News

Connecting Small Presses With Readers for 35 Years By MATTHEW ARTZ

Tuesday December 07, 2004

Small Press Distribution (SPD) is celebrating its 35th year as the nation’s only non-profit book distributor. -more-


Five-Story Project Proposed For San Pablo Avenue Site By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Tuesday December 07, 2004

A controversial development project on San Pablo Avenue, first proposed in 1999 and then abandoned amid neighborhood opposition a year and a half ago, has taken on new life with a different developer. -more-


City Manager Issues Rosy Budget Update, With Warnings By MATTHEW ARTZ

Tuesday December 07, 2004

An unexpected surge in tax revenues on property transfers could erase more than a quarter of the city’s projected $7.5 million deficit next year, according to a first quarter budget update released by the city last week. -more-


Roberts Center Critics Appeal Project Approval By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Tuesday December 07, 2004

Critics of the Ed Roberts Campus recently approved by the Zoning Adjustments Board (ZAB) for South Berkeley have appealed the Nov. 15 decision to the City Council. -more-


A Daily Planet Holiday Invitation

Tuesday December 07, 2004

For the holidays we at the Daily Planet want to give our readers an issue of their own. If you have a story you want to tell about something in the East Bay, about one of your favorite things, a recollection, or anything else you have wanted to see in the Planet, this is your chance. Send us your stories and poems and we will turn over our Dec. 24 issue to you. Get submissions to us by Friday, Dec. 17 for consideration. -more-


Kerry Captured 90 Percent of Berkeley Vote By ROB WRENN

Special to the Planet
Tuesday December 07, 2004

John Kerry won 90 percent of the votes cast for president in Berkeley, while George Bush won the support of only 6.6 percent of Berkeley’s voters. -more-


Hancock Fears New Hacking Bill May Go Too Far By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Tuesday December 07, 2004

A Southern California State Senator, reacting to last fall’s UC hacking incident, wants to repeal current California laws allowing state agencies to release social security numbers and other personal data to public and private sector researchers. -more-


New Council to Choose Vice-Mayor Rotation By MATTHEW ARTZ

Tuesday December 07, 2004

Mayor Tom Bates has backed off, in the face of City Council opposition, from proposing that Councilmember Linda Maio succeed Maudelle Shirek as vice mayor when the new council convenes today (Tuesday), his chief of staff said Monday. -more-


BUSD Classified Employees Ask To Reopen Contract By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Tuesday December 07, 2004

The Board of Education of the Berkeley Unified School District (BUSD) will consider a proposal at this Wednesday night’s board meeting to reopen collective bargaining agreement with its classified employees. -more-


Education Foundation Newsletter Wins Award for Excellence By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Tuesday December 07, 2004

A Berkeley non-profit foundation set up to promote excellence in local schools has received that distinction itself—an award from the Public Education Network in Washington D.C. for Excellence in Communication. -more-


Letters to the Editor

Tuesday December 07, 2004

KPFA -more-



Opposition to Ed Roberts Campus Masked in Historic Design Complaint By SUSAN PARKER

COLUMN
Tuesday December 07, 2004

I read in this very paper that the proposal to build the Ed Roberts Campus, the South Berkeley facility that will house a consortium of organizations serving the needs of the disabled, could be held up due to challenges from the California Office of Historic Preservation. -more-


Police Blotter By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Tuesday December 07, 2004

Felon Bites Cop -more-


Fire Department Log By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Tuesday December 07, 2004

Fireplace Ash Triggers $1.1 Million Blaze, Destroys Cragmont Ave. Home -more-


Alquist-Priolo Bars Building On Faultlines By JANICE THOMAS

COMMENTARY
Tuesday December 07, 2004

To follow-up on Charles Smith’s reflections (Letters, Daily Planet, Dec. 3-6) about policies that would effectively prohibit building on earthquake faults, there is already such a policy, a law even, voted in by the state Legislature in 1972. It is the Alquist-Priolo Earthquake Zoning Act. -more-


Planning Department Website Watch By ZELDA BRONSTEIN

COMMENTARY
Tuesday December 07, 2004

As I’ve previously written in the Daily Planet, some time in the past year the Berkeley Planning Department removed from its website the lists of notices of decision that document the Zoning Adjustment Board’s recent approval of use permits. -more-


Berkeley’s Rent Control Ordinance Violates the U.S. Constitution By ROBERT CABRERA

