The Week

Jakob Schiller:
          
          Benjamin Triana, 7, of Point Richmond, sports a Mexican flag on his cheek after visiting the face-painting booth at Saturday’s Cinco de Mayo celebration at James Kenney Park. For a history of the Cinco de Mayo holiday, see Page Four.
Jakob Schiller: Benjamin Triana, 7, of Point Richmond, sports a Mexican flag on his cheek after visiting the face-painting booth at Saturday’s Cinco de Mayo celebration at James Kenney Park. For a history of the Cinco de Mayo holiday, see Page Four.
 

News

Ruling Puts County E-Voting On Hold

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Tuesday May 04, 2004

Voters here in Berkeley and throughout Alameda county could be back to voting on paper in the November elections, according to a stunning, far-reaching ruling last week by California Secretary of State Kevin Shelly. -more-


Citizens Criticize University Growth Plan

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Tuesday May 04, 2004

While critics of UC Berkeley’s recently released Long Range Development Plan fear the university’s vision for Berkeley amounts to a parking space for every car and a traffic jam for every street, a local legislator—Loni Hancock (D-Berkeley)—is pushing a state bill that would require the university to pay Berkeley for those and other headaches caused by its continued growth within the city. -more-


BPD’s First Woman Lieutenant Retires

By RICHARD BRENNEMAN
Tuesday May 04, 2004

Sherrie Aldinger decided to become a police officer in her senior year at Cal, while she was working in a dress shop at the corner of Telegraph Avenue and Durant Street. -more-


Council To Hear Budget Deficit Reduction Plan

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Tuesday May 04, 2004

The City Council will get its first look tonight (Tuesday, May 4) at a finalized budget plan for the upcoming fiscal year that is sure to leave many in Berkeley feeling shortchanged. -more-


Berkeley This Week Calendar

Tuesday May 04, 2004

TUESDAY, MAY 4 -more-


St. Joseph Instrument Theft Has Happy Ending

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Tuesday May 04, 2004

Thanks to an outpouring of support from the community and a little clever detective work, a potentially bad story turned good late last week after three local students had their instruments stolen from St. Joseph the Worker Church. -more-


St. Joseph Instrument Theft Has Happy Ending

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Tuesday May 04, 2004

Thanks to an outpouring of support from the community and a little clever detective work, a potentially bad story turned good late last week after three local students had their instruments stolen from St. Joseph the Worker Church. -more-


Shortage of Pledges May Empty Frat House

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Tuesday May 04, 2004

On the otherwise gray wall of the Alpha Sigma Phi fraternity house is a painting of the U.S. Marines struggling to raise the American flag at Iwo Jima. Beside the painting is a testimonial to fraternity brother Colonel Harry Liversedge, who “led U.S. forces” in the famous World War II battle. -more-


Cinco de Mayo Honors ‘Rag Tag’ Mexican Victory

By THEODORE G. VINCENT Special to the Planet
Tuesday May 04, 2004

On Cinco de Mayo 1862 at Puebla, in southeastern Mexico, a conquest army of 6,000 seasoned French soldiers funded by Emperor Napoleon III of France, and marching at behest of Archduke Maximilian of Austria, met 4,000 Mexican defenders who were mostly last minute recruits from the barrios of Puebla. The invaders were headed for Mexico City 60 miles away to install Maximilian Emperor of Mexico. They expected little resistance. French General Charles Ferdinande de Lorencez had declared, upon landing of his troops at the port of Veracruz, that because Mexicans were merely “bloodthirsty half-castes who united the vices of the white man with the savageness of the Indian... We are so superior to the Mexicans in race, in organization, in discipline, (and) in morality...that, at the head of 6,000 soldiers, I am already master of Mexico.” -more-


Terrorist Mercenaries on U.S. Payroll in Iraq War

By LOUIS NEVAER Pacific News Service
Tuesday May 04, 2004

When a suicide bomber parked a van disguised as an ambulance in front of the Shaheen Hotel in the Karadah neighborhood of Baghdad on January 28 and blew himself up, he killed four people and wounded scores of others. -more-


