News

Police About-Face On Decades-Old Cop Killing Charges

By RICHARD BRENNEMAN
Friday May 28, 2004

Though Berkeley Police Tuesday were trumpeting the arrest of a former Black Panther as a key figure in Berkeley’s first cop killing, by the next morning the tone was considerably less triumphant. -more-


University Avenue Strategic Plan Nears Final Stage

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday May 28, 2004

Ready or not, here come new zoning regulations for University Avenue. -more-


Council Negotiates Longs Drugs, Prepares November Ballot Measures

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday May 28, 2004

The City Council Tuesday breathed new life into a proposed Longs Drugs store downtown, but warned the national retailer that it wouldn’t get the alcohol permit it’s demanding unless it yielded to city demands for a substantial produce department and strict limits on the sale of beer and wine. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Friday May 28, 2004

FRIDAY, MAY 28 -more-


Builders, Environmentalists Spar Over Toxic Richmond Site

By RICHARD BRENNEMAN
Friday May 28, 2004

A major residential and biotech research complex proposed for the Richmond waterfront has pitted a coalition of activists and neighbors against a developer who offers a healthy boost to the city’s stricken tax base. -more-


Search For New UCB Chancellor Narrows to Eight Finalists

Friday May 28, 2004

UC Berkeley Chancellor Robert Berdahl is on his way out. But according to UC officials, the university has still not chosen his replacement. -more-


Open Houses Mark Fire Department’s Centennial

Friday May 28, 2004

The Berkeley Fire Department kicks off the start of its 100th birthday festivities with a Saturday open house at Station No. 6, 999 Cedar St. -more-


Fallout From Deadly Apartment Fire Haunts Honduras

By PETER MICEK Pacific News Service
Friday May 28, 2004

SAN FRANCISCO—“Accident or intentional?” asks the front page headline in El Bohemio News, a local Spanish-language weekly, about a deadly Honduran prison fire. The photo shows tattooed dead bodies lining a yard with police officers in blue jeans standing above them. -more-


Bush Plan for a Self-Governing Iraq Rings Hollow

By WILLIAM O. BEEMANPacific News Service
Friday May 28, 2004

President Bush implied that Iraq would be “free and self-governing” in his speech before the Army War College on May 24, 2004. But the speech is a thin fabric of insubstantial promises. None of the points are new, and all of the implied efforts have failed to date. -more-


BUSD Taps New Deputy Superintendent From Coalinga

Friday May 28, 2004

The Berkeley Unified School District named Glenston Thompson as its new Deputy Superintendent Tuesday. -more-


Is Stem Cell Research A New Bay Area Revolution?

By RAYMOND BARGLOW and MARION RIGGS Special to the Planet
Friday May 28, 2004

There may be a new revolution brewing in the Bay Area, but this time it’s taking place not in the streets but in the laboratories. Advocates of stem cell research suggest that we stand at the threshold of biomedical breakthroughs that may transform modern medicine. At the forefront of this effort are universities like Stanford and UCSF, and local companies like Geron. Stem cells hold promise for curing such devastating illnesses as Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, juvenile diabetes, MS, ALS, paralysis, and some forms of cancer and heart disease. -more-


Letters to the Editor

Friday May 28, 2004

DERBY FIELD -more-


Continuing the Contentious Dialogue On Sophistry, Ideology

By JUSTICE PUTNAM
Friday May 28, 2004

I couldn’t agree more with Max Anderson’s assessment of the ongoing national and local political sophistry (“Rent Board Chair Chides Control Foe’s ‘Rant,’” Daily Planet, May 25-27). His own contentious diatribe is a prime example of the same sophistry he so deliciously condemns. He takes John Koenigshofer to task for supposedly misleading that he is a “...landlord and realtor who works out of George Oram’s firm, one of Berkeley’s largest real estate interests.” Mr. Anderson wisecracks facetiously that “...perhaps modesty prevented Mr. Koenigshofer...” from such a revealing label. If Mr. Anderson were not so inept in his own “... Ashcroftesque invasion of privacy...” he would have revealed that Mr. Koenigshofer and this writer organized and held the first public call for Richard Nixon’s impeachment, in of all places, Yorba Linda, Cal. He would have revealed that Mr. Koenigshofer holds a degree in creative writing from San Francisco State University, that he is an artist of considerable depth, a fabulous poet and an engaging storyteller. Mr. Anderson would have also revealed that Mr. Koenigshofer forsook an internship at A.C.T. as a playwright to attend to his dying mother. That he requires a hip replacement from decades of fence building, landscape construction and gardening that gave him the courage to purchase his first project with a couple of credit cards and an unflagging endurance. Perhaps Mr. Anderson’s own physicality and ailments is derived from his longtime position as “...chair of the Rent Stabilization Board,” or other supine endeavors. -more-