COMMENTARY
Tuesday December 07, 2004

The Taking protections of our Federal (5th Amendment) Constitution is a significant protection and the envy of people throughout the world. In an era when property in parts of the world is taken by the use of force without just compensation to those displaced, this American right created in our constitution must be applied even under the most benevolent circumstances such as the good intentions of people like Chris Kavanaugh (Letters, Daily Planet, Nov. 19-22). -more-


‘Play of Daniel’ Brings Medieval Liturgical Drama To Berkeley Church By KEN BULLOCK

Special to the Planet
Tuesday December 07, 2004

Combining spectacle and intimate moments of dialogue and soliloquy in song with an extraordinary processional chorus of 40, The Play of Daniel is at St. Mark’s Episcopal Church on Bancroft Way this week in a joint production by Aurora Theatre Company and Pacific Mozart Ensemble. -more-


Holiday Spirit is Alive at Two Historic Houses By STEVEN FINACOM

Special to the Planet
Tuesday December 07, 2004

The seasonal tradition of “decking the halls” makes December a particularly colorful time to visit local house museums decorated for Christmas tours and events. -more-


Arts Calendar

Tuesday December 07, 2004

TUESDAY, DEC. 7 -more-


Fierce Debate Rages Over Monarch Migration Pattern By JOE EATON

Special to the Planet
Tuesday December 07, 2004

My thanks to Tom Butt for the reminder that the monarch butterflies have returned to their winter bivouac in the eucalyptus grove at UC’s Richmond Field Station. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Tuesday December 07, 2004

TUESDAY, DEC. 7 -more-


Sutter Locks Out Striking Workers By RICHARD BRENNEMAN and JAKOB SCHILER

Friday December 03, 2004

Sutter Health carried out its threat against nurses and other union members who staged a one-day walkout Wednesday and refused to let them go back to work Thursday morning, the start of a four-day lockout. -more-


Peralta Makes Exclusive Pact To Plan Laney Development By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN TAYLOR

Friday December 03, 2004

Over the strong objections of the Laney College president, Laney College staff representatives, and Trustee-elect Nicky González Yuen, a lame-duck session of the Peralta Community College District Board of Trustees has authorized a free-of-charge, one-year agreement with an Oakland development firm to negotiate possible commercial development of certain Laney College and Peralta District properties. -more-


Pickets Target Toxic Site Plan By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Friday December 03, 2004

Richmond residents, business folk, environmental activists and newly elected City Councilmember Gayle McLaughlin braved the 40-degree cold Wednesday morning to picket one of the entrances to Campus Bay, protesting ongoing operations at the site. -more-


Jubilee Stripped of City Funding By MATTHEW ARTZ

Friday December 03, 2004

City officials Tuesday froze funds to Jubilee Restoration Inc., its third largest non-profit housing developer, after reports submitted by the organization in response to a federal probe revealed that the organization had diverted federal funds. -more-


Elmwood Theater Renovations to Last Into New Year By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Friday December 03, 2004

Problems with renovation work are expected to delay opening of Berkeley’s Elmwood Theater until past the first of the year, but a local engineer involved in seismic retrofit of the theater building says his portion of the project is not to blame. -more-


Police Review Director Attard Bolts For San Jose By MATTHEW ARTZ

Friday December 03, 2004

Longtime Berkeley Police Review Commission Director Barbara Attard announced her resignation this week to become San Jose’s police auditor. -more-


Mylar-Induced Power Outage Hits Southside By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Friday December 03, 2004

Balloons made of Mylar and aluminum don’t mix too well with power lines, as more than 4,000 South Berkeley customers of PG&E’s electric service discovered abruptly at 9:06 Saturday morning. -more-


Shelter Warms Hearts of City’s Homeless Youth By MATTHEW ARTZ

Friday December 03, 2004

T-Rex, 25, says he has been living on Berkeley streets since he was eight. Wednesday night, however, he and his dog escaped the bitter winds blowing through their wooded hillside squat to take refuge in the city’s shelter for homeless youth. -more-


Body of Transient Found Under Max Anderson’s Deck By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Friday December 03, 2004

Linda Olivenbaum, spouse of newly elected Berkeley City Councilmember Max Anderson, Jr., made a gruesome discovery in her back yard when she went to move her car recently. -more-


Two Groups Battle for KPFA Listener Board By JAKOB SCHILLER

Friday December 03, 2004

In a hotly contested election race that ends Monday, two groups are vying for nine open seats on KPFA 94.1 FM’s Listener Station Board. -more-


ZAB Approves University Avenue Project, Bids Adieu as Capitelli Heads to Council By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Friday December 03, 2004