Nervous Mood in Thailand As Religious Insurgency Grows

StaffBy ANDREW LAM Pacific News Service
Tuesday May 04, 2004

For a long while now, her neighbors envied her. While they suffered under colonial rules, she alone in Southeast Asia developed independently and in peace. While they suffered from insurgencies and warfare, torn apart by opposing Cold War ideologies, she grew in confidence and sophistication, all the while under a constitutional monarchy. Indeed, by all geopolitical standards, Thailand seems a blessed country. -more-


From Susan Parker: A Decade After the Accident, We’ve Come Pretty Far

Susan Parker
Tuesday May 04, 2004

Ten years ago this week my husband Ralph had an accident that left him a C-4 quadriplegic. Cruising down Claremont Avenue on his Italian racing bike, just above the Claremont Hotel, his front tire went flat and he sailed over the handlebars, landing in the middle of the road. He slipped in and out of consciousness until a passerby discovered him and called 911. An ambulance picked him up and delivered him to Highland Hospital, where emergency room doctors monitored his vital signs. When I arrived at the emergency room the prognosis was not good. I was warned that he might not make it, then later informed that if he did pull through he wouldn’t be able to use his arms and hands again. Twenty-four hours later we were told that he would probably remain paralyzed from the neck down. -more-


High Speed I-80 Exit Claims Two Lives

By RICHARD BRENNEMAN
Tuesday May 04, 2004

A single car accident that began on the University Avenue Interstate 80 overpass early Sunday claimed the life of a Berkeley man and a 19-year-old passenger. -more-


Letters to the Editor

Staff
Tuesday May 04, 2004

UNDERREPRESENTED -more-


Key to Stability Is Small-Scale Democracy

By FRED FOLDVARY
Tuesday May 04, 2004

Iraq can quickly move to democracy if it is based on small groups rather than the mass democracy practiced throughout the world today. Small-group voting can be implemented quickly, at low cost. A bottom-up election process can create a democratic legislature in Iraq by June 30, in time for the planned transfer of sovereignty to Iraq. -more-


We’re Broke — Let’s Keep Spending!

Tuesday May 04, 2004

Our city is in a financial crisis and we are being told that there may have to be cuts in vital services and a tax increase. Under these circumstances is it right to be planning a $5-$6 million replacement fire station in Fire District 7? The facility to be built in northeast Berkeley will have 7,200 square feet and 1,500 square feet of decks and will house three Berkeley engines. The three-person crew will, in addition to the decks, have 3,200 square feet of living space. The project has been presented as the additional multi-jurisdictional station specified by 1992’s bond Measure G. It is, however, called “Replacement Station No. 7.” Bond money will indeed pay for the construction, but let us remember that bond money is a loan and our taxes pay the principal and interest on that loan. Furthermore, the costs of maintenance and operation must also be paid for with our taxes that fund the city’s already inadequate yearly operating budget—the same budget that currently cannot pay for all our vital services, let alone the additional costs this project will incur! -more-


Berkeley Schools Failing Our Black Children

By LEE BERRY
Tuesday May 04, 2004

At the end of April 2004, I resigned as president of Berkeley High School Parent Teacher Student Association because I got fed up with being called names and threatened because I have been preaching to the district that something should be done about the high percentage of black children behind at our elementary schools in math and reading. I have been called anti-Semitic, a racist and other names that cannot be printed here. The most recent one is that I am too emotional to be president of the PTSA. -more-


Ambitious BHS Students Premiere ‘Man in the Musical’

By Ellen Cushing Special to the Planet
Tuesday May 04, 2004

This spring, the Berkeley High School theater department is putting on an impressive world-premiere musical, called Man In The Musical. The ambitious and well-done show was written by Bay Area natives Phil Gorman and Lila Tschappat. -more-


House Tour Remembers Desegregation Pioneers

By DANIELLA THOMPSON Special to the Planet
Tuesday May 04, 2004

One of the highlights of the 29th annual Berkeley Architectural Heritage Association 29th Spring House Tour on Sunday, May 9, is the Tape House on Russell Street near Shattuck Avenue. It was once the home of the pioneering Tape family. -more-


