The Week

Jakob Schiller
          Brandon Sullivon, 2 1/2, enjoys the Fourth of July fireworks exhibition at the Berkeley Marina. Brandon brought his parents, Ken and Myoung, all the way from Hercules just to witness the city’s Independence Day celebration. ›
Jakob Schiller Brandon Sullivon, 2 1/2, enjoys the Fourth of July fireworks exhibition at the Berkeley Marina. Brandon brought his parents, Ken and Myoung, all the way from Hercules just to witness the city’s Independence Day celebration. ›
 

News

UC Announces $69 Million Enron Settlement

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Tuesday July 06, 2004

The University of California announced Friday a $69 million settlement with the Bank of America in the ongoing Enron class action lawsuit. -more-


Well-Connected Livable Berkeley Pushes Smart Growth

By RICHARD BRENNEMAN
Tuesday July 06, 2004

In a community marked by strongly conflicting visions of the city’s future, a young but powerfully connected organization named Livable Berkeley is striving to make its own stamp on the city of tomorrow. -more-


Gilbert Jumps Into District 5 City Council Race

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Tuesday July 06, 2004

One of the City Council’s loudest and most prolific critics is seeking a seat on the legislative body she has relentlessly hounded for the past two years. -more-


Three City Unions Vote for Pay Deferral

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Tuesday July 06, 2004

Members of three city unions have voted overwhelmingly to ratify a deal that defers roughly half of their cost of living pay raises to help the city close a $10.3 million budget shortfall. -more-


Editorial: In Support of Kamala Harris

By Congresswoman Barbara Lee
Tuesday July 06, 2004

EDITOR’S NOTE: It is not conventional for newspapers to turn over their editorial space to “politicians.” Papers are expected to maintain a detached approach to the issues of the day, and to assume that those who represent us are guilty until proven innocent. But the owners and publishers of this paper (which has never been accused of being conventional) have had a “Barbara Lee Speaks for Me” bumper sticker on their old red van since Barbara was the sole vote against the invasion of Afghanistan. Our senior editor, who was living in Napa at the time, remembers thinking that he wished she was his representative. Of course, we reserve the right to tell our Congresswoman if she makes any mistakes in the future, but today we’re very pleased that she’s written this guest editorial for us. Today, Barbara Lee speaks for the Berkeley Daily Planet. -more-


Letters to the Editor

Tuesday July 06, 2004

FINE ARTS BUILDING -more-


Hauling Away Davis Hall is a Long Haul Indeed

By JIM SHARP
Tuesday July 06, 2004

Say good-bye to Hearst Avenue as you’ve known it—at least until 2007. -more-


Reflections on ‘Fahrenheit 9/11’

By GEORGE PALEN
Tuesday July 06, 2004

What this country needs is truth and reconciliation. South Africa did it. So should we. -more-


Gilroy’s Bonfante Gardens is a Varied Delight

By STEVEN FINACOM Special to the Planet
Tuesday July 06, 2004

If you’re yearning for a kinder, gentler, theme park, something that works for both children and adults but doesn’t cost a fortune, a week’s vacation time, or leave you too exhausted, this may be the summer to visit Bonfante Gardens. -more-


Arts Calendar

Tuesday July 06, 2004

TUESDAY, JULY 6 -more-


Scented Camphor Trees a Staple of Berkeley Streets

By RON SULLIVAN Special to the Planet
Tuesday July 06, 2004

There’s a piece of furniture in the Art Deco exhibit that just closed at the Palace of the Legion of Honor in San Francisco that seems to be deliberately designed for maximum use of precious materials. Come to think of it, there are several of those, the silver-plated canopy bed of some maharajah being a standout, if only because someone has to polish that big, complicated thing. But what I’m talking about was a writing desk, gesso’d and gilded with white gold, ornamented with ivory and rock crystal. It was built by one Sir Edward Maufe, out of ebony, mahogany, and camphorwood. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Tuesday July 06, 2004

TUESDAY, JULY 6 -more-


UC Moves Forward with Albany Development Plans

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday July 02, 2004

Despite objections from several students, faculty and the Albany City Council, a University of California committee Wednesday approved UC Berkeley’s plan to demolish some of its most affordable housing and uproot one of the area’s last vestiges of farmland. -more-