University Avenue Strategic Plan Should Benefit All Berkeley Citizens

By JUDY STAMPS
Friday May 28, 2004

University Avenue is the most important traffic corridor in Berkeley. As such, decisions about its development should not be controlled by the opinions of highly vocal minorities with vested interests in the outcome of these decisions. Berkeley currently has an opportunity to make plans that will benefit all of its citizens, not just those individuals who are directly and immediately impacted by development along University Avenue. For these reasons, I urge the citizens of Berkeley to contact the Planning Commission, and urge them to adopt the recommendations of the University Avenue Strategic Plan. -more-


A Patient’s Perspective

By CHARLES A. PAPPAS
Friday May 28, 2004

As a medical cannabis patient (quadriplegic) fortunate enough to have a doctor’s recommendation for the past five years, I feel compelled to comment on recent developments in our community regarding the cultivation and dispensing of medical marijuana. On April 27 our City Council unfortunately tabled proposed amendments to the previous 2001 medical cannabis initiative. Their lack of decision has prompted a voter initiative drive and the rights of patients like myself have been overlooked and ill-served. I believe this process can be avoided with reconsideration by the Berkeley City Council. -more-


Traveling Jewish Theatre’s Impressive ‘Dybbuk’ Presents a Bit of a Problem

By Betsy Hunton Special to the Planet
Friday May 28, 2004

The Traveling Jewish Theatre has come to Berkeley’s Julia Morgan Theater, bringing along with it Dybbuk—which is one chunk of a play—and two gifted actors. In the course of the evening Karine Koret and Keith Davis successfully play roles that run from a nice young couple happily celebrating the Sabbath together, to ones embodying possession by supernatural and terrifying spirits. In between they each portray a dazzling variety of ages and characters as well as an enormous emotional range. It is a very impressive pair of performances. -more-


Arts Calendar

Friday May 28, 2004

FRIDAY, MAY 28 -more-


Beans: An American Staple That Altered The World

By Shirley Barker Special to the Planet
Friday May 28, 2004

Legumes are such an important partner of grains as a source of complete protein that one wonders how Europeans managed before the advent of foods from America. Although every continent seems to have indigenous legumes and pulses, Europe has only one bean, the fava or broad bean, Vicia faba. Historians have documented an increase in human populations in Europe after the arrival of beans from the Americas. These beans are often called French, having been introduced into Europe by French explorers in Canada. -more-


UnderCurrents: Tracking Down the Rats of America’s Intolerance

J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR
Friday May 28, 2004

The exterminator receives a call to return to the scene of recent work. Upon arrival, he is confronted by the angry customer. -more-


Rosa Parks School Faces Huge Turnover

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Tuesday May 25, 2004

At least four teachers will be transferred involuntarily from Rosa Parks Elementary School next year—and many more might follow them willingly—two months after more than three-quarters of the faculty signed a letter of no confidence in their principal. -more-


Liquor License Poses Roadblock for Longs

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Tuesday May 25, 2004

For a city whose downtown recently has been characterized more by empty storefronts than thriving shops, Longs Drugs offers Berkeley an enticing opportunity. -more-


UC Lecturer’s ‘Intifada’ Comment Brings Death Threats

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Tuesday May 25, 2004

A recent speech delivered by a UC Berkeley lecturer during an impromptu anti-war protest in San Francisco has set off a firestorm of criticism around the country, including death threats and calls for his removal from the university. -more-


Berkeley This Week Calendar

Tuesday May 25, 2004

TUESDAY, MAY 25 -more-


Berkeley Studies S.L. Obispo’s Downtown Creek

By RICHARD BRENNEMAN
Tuesday May 25, 2004

Richard Register and other Berkeley proponents of daylighting Strawberry Creek have come to San Luis Obispo so often that they’re “becoming a new type of economic tourism,” quipped San Luis Obispo City Councilmember Kenneth Schwartz. -more-


Police Blotter

By RICHARD BRENNEMAN
Tuesday May 25, 2004

Pedestrian Killed in I-80 Accident -more-


‘Oversight’ Bumps Union Resolution From City Council Agenda

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Tuesday May 25, 2004

The biggest news swirling around tonight’s (Tuesday, May 25) City Council meeting isn’t on the agenda. -more-


Doin’ the Berkeley Border Flatlands Dance

From Susan Parker
Tuesday May 25, 2004

It was two in the afternoon and I was unloading groceries from my car. On the second trip out the front door I saw her rounding the corner and coming toward me: a small, waif-like woman dressed in flannel pajama bottoms and a bubble jacket. I knew what was coming. I was going to get nailed. -more-


