News

Berkeley Sets National Record For Moore Film

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Tuesday June 29, 2004
As Michael Moore’s new film Fahrenheit 9/11 set attendance records across the country, Berkeley notched one of its own when the California Landmark Theater recorded the highest opening-night profit numbers for any movie theater screening the film nationwide. Crowds also helped sell out every afternoon and evening screening but one, from Friday through Sunday, grossing tens of thousands of dollars for the theater. A spokesperson for the theater declined to give the exact dollar figure for Landmark’s gross take. -more-

Agreement Averts Alta Bates Walkout

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Tuesday June 29, 2004
A 27-year employee is back on the job at the Alta Bates Summit Medical Center after close to the entire hospital staff—with the exception of only the doctors—threatened to walk off the job for one day unless she was reinstated. -more-

BHS Problems Fading After a Year of Slemp

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Tuesday June 29, 2004
What a difference a year makes. -more-

‘Scathing’ Report Blasts UC Development Plan

By JOHN ENGLISH Special to the Planet
Tuesday June 29, 2004
It’s clear that the proposed new Long Range Development Plan (LRDP) for UC Berkeley is a very growth-oriented plan. While its enrollment hike would be comparatively modest (from a two-semester average of 31,800 in 2001-2002 to a projected 33,450 in future), other stats are quite dramatic. Between now and 2020, total “academic and support” space could increase by 18 percent, or 2.2 million gross square feet. That’s about three times the 15-year increase that was foreseen when the present LRDP was adopted in 1990. Parking could swell by 30 percent, or 2,300 spaces. Housing could increase by 32 percent, or 2,600 beds. These are net amounts, representing new construction minus demolitions. And they’re over and above the changes resulting from still-uncompleted projects—like the big new Stanley Hall and the giant Underhill garage—that the regents have already approved. -more-

Medical Marijuana Case Could Affect Berkeley

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Tuesday June 29, 2004
An Oakland woman’s quest to grow medical marijuana without fear of federal intervention is heading to the Supreme Court and could result in a new precedent in the resurgent battle over states’ rights, perhaps putting in danger Berkeley’s liberal medical pot laws. -more-

Lawsuit Addresses Prison Contractors’ Immunity

By CHARLES MUNNEL and NESTOR RODRIGUEZ Pacific News Service
Tuesday June 29, 2004

Floor-to-Ceiling Collectibles Hamper Firefighting Efforts

By RICHARD BRENNEMAN
Tuesday June 29, 2004

New Nature Center Exemplifies Natural Construction

By STEVEN FINACOM Special to the Planet
Tuesday June 29, 2004

Police Blotter

By RICHARD BRENNEMAN
Tuesday June 29, 2004



Letters to the Editor

Tuesday June 29, 2004


Peaceful Point Molate

Commentary
Tuesday June 29, 2004


40 — Okay, 20 — Observations From 40 Years in Berkeley

By ALBERT SUKOFF
Tuesday June 29, 2004

The Hardy California Finch Spreads Its Wings

By JOE EATON Special to the Planet
Tuesday June 29, 2004

Spiral Gardens Sets Down Roots on Sacramento Street

By RON SULLIVAN Special to the Planet
Tuesday June 29, 2004

Carrying on a Telegraph Avenue Tradition

By ELLEN GROSSHANS Special to the Planet
Tuesday June 29, 2004

Arts Calendar

Tuesday June 29, 2004

Berkeley This Week

Tuesday June 29, 2004

Jakob Schiller
              Sean Dugar, right, and Denisha Delane, center, both members of the NAACP, help Jeremy Jachym update his address on a voter registration card while standing outside Berkeley’s Landmark California Theater where Michael Moore’s new film Fahrenheit 9/11 opened Friday.?
Jakob Schiller Sean Dugar, right, and Denisha Delane, center, both members of the NAACP, help Jeremy Jachym update his address on a voter registration card while standing outside Berkeley’s Landmark California Theater where Michael Moore’s new film Fahrenheit 9/11 opened Friday.?

Editorials

EDITORIAL: Kerry: The New Clinton?

Becky O’Malley
Tuesday June 29, 2004
The back page cartoon in a recent New Yorker showed a Kerry campaign rally. The candidate was standing at a flag-draped podium with Kerry banners above. In the foreground, also at the podium and looming large enough to dwarf the candidate, who was reduce d to peeking out from behind, was a grinning Bill Clinton. -more-

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