The Week

Jakob Schiller: 
          Chuck McNally, who was fired from the Berkeley Bowl last year during a union organizing drive, fought his case and will receive a monetary settlement from the store as part of a deal signed between the Berkeley Bowl and the United Food and Commercial Workers Butcher’s Union Local 120.?
Jakob Schiller: Chuck McNally, who was fired from the Berkeley Bowl last year during a union organizing drive, fought his case and will receive a monetary settlement from the store as part of a deal signed between the Berkeley Bowl and the United Food and Commercial Workers Butcher’s Union Local 120.?
 

News

Berkeley Bowl Employees Win Right to Unionize By JAKOB SCHILLER

Friday August 06, 2004

More than a year after the organizing started, and nine months after they lost an initial vote to verify the union, Berkeley Bowl employees have won. -more-


Reports Cite Chill Between Developer, UC Prof Backer By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Friday August 06, 2004

The alliance between Berkeley’s most controversial developer and the city’s biggest backer of high-density residential buildings has reached an impasse, according to Berkeley City Councilmember Dona Spring. -more-


Plans for Massive Richmond Casinos Move Forward at Civic Center Meetings By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Friday August 06, 2004

Richmond residents turned out in force for two separate meetings at the Civic Center Wednesday night, each dealing with sites for proposed casinos that could turn the East Bay into a haven for gamblers. -more-


Formerly Incarcerated People Fight for Their Rights By JAKOB SCHILLER

Friday August 06, 2004

Star Smith saw her life collapse a few years ago when her partner walked out on her. She was left with a small child and nowhere to go. She immediately applied for welfare and tried to get a job, but hit a brick wall because she had a drug felony conviction on her record. -more-


State Toxics Experts Analyzing Report on LBNL Contamination By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Friday August 06, 2004

The California Department of Toxic Substances Control (DTSC) has launched a six-to-nine-month study of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory’s (LBNL) report on hazardous materials in the soils and groundwater near the lab. -more-


Berkeley’s Second Homicide Follows 14 Days After First By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Friday August 06, 2004

Two weeks to the day after Berkeley’s first homicide of the year, a 64-year-old South Berkeley man was gunned down Sunday evening in his apartment at 1820 Alcatraz Ave. -more-


Cities, County Look to November Vote for Funds By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Friday August 06, 2004

California cities and counties have been tightening their belts over the last decade, partly due to raids on their treasuries by the state government. Now, with an historic local-state tax revenue agreement in place and the state’s fiscal year 2004-05 bu dget passed and signed by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, local governments find they must also hold their collective breaths until November. That’s when California voters will decide on a state constitutional amendment—Proposition 1A—that would put restraint s on the ability of the state to shift tax money away from cities and counties. -more-


Serial Armed Robber Sought: by Richard Brenneman

Friday August 06, 2004

Berkeley Police are seeking the public’s help in identifying the gunman who has robbed at least 13 business in Berkeley and North Oakland during the past month. -more-


Briefly Noted

Bay City News and City of Berkeley press release
Friday August 06, 2004

Jury Finds Beretta Not Responsible For -more-


An Interview With Michael Lysobey,Democratic Delegate from Berkeley By CHRISTOPHER KROHN

Special to the Planet
Friday August 06, 2004

Sitting far from the main stage and stretching out seemingly forever up the Fleet Center embankment, the 502-person California delegation at the Boston Democratic Convention was impressive in size, even if it was but a distant speck in the context of the swing state mania now sweeping the party. To put it bluntly, the California delegation was not very celebrated at this particular convention. Since the Golden State is not a swing state—Kerry leads by more than 10 points here—the royal treatment was rese rved for Ohio, Pennsylvania, New Mexico, and Iowa. These state delegations were treated with kid gloves during convention week 2004 and were seated almost on top of the speaker’s platform. All of these states are running neck-in-neck in the Bush-Kerry po l ls, and the DNC wanted to send these delegates home feeling like the outcome of the presidency is up to them. -more-


Maxine Waters: Seasoned Leader or Leftist Pariah? By CHRISTOPHER KROHN

Special to the Planet
Friday August 06, 2004

Maxine Waters has represented South-Central Los Angeles (includes Gardena, Inglewood, Lawndale, and Hawthorne) for seven terms in the U.S. House of Representatives. She has one of the most liberal voting records in Congress. When Gary Webb of the San Jose Mercury News wrote about the CIA-backed Contra crack cocaine link between Central America and South-Central Los Angeles in the mid-1980s, she held town hall meetings to investigate and took a leading role in searching out the truth. When Haiti’s President Jean-Bertrand Aristede was taken to the Central African Republic recently (Waters says “kidnapped”) she was one of a handful on a plane bound for Bangui, the capital, to rescue the deposed leader. In fact, she was arrested in front of the White House recently while advocating for justice for Haitian refugees and the restoration of democracy in Haiti. -more-


COMMENTARY Searching for the Democrats: Candidate Kerry By BOB BURNETT

Special to the Planet
Friday August 06, 2004

This is the last of three articles summarizing my impressions of the Democratic convention. Here I compare John Kerry to George Bush (Kerry’s speech is at www.johnkerry.com/pressroom/speeches/spc_2004_0729.html). -more-