Longs Drugs Agrees To Downtown Store Without Alcohol

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday July 02, 2004

Longs Drugs is apparently coming to downtown Berkeley and checking its beer and wine selection at the door. -more-


Death of Fine Arts Cinema Ends a Legendary Tradition

By RICHARD BRENNEMAN
Friday July 02, 2004

The Fine Arts Cinema is officially dead, and Patrick Kennedy, the owner of the massive apartment and commercial complex rising on its former site, doesn’t hold out much hope for a new theater on the site—spelling the end of repertory cinema in the city t hat first raised it to an art form. -more-


Suit Challenges Sutter Health’s Non-Profit Status

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Friday July 02, 2004

Summit Health, the parent company for Alta Bates Summit medical center, was the target of a lawsuit filed in Federal court Wednesday that alleges the company overcharges uninsured patients and does not fulfill its obligations as a non-profit entity under U.S. tax law. -more-


East Bay Volunteers Trek To Florida to Ensure Fair Vote

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Friday July 02, 2004

Nothing can stop a group of determined Berkeley volunteers this summer, not even engine failure, monsoon season, or long hours in the hot, humid, sun. Not when the election is on the line. -more-


Police Blotter

By RICHARD BRENNEMAN
Friday July 02, 2004

Pair Strongarms Victim’s Cash -more-


Fourth of July Fireworks Planned for Marina

By RICHARD BRENNEMAN
Friday July 02, 2004

Berkeley Police expect 40,000 spectators for the city’s annual Fourth of July fireworks extravaganza on the Berkeley Marina this weekend, according to police spokesperson Officer Joe Okies. -more-


‘Fahrenheit 9/11’ Baits Bush, — And Springs the Trap

By PETER Y. SUSSMAN Pacific News Service
Friday July 02, 2004

The media chatter about Michael Moore’s Fahrenheit 9/11 comes down to three basic issues: -more-


BUSD Balances $46 Million Budget, But Future Revenue Still Needed

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday July 02, 2004

The Berkeley Unified School District passed a $46 million budget for its general fund Wednesday, its first balanced budget in three years. -more-


County Keeps General Assistance Program, Hoping Federal Government Will Help Out

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Friday July 02, 2004

Alameda County’s almost 1,500 General Assistance welfare recipients were issued a temporary reprieve, at least for this year, after the County Board of Supervisors voted last Friday to maintain the program even in the face of severe budget cuts. -more-


Waters Signs Deal to Upgrade School Lunches

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday July 02, 2004

Imagine lunch hour at a Berkeley middle school: Eighth graders tossing salad side by side with cafeteria workers, seventh graders eating the chard they grew in the school garden while receiving a geography lesson, sixth graders sorting seeds to plant for the next harvest. -more-


21st Century Irony: Jews Find Refuge in Germany

By HILARY ABRAMSON Pacific News Service
Friday July 02, 2004

BERLIN—In electric transition, the multicultural capital of Germany is now home to a gay mayor, almost as much sushi as strudel, and more Jews than anyone has seen since Adolph Hitler. -more-


UnderCurrents: A Symbolic Moment That Went Sadly Wrong

J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR
Friday July 02, 2004

Since drama in real life does not come with a sound track—nor promos to get you in the proper frame of mind to interpret what is to come—its true import is often lost on us in the fleeting moments of the actual experience. That is even more true in these days of Internet blogs and 24-hour cable, where a gaggle of honkers following the parade rushes to interpret—the latecomers helpfully providing interpretations of the initial interpretation—so that we come away with our common sense numbed, all remnants of our own initial impressions irretrievably lost. -more-


Profligate Energy Consumption Not Just Unwise, But Unpatriotic

By DAVID PARTCH
Friday July 02, 2004

As the “energy crisis” rolls on and the environmentally oblivious continue to waste gas on SUVs, Hummers and RVs, the most critical dissent one hears in the broader public forum is a mild protest with respect to the price at the pump (Democrats love to jump on this bandwagon). What a revolutionary cry! As if releasing federal reserves and reigning in the power of the oil corporations slightly were enough to bring back the good ol’ days of American prosperity and that nostalgic heyday of the car culture. Meanwhile, the American public is carefully guarded from knowledge about the real costs of petroleum (economic, political, social, medical, environmental, military, etc.) and the indisputable geological truth of the finiteness of a resource we continue to splurge as if there were no tomorrow. And the inevitable consequences this will have to our geopolitical status are woefully ignored and swept under the rug by all quadrants of the political spectrum. -more-