Berkeley Zoning Adjustments Board members greenlighted a five-story University Avenue condominium project Monday, saying they were delighted that the developer would be offering units to low-income residents. -more-


20 Years After Bhopal, Women Fight For Justice SANDIP ROY

Pacific News Service
Friday December 03, 2004

Twenty years down the road, if anything good has come from the terrible gas leak in Bhopal, India, it is the birthing of a new generation of unlikely heroes. -more-


Election 2004: Another Look At the Disputed Vote Count By BOB BURNETT

Special to the Planet, NEWS ANALYSIS
Friday December 03, 2004

Four weeks after the presidential election, there continues to be a controversy about the difference between the exit poll projections and the actual results. Almost daily, conspiracy theories surface on Internet blogs, only to be refuted a few hours later. -more-



Letters to the Editor

Friday December 03, 2004

BERKELEY TAXES -more-


Brown’s Police Chief Choice Could Help Him in ‘06 Campaign By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

UNDERCURRENTS OF THE EAST BAY AND BEYOND
Friday December 03, 2004

The Oakland chips are beginning to fall in place for Mayor Jerry Brown’s run for California attorney general in 2006, and if you thought the whole purpose of the effort was for the Oakland chips to fall in place for the rest of us in Oakland, you went and slept through part of this production, didn’t you? -more-


Police Blotter By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Friday December 03, 2004

Nondescript Slasher -more-


A New Hit From the Past: Berkeley Rep Performs Hurston’s ‘Polk County’ By KEN BULLOCK

Special to the Planet
Friday December 03, 2004

Against Thomas Lynch’s set of “life on this sorry sawmill camp”—great beams hold up roof and sidings of rusted metal, flanked by a two-story tall iron wheel, with a ragged line of treetops painted on the backdrop—Lonnie (Kevin Jackson) comes out at dawn and sings the Shack Rouser Song “Wake up . . . Day’s breakin’.” -more-


Proposed UC Bridge is Wasteful, Unnecessary By NORTHSIDE NEIGHBORHOOD ASSOCIATION and BERKELEYANS FOR A LIVABLE UNIVERSITY ENVIRONMENT

COMMENTARY
Friday December 03, 2004

On Tuesday, Dec. 7, the City Council will vote on the Foothill Bridge, which UC Berkeley proposes building on upper Hearst Avenue, at the intersection of La Loma, Hearst, and Gayley Road. To build this bridge, UC Berkeley must obtain an encroachment permit (airspace approval), from the city. -more-


The Irresponsibilities of Religion By THOMAS ULATOWSKI

COMMENTARY
Friday December 03, 2004

Since there is no worldwide religious consensus, the belief in divine revelation produces this devastating dichotomy: Either God is not almighty because He was incapable of making Himself clear regarding the existence of one true religion, or the Almighty created mostly defective people who can’t recognize His clear message. Consequently, faiths based on a revelation by a god who claims to be both omnipotent and omnibenevolent must either inculcate a prejudice against nonbelievers or an aversion to impartial consideration. -more-


For Sure-to-Please Gifts, Look to West Berkeley By ZELDA BRONSTEIN

Special to the Planet
Friday December 03, 2004

Go West, ye seekers of gifts. To be precise, go to San Pablo Avenue, to Fourth Street, and to venues nearby and in between. Here are some choice possibilities that turned up on a recent random tour of shops on the west side of town. -more-


A Play Forgotten 60 Years Ago Comes To Life in Berkeley Rep Production By BETSY M. HUNTON

Special to the Planet
Friday December 03, 2004

Berkeley Repertory is joining in a production called Polk County with Princeton’s McCarter Theatre, and here it is, the East Coast cast, same director, same staging, same everything. It sounds as if the Rep is getting off pretty easy. But it turns out that it isn’t all that easy at all, as we’ll get into later. The question now is, what’s the reason for all the hoopla? -more-


Day Trip to Sonoma, Home of the Bear Republic By MARTA YAMAMOTO

Special to the Planet
Friday December 03, 2004

It’s a beautiful, crisp morning in the town of Sonoma. Sunlight reflects off color-saturated autumn foliage and whitewashed adobe buildings. From the park in Sonoma Plaza, a pleasant walk leads you past Sonoma State Historic Park, charming boutiques, enticing eateries and beautifully restored Victorian homes. A perfect day for an extended “paseo” in the heart of wine country. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Friday December 03, 2004

FRIDAY, DEC. 3 -more-