL career a Super Bowl champion, died last Friday of a suspected heart attack. He was 46. -more-


Police Blotter

By RICHARD BRENNEMAN
Friday April 09, 2004

Inebriated student sparks campus hazing probe -more-


Reports of Bio-Diesel Ban Are Untrue, Says Eco Center

—Jakob Schiller
Friday April 09, 2004

Recently-circulated reports of a ban on the sale of bio-diesel in California are not true, according to Dave Williamson of the Ecology Center in Berkeley. -more-


West Contra Costa Hospital May Close

Friday April 09, 2004

SAN PABLO —A hospital that provides the majority of emergency care to West Contra Costa County residents could be shut down unless voters approve Measure D, a $1 per week parcel tax that would fund hospital operations, Contra Costa County Supervisor John Gioia and West Contra Costa Healthcare District officials said in a news conference on Thursday. -more-


Civil Lawsuit Settled In Reddy Sex-Slave Case

Friday April 09, 2004

SAN FRANCISCO—A civil lawsuit filed against a Berkeley landlord by four natives of India who claimed they were sexually abused or exploited for cheap labor was settled in federal court in San Francisco on Wednesday just before the start of a trial. -more-


UnderCurrents: Just Say Go: An Exit Strategy for the Iraq War

J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR
Friday April 09, 2004

A friend and I were speaking this week about events in Iraq—what else?—and she posed the questions that haunt many Democrats who came of age in the Vietnam war era: If John Kerry wins in November, how does he extricate the country from the Iraqi war? Even under a Kerry presidency, aren’t we looking at months—perhaps even years—of continued American military occupation while the new administration seeks out that elusive “peace with honor”? -more-


Letters to the Editor

Friday April 09, 2004

ONE YEAR -more-


State Law Should Back Volunteer Efforts

By Susan Schwartz
Friday April 09, 2004

As a gray-haired 60-year-old whose activism, such as it is, started with Free Speech Movement sit-ins, I find it ironic to be back to civil disobedience. -more-


Taking Away Parking Did Not Increase Europe’s Traffic Congestion

By ROB WRENN
Friday April 09, 2004

When Jon Alff generalizes about Europe based on what he has seen in Bilbao and says that removing parking increases congestion, he is just plain wrong. (Letters, Daily Planet, April 6-8) -more-


Film Shows Need for Complex Interpretation of History

By MARC WINOKUR
Friday April 09, 2004

Months before Mel Gibson’s picture The Passion of the Christ was even released, the public was counseled by a plethora of spiritual mentors to avoid autonomic assumptions that the Jews were responsible for Christ’s death. Although there is little coherent evidence that has put the issue of culpability to irrefutable rest, there is nothing inductively impossible in the gospels’ telling of the social-political denouement leading to the crucifixion of the Nazarene, Jesus Christ. -more-


Did Richard Clarke Do Us a Favor?

By GEORGE COHEN
Friday April 09, 2004

Richard Clarke’s recent televised apology during the commission investigating 9/11 was a rarity in public American life. It not often that a high ranking public leader takes responsibility for the failure to protect the American people and for the ultimate disaster of 9/11. The issue, however, goes way beyond 9/11. It speaks about our inability to act humanely and decently in a variety of situations. No one, especially our leaders, wants to be seen as “weak.” Somehow we’ve come to confuse apology with weakness. The myth is that real men and women do not make large and serious mistakes, and that the effort to deal with these errors will only compound the sin. For a variety of reasons the act of apology is taboo. It has been in serious disrepute for as long as we can remember. -more-


Mailblocks Program Stops Spam, Saves Hassles

By HENRY NORR Special to the Planet
Friday April 09, 2004

EDITOR’S NOTE: The Berkeley Daily Planet extends a hearty welcome to Beyond Chron, (www.beyondchron.org) the Voice of the Rest, a new online publication launched by Randy Shaw, the director of the Tenderloin Housing Clinic. His announced goal is to “provide coverage of political and cultural issues often distorted or ignored by the Bay Area’s largest newspaper, the San Francisco Chronicle... with a critical look at the cutting edge issues of the day.” The Daily Planet has agreed to provide a newsprint outlet from time to time for interesting articles from Beyond Chron. We are pleased to launch this collaboration with part one of an article on spam blocking by Berkeley resident and technology expert Henry Norr. Part two will appear next week. -more-


Shotgun Players Serve Up Some Serious Silliness

By BETSY HUNTON Special to the Planet
Friday April 09, 2004

No question but that the Shotgun Players are on a roll. Ever since last summer’s terrific production of Mother Courage they’ve been showing their stuff by leaping from one high point to another—all equally fine shows, but extraordinarily different in content and style. -more-


Questions and Answers on Home Repair Problems

By ANTHONY ELMO Special to the Planet
Friday April 09, 2004

Q. I hired a contractor to remodel my bathroom and expected it to be finished while I was out of town. When I returned, the job was not completed and the contractor keeps stalling. I’m really frustrated. What should I do? -more-


Arts Calendar

Friday April 09, 2004

FRIDAY, APRIL 9 -more-


To Avoid Lyme Disease, Watch Where You Sit

By RICHARD BRENNEMAN
Friday April 09, 2004

Each no bigger than a poppy seed, a host of minuscule critters lurks in Northern California woodlands, loaded with bacteria capable of inflicting misery on campers, hikers and picnickers who take to the woods this spring. -more-


Opinion

Editorials

Letters to the Editor

Tuesday April 13, 2004

DOWNTOWN -more-


Editorial: Subverting Citizen Planning

Becky O'Malley
Friday April 09, 2004

The most arresting fact so far uncovered in Richard Brenneman’s ongoing series on rental vacancies in Berkeley was this quote from Ted Burton, the city’s Economic Development Project Coordinator: “The last update I had was a year ago, and we were running about 10 percent [commercial] vacancies downtown then.” This is the reason that Berkeley observers of the hectic pace of building projects to which Berkeley has been subjected in the past four years are tempted to call the city’s planning department “The Department of Data-Free Development.” We have no current data showing that we need more commercial space, and in fact our old data shows that we don’t, but let’s just build some anyhow. -more-