Solving the Budget Crunch With Neighborhood Empowerment

By FRED E. FOLDVARY
Friday July 02, 2004

Berkeley can eliminate its budget deficit and provide better governance by shifting some of the government functions to community associations. A voluntary civic association would be formed in each council district. The association would be able to raise revenue for civic services without being bound by state laws that have put local governments in straitjackets. -more-


Rent Board Budget Could Fund Schools

by Tom Ferentz
Friday July 02, 2004

Editors, Daily Planet: -more-


Letters to the Editor

Friday July 02, 2004

A FEW POINTS -more-


Berkeley can eliminate its budget deficit and provide better governance by shifting some of the government functions to community associations. A voluntary civic association would be formed in each council district. The association would be able to rais

By RICHARD BRENNEMAN andJAKOB SCHILLER
Friday July 02, 2004

For three hours on midday Tuesday, a seemingly endless chain of book-clutching fans threaded their way up Haste Street toward Telegraph Avenue in hopes of receiving an ink scrawl and a handshake from the man on the second floor of Cody’s Books. -more-


A Personal Take on Bill Clinton’s Book Tour

By PAUL PARISH Special to the Planet
Friday July 02, 2004

I had dinner with Bill Clinton this week, a good friend for the last 36 years—though he’s always been better than me about keeping in touch. -more-


A Backwards-Told Tale Definitely Worth Seeing

By BETSY HUNTON Special to the Planet
Friday July 02, 2004

Does anybody know a nice sophisticated term to substitute for “Wow!”? Aurora Theatre’s current production of Harold Pinter’s play Betrayal deserves the best: the very best. The most frequently performed of all the famous British playwright’s works, it’s hard to imagine a more effective presentation than the one we have right here in Berkeley. -more-


Arts Calendar

Friday July 02, 2004

FRIDAY, JULY 2. -more-


High Fiber Buckwheat Akin to Rhubarb

By SHIRLEY BARKER Special to the Planet
Friday July 02, 2004

Buckwheat is not a cereal. The word cereal comes from the name of the goddess of wheat, Ceres. Buckwheat is not related to wheat. Edible buckwheat, Fagopyrum esculentum, is not in the family of grasses, Graminae, from which spring all our cereals, including corn, rye and barley. It is not even in the same order, Poales. Rather, it is part of the rhubarb and sorrel family, Polygonaceae, order Polygonales, as is the wild buckwheat, genus Eriogonum, whose flowers ornament our gardens. -more-


Buckwheat Pancake

Friday July 02, 2004

Calendar: Berkeley This Week

Friday July 02, 2004

FRIDAY, JULY 2 -more-


Opinion

Editorials

From Susan Parker: Middle Age Screen Sex Is No Laughing Matter

Susan Parker
Tuesday July 06, 2004

Last week, while everyone in Berkeley stood in line to see Michael Moore’s Fahrenheit 9/11, my husband and I went to the Albany Twin theater to see The Mother. We often go to this movie house because it regularly features films that aren’t shown in other locations. I’d read a review in the Sunday San Francisco Chronicle about The Mother. The little bald man was jumping out of his chair, clapping. Although this action does not necessarily guarantee that the movie will be worth seeing, I decided to take a chance. The subject matter intrigued me. -more-


Editorial: Stand Up and Sing Along

By BECKY O'MALLEY
Friday July 02, 2004

There have been a number of sideways glances in the liberal press (yes, there is a bit of a liberal press, still) at the rowdy proletarian gusto with which Michael Moore goes after his targets in Fahrenheit 9/11. I often count myself as one of the genteel middle-aged ladies in matters like this. Still, I can’t go along with Ellen Goodman’s call for more sweet reasonableness in the effort to change hearts and minds. Or rather, I’m afraid that only sweet reasonableness won’t do it. -more-