Arts Calendar

Tuesday May 04, 2004

TUESDAY, MAY 4 -more-


Salamander World Behind a South-of-UC Apartment

By JOE EATON Special to the Planet
Tuesday May 04, 2004

Anyone who passed through Austin during the glory years of the Texan counterculture will remember the establishment called Armadillo World Headquarters. Well, there’s a spot in Berkeley that I’ve begun to think of as Salamander World Headquarters. (No, y ou can’t get Lone Star or Shiner Bock there.) It’s the courtyard of a nondescript south-of-Campus apartment complex that has some irresistible attraction for salamanders. A friend who lives there keeps finding them: mostly arboreal salamanders, although a slender salamander turned up a few weeks ago. -more-


Cartoon

Justin DeFreitas
Tuesday May 04, 2004

Cartoon -more-


Council Action Moves Ballot Measures Forward

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday April 30, 2004

On a night when Berkeley City Councilmembers deliberated a host of potential November ballot measures to shore up a $10 million budget deficit, council action made it likely that two other electoral choices will come before city voters this November. -more-


UC Admissions Drop Hits Native Americans

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Friday April 30, 2004

The loss of 11 students is just a drop in the bucket to most college student organizations. But for the Native American Recruitment and Retention Center (NARC) at the University of California, it is enormous. -more-


State Panel Allows Touchscreen Voting To Continue — With Provisions

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Friday April 30, 2004

In a 7-0 vote, a state voting panel decided Wednesday to allow 10 counties, including Alameda, to continue using their touchscreen voting machines provided those counties also supply all their polling places with paper ballots for any voters who choose to use them. -more-


Hotel Task Force Report Heads to Planning Commission

By RICHARD BRENNEMAN
Friday April 30, 2004

The Berkeley Planning Commission’s UC Hotel Task Force wrapped up their last official business Tuesday, adopting the last of their recommendations on the biggest project to ever hit downtown Berkeley. -more-


Union Files Firing Grievance Against BOSS

—Matthew Artz
Friday April 30, 2004

One of Berkeley’s largest and most fiscally troubled nonprofits is back in hot water with its labor union. -more-


Cartoon

DeFreitas
Friday April 30, 2004

Cartoon: -more-


Planners See Two New University Avenue Plans

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday April 30, 2004

University Avenue neighbors, who for years, to no avail, have been pushing for a change in zoning rules to limit the size of new buildings on the avenue, now have two new proposals drafted to address their concerns. -more-


John Muir Elementary Nets State Award

Matthew Artz
Friday April 30, 2004

Berkeley’s John Muir Elementary School was one of just three schools in Alameda County and 214 statewide to receive the prestigious Title I Academic Achievement Award, the State Department of Education announced Tuesday. -more-


The Challenges of Male Parenting in Progressive Berkeley

By JOSH GREENBAUM Special to the Planet
Friday April 30, 2004

Knowing your way around a particular town is like knowing your way around the English language: Just because you’re fluent doesn’t mean you can name all the working parts of a toilet or trade bons mots with an Oxford don. And just because you’ve lived in a town on and off for over 10 years, as I have in Berkeley, doesn’t mean you really know it as well as you might think, if at all—a fact I found out upon returning this year to Berkeley as the father of a newborn little girl. -more-


Police Blotter

By RICHARD BRENNEMAN
Friday April 30, 2004

Laser Tagging Leads to Arrest -more-


UnderCurrents: Picky-Picky While Chopping Liver

J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR
Friday April 30, 2004

One of the more interesting things about living in Oakland in the Jerry Brown years is never quite knowing where our mayor is going to turn up. Lately Mr. Brown has been on cable television, hawking cars for the merchants at Oakland’s Auto Row, complaining that two-thirds or thereabouts of Oakland residents who have recently bought new cars have chosen not to do so in the city in which they live. -more-


Commentary: Berkeley BudgetWatch Offers Plans For Services, Elections and Personnel

By MARIE BOWMAN
Friday April 30, 2004

Residents from all neighborhoods in Berkeley have come together around the city’s current budget crisis as evidenced by their active participation at various City meetings. This is a Preliminary Statement that, in expanded form, was sent to all members of the City Council to respond to various proposals that have been put forward to date. -more-


Commentary: City’s Quakers Calculate Their Energy Usage

By KAREN STREET
Friday April 30, 2004

Is your concern for the environment a spectator sport? Or does it go beyond sporting a bumper sticker? A butterfly in Brazil can affect the climate here; what will happen if you turn off your kitchen lights? -more-