COMMENTARY The Good, The Bad and the Ugly By CHRISTOPHER KROHN

Special to the Planet
Friday August 06, 2004

So, you invited a bunch of Democrats to town. They came, they convened, and they went. Was it successful? Did the Dems do what they needed to do? Where do they go from here? Here are some observations by a totally non-objective bystander about where the Democrats came from, where they were at the Boston convention, and where they are going next. -more-


Penultimate Pundit Ponders Interconvention Tension By PETER SOLOMON

Friday August 06, 2004

It’s a tough game, newspaper reporting, especially when you want to be meaningful. But sometimes you get lucky. -more-


David Teece: Big Building Backer, Academic Guru, Political Power Player and a Corporate Tycoon By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Friday August 06, 2004

The New Zealand government calls him an “economics rock star” and Accenture, the global management consulting and outsourcing giant, named him one of the world’s top 50 business intellectuals. -more-


UnderCurrents: The Amazing Ending to the Brown-Barzaghi Story by J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Friday August 06, 2004

Last week, we talked about how Mayor Jerry Brown got himself stuck on the Tarzaghibaby…that dilemma in which he was running for California attorney general while dragging the sexual harassment of his longtime aide and confidante, Jaques Barzaghi. This we ek: the miraculous unstucking. -more-


From Susan Parker: A Tireless Disabilities Advocate Ships Out

Staff
Friday August 06, 2004

When my husband had a bicycling accident 10 years ago and became wheelchair bound, unable to move below the shoulders, besides going crazy I also went in search of help. I didn't know anyone personally with his kind of injury, C-4 quadriplegia. I had find advice and resources any way that I could. It wasn’t easy. -more-


Letters to the Editor

Friday August 06, 2004

BERKELEY HIGH -more-


COMMENTARY 350,000 Pounds of ‘Spaceship Earth’ By PETER SELZ

Friday August 06, 2004

The proposed David Brower Memorial Sculpture is simply preposterous. The time of bronze statues of generals on horseback disgracing our parks is long behind us. Now, it is proposed that the City of Berkeley accept a huge bronze statue of David Brower cli mbing a globe. This monster will weigh 350,000 pounds. It is to be 20 feet high and 15 feet wide and will withstand “any ground motion, even an earthquake.” It is to be made of Brazilian blue quartzite with bronze pieces in clusters to represent the seven continents with a bronze likeness of David Brower trying to scale the globe. It is named “Spaceship Earth,” a name coined by Buckminster Fuller, who would surely turn in his grave. It is the work of a retrograde Finnish sculptor, Eino, a longtime friend of Brian Maxwell, the founder of Powerbar, and will be offered by Maxwell’s widow to the City of Berkeley. It is to be erected at the traffic circle at the end of Spinnaker Way and thus dominate the great view to the Bay. The area is already blemished by the horrible “Guardian,” which was plopped down one dark night without approval of the Civic Art Commission. -more-


COMMENTARY Medea Benjamin Should Have Chosen A Better Venue for Protest By CAROL DeWITT

Friday August 06, 2004

I’ve met Medea Benjamin. She is dedicated, hard working, selfless, courageous and inspiring. I usually have the utmost respect for her and find myself in agreement with her. However, I do not feel that it was productive or appropriate for her to attend t he Democratic National Convention with the intention of being an issue-provoking and disruptive influence. -more-


COMMENTARY Time to Hit the Streets By LIZA GRANDIA

Friday August 06, 2004

“Drop dead!” “No way!” “Ha! Are you kidding?” “What? Are you crazy?” “Are you a Republican?” “I’m not a hippie!” “I hate him!” -more-


Shotgun Stages Brecht Play in Bucolic Setting By BETSY M. HUNTON

Special to the Planet
Friday August 06, 2004

Patrick Dooley, the Shotgun Players’ founder and Artistic Director, is determined not to do Shakespeare in John Hinkle Park. “Anything,” he says, “But not Shakespeare. Not in the park.” He seems to feel—with some justification—that it’s an idea that’s become a little tired with overuse. -more-


Putting Up the Produce of Summer’s Fruitfulness By SHIRLEY BARKER

Special to the Planet
Friday August 06, 2004

In this season of mists and mellow fruitfulness that we call our Berkeley summer, there may be little to do in the garden beyond watering. In contrast, the kitchen can be a hive of activity. -more-


Arts Calendar

Friday August 06, 2004

FRIDAY, AUGUST 6 -more-


Not All Eucalypts Are Invasive Culprits By RON SULLIVAN

Special to the Planet
Friday August 06, 2004

Murray Bail wrote a novel, Eucalyptus, with a plot that hinges on one of those marry-my-daughter contests that show up in fairy tales: The successful suitor must name all the eucalypts on the father’s property, and the father has planted at least one of pretty much all of them. That’s hundreds of species —and as things get studied and shuffled, it’s hard to say how many species there are, let alone which any tree belongs to. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Friday August 06, 2004

FRIDAY, AUGUST 6 -more-


Letters on the Middle East

Friday August 06, 2004

Editor, Daily Planet: -more-


Opinion

Editorials

Editorial: Analyzing the Conventional Wisdom by Becky O’Malley

Friday August 06, 2004

One last convention retrospective, and then we’ll get down to business again. Many of the publications we read, including this one, have devoted a lot of space to analyzing the effect of the recent Democratic gathering on the political landscape. We have, however, missed getting a comment from the one person whose opinion would be most relevant: our theater critic. So I’ll just usurp her job for a moment and take a quick look at the spectacle formerly known as the Democratic National Convention. -more-