Boalt Students Respond to Prisoner Doctrine Author

By Michael W. Anderson
Tuesday May 25, 2004

On May 22, more than a quarter of the graduating class of Boalt Hall law students protested actions taken by Boalt law professor John Yoo during his tenure as deputy assistant attorney general for the Bush administration. In January, 2002, Professor Yoo authored a 42-page memo for the Department of Justice advising that the U.S. is not constrained by the Geneva Conventions in its treatment of Taliban and al Qaeda prisoners captured in Afghanistan. The State Department vigorously opposed this position on several grounds, arguing that it could do great damage to our international standing and the legitimacy of our foreign policy. Subsequent events in both Iraq and Afghanistan and have borne out these concerns. -more-


Letters to the Editor

Tuesday May 25, 2004

LAKOFF LECTURE -more-


Plan Berkeley Questions UASP Proposed Zoning Codes

Tuesday May 25, 2004

Staff proposals for implementing the University Avenue Strategic Plan (UASP) are so confusing that the public, the commission, and even staff find it difficult to understand them, as is shown by each succeeding draft having additional mistakes and inconsistencies. The drafts have come so quickly that issues presented weeks ago have not been resolved, and have been buried by many new questions raised by the later revisions. Staff is pushing the commission to complete a final draft before the City Council recess in July, but neighbors and merchants are not convinced that the proposed zoning code changes will lead to the viable and vital University Avenue that the UASP promised. -more-


Rent Board Chair Chides Control Foe’s ‘Rant’

By MAX ANDERSON
Tuesday May 25, 2004

The season of political sophistry is well underway in Berkeley as it is across the nation. Evidence of this can be seen in John Koenigshofer’s less than rational, less than honest anti-rent control rant. The latest thoughtless tirade appeared on the op-ed page in the weekend edition of May 11-13. Mr. Koenigshofer signed his piece as “a Berkeley resident.” Perhaps modesty prevented Mr. Koenigshofer from revealing that he is a Berkeley landlord and realtor who works out of George Oram’s firm, one of Berkeley’s largest real estate interests. -more-


Costa Hawkins Bill Cut Rents, Added Units

By GALE GARCIA
Tuesday May 25, 2004

Jesse Arreguin recently wrote in this newspaper (Letters, Daily Planet, May 14-17) that “Costa Hawkins and excessive rent levels led to the lack of housing in Berkeley.” I doubt that Mr. Arreguin was living in Berkeley when rent control began in 1979, or that he has taken the time to study the history of this issue. -more-


Jane Jacobs, Democrat With a Small ‘D’

By ZELDA BRONSTEIN Special to the Planet
Tuesday May 25, 2004

Last week, San Francisco’s City Arts & Lectures offered a tantalizing twofer at Herbst Theatre: renowned urbanist Jane Jacobs was interviewed by Paul Goldberger, architecture critic for the New Yorker and, before that, for the New York Times. Jacobs, 88, lives in Toronto and seldom ventures into these parts. Not surprisingly, the event sold out. -more-


Chronicle Review Cheap Shots UC Task Force Report

By ZELDA BRONSTEIN Special to the Planet
Tuesday May 25, 2004

John King’s review of Jane Jacobs in the May 20 San Francisco Chronicle concluded with a swipe at the UC Hotel Task Force. -more-


New Book Details Notorious Gangs: U.S. Corporations

By RICHARD BRENNEMAN
Tuesday May 25, 2004

For a nation created in part as a rebellion against corporate power, the United States has embraced the corporation to a degree unprecedented in history, enshrouding it with the protections Jefferson enshrined to shelter the individual from the undue intrusion of government. -more-


Local Librarian Documents London’s War

By STEVE FINACOM Special to the Planet
Tuesday May 25, 2004

Sayre Van Young’s face and name are familiar to many Berkeley residents. For nearly four decades, she’s worked for the Berkeley Public Library, helping to answer the most common and esoteric questions posed at the reference desk. -more-


Arts Calendar

Tuesday May 25, 2004

TUESDAY, MAY 25 -more-


A Paperbark Writer Talks of Trees That Go ‘Oof!’

By RON SULLIVAN Special to the Planet
Tuesday May 25, 2004

Melaleucas are blooming now; there’s a double row of Melaleuca linariifolia on Jefferson Street, on both sides of its intersection with Bancroft, and a nice row of them by the BART tracks on Masonic in Albany, among others. They look nifty in rows, with their profusion of tiny white flowers mounding the edges of the rounded crowns. One of their English names is “snow-in-summer,” a name shared with an easy herbaceous groundcover, Cerastium tomentosum. They look a little odd together, though, because they have such different color palettes: The tree is pale tan and slightly olive-ish green with creamy flowers, and the herb is silvery and cold white. -more-


Cartoon

Justin De'Freitas
Tuesday May 25, 2004

Cartoon by Justin De'Freitas -more-