Letters to the Editor

Friday April 30, 2004

BERKELEY HIGH -more-


TheatreFIRST Extends Memorable ‘Mooi Street’

By BETSY HUNTON Special to the Planet
Friday April 30, 2004

There’s a totally smashing production by TheatreFIRST at the Berkeley City Club which you need to rush over to see. Although it’s been extended through May 9, that still doesn’t give you much time. Missing the opportunity to see this South African work would be a definite loss. (We deeply regret that a communications failure kept us from reviewing the play earlier in the season). Mooi Street Moves isn’t produced in the U.S. too often. The only previous presentation here was in 1993 at the MetroStage in Alexandria, Virgina. In any case, it is hard to believe that it could be done with greater skill and talent than what we can see in this sterling production. -more-


See Shakespeare for Free at UCB

By STEVE FINACOM Special to the Planet
Friday April 30, 2004

One of the advantages of living in a university town is that dramatic performances by not only visiting professionals but talented locals are frequent events, often in unique surroundings. -more-


BAHA’s House Tour Examines Victorian Past

By STEVE FINACOM Special to the Planet
Friday April 30, 2004

Berkeley began as a blend of countryside, farmland, waterfront settlement, and academic village. By the end of the 19th century the town was still small, but featured neighborhoods of both stately and modest Victorian residences. Such homes were the glory of Berkeley a century ago. -more-


Commission Completes Arts and Culture Plan

By RICHARD BRENNEMAN
Friday April 30, 2004

After adopting a few last-minute amendments, the Berkeley Civic Arts Commission Wednesday night wound up its five-year effort to create an Arts and Cultural Plan for the city. -more-


Correction

Friday April 30, 2004

In the Tuesday, April 27, story on the Arts Commission’s last public input session (“Arts Commissioners Call For Public Input,” Daily Planet, April 27-29), remarks by Berkeley Arts Center executive director Robbin Henderson were incorrectly attributed to city staff member Mary Ann Merker. -more-


Arts Calendar

Friday April 30, 2004

FRIDAY, APRIL 30 -more-


Berkeley This Week Calendar

Friday April 30, 2004

FRIDAY, APRIL 30 -more-


Sweet Potatoes Are the Toothsome Tuber

By SHIRLEY BARKER Special to the Planet
Friday April 30, 2004

Sweet potato recipes invariably seem overburdened with other ingredients, causing one to wonder whether we dislike the natural taste of vegetables so much that we go to great lengths to hide it. -more-


Opinion

Editorials

Editorial: Mercenaries Amok in Iraq

Becky O'Malley
Tuesday May 04, 2004

The mythic history of the American Revolution which used to be taught in the elementary schools (and perhaps still is) reserved a special bad guy slot for the role of the Hessian soldiers who fought with the British against the American revolutionaries. They were “mercenaries,” hirelings who fought for money instead of for principle (like the Americans) or for king (like the Redcoats). Never mind that the major part of the payment for their services went to their German rulers, and that the Hessians themselves were poorly paid peasants. (Many of them were stranded in the United States with no way to get home when the war was over.) Americans, our teachers made clear, didn’t use mercenaries. World War II was fought by citizens, not mercenaries. -more-


Editorial: The Politics of Public Art

Becky O'Malley
Friday April 30, 2004

Recent discussions before the Civic Arts Commission and in these pages remind me of what I learned in my stint in the 1970s as an intern at the California Arts Council, when Jerry Brown was still playing his Governor Moonbeam role and I was a law student. The council’s executive director was the redoubtable Eloise Pickard Smith, a painter and political activist. Among the illustrious commissioners were actor Peter Coyote, poet Gary Snyder and Luis Valdez, founder of El Teatro Campesino. Watching from the sidelines as these politically savvy artists allocated public funding for the arts taught me many lessons. The most surprising thing I learned was how much many members of the public hate public art. Or rather, how much they hate certain kinds of public art. Or most specifically, how they actively dislike large non-representational sculptures plopped into public spaces. We got letters, we got lots and lots of letters, almost all complaining about such installations. -more-