The Week

Jakob Schiller 
          WALKING IN JACK LONDON’S FOOTSTEPS
          Chris Lyles of Oakland and Ayesha Jamal of Sacramento rest under a statue of Jack London during an afternoon outing at Oakland’s Jack London Square on Thursday. S
Jakob Schiller WALKING IN JACK LONDON’S FOOTSTEPS Chris Lyles of Oakland and Ayesha Jamal of Sacramento rest under a statue of Jack London during an afternoon outing at Oakland’s Jack London Square on Thursday. S
 

News

Berkeley Man Arraigned in Shooting of Police Officer By MATTHEW ARTZ

Friday May 20, 2005

The 36-year-old Berkeley man accused of shooting a Berkeley police officer Tuesday morning will remain held without bail at Santa Rita Prison, Alameda County Superior Court Judge Winfred Scott ruled Thursday. -more-


City Council Votes to Disclose UC Settlement By MATTHEW ARTZ

Friday May 20, 2005

Under intense public pressure, the City Council voted unanimously Tuesday to request that UC release it from a confidentiality agreement that has kept settlement talks over a town-gown legal dispute out of the public view. -more-


BART Workers Protest Cuts By MATTHEW ARTZ

Friday May 20, 2005

Facing the loss of 115 jobs and the threat of no raises over the next four years, BART workers Wednesday took to the stations to marshal rider support before they head back to the negotiating table. -more-


UC, University of Texas Vie For Weapons Lab Contract By JUDITH SCHERR

Special to the Planet
Friday May 20, 2005

While the University of Texas and the University of California arm to fight each other for a $60 million contract to run Los Alamos National Laboratory nuclear weapons research and development facility, peace advocates say the competition is misdirected and the debate should focus instead on the danger of developing weapons of mass destruction. -more-


Council Fails to Resolve Debate Over Commission Cuts By MATTHEW ARTZ

Friday May 20, 2005

The fate of Berkeley’s many citizen commissions remains in question after the City Council Tuesday failed to reach a consensus on reducing the number of times city commissions will be able to meet. -more-


Jefferson School Debates What’s in a Name By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Friday May 20, 2005

A day before ballots went out to the Jefferson Elementary community to decide the fate of the school name, parents and teachers met at the West Berkeley school to discuss the controversial issue. -more-


Germany’s Great Silence on World War II Legacy By MICHAEL SCOTT MOORE Pacific News Service

Friday May 20, 2005

BERLIN—On a calm spring day in Berlin recently, a horse with a dead-looking soldier on its back clopped across the cobblestones of a leafy neighborhood. The soldier wore a gas mask and slumped forward on the horse’s mane, or wobbled dangerously in the saddle. -more-


Letters to the Editor

Friday May 20, 2005

NEWSWEEK -more-


The Challenge of Growing Good Samaritans By P.M. PRICE The ViewFrom Here

Friday May 20, 2005

Upon discovering that my teenage daughter was writing an essay on William Golding’s seminal novel Lord of the Flies, I had her view the film version with me, a film that absolutely terrified me when I first saw it at about the age of 10. We watched it al ong with my 10-year-old son who couldn’t bear to watch the whole thing. “Why are they being so mean to him?” he cried, tears streaming down his face as he turned away from witnessing boys his own age stone pudgy, philosophical “Piggy” to death. -more-


Closing Kaiser Convention Center Doesn’t Make Sense J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Friday May 20, 2005

As was earlier announced, here and elsewhere, Mayor Jerry Brown is proposing shutting down the Kaiser Convention Center as a “cost-saving” venture to “balance Oakland’s budget.” Noting in a “Budget Facts” document on the mayor’s proposed policy budget for fiscal year 2005-07 released by City Administrator Deborah A. Edgerly that we are looking at a $32 million shortfall in those years, we learn that in order to help close that shortfall, Mr. Brown proposed to “shut [the Convention Center’s] doors on Jan. 1, 2006, upon completion of existing contracts with community groups. This closure will eliminate the growing annual city subsidy to the facility of an estimated $0.4 million per year, and result in the elimination of 20 positions, mostly part-time.” -more-



Getting Lucky By CAROL DENNEY Special to the Planet

Friday May 20, 2005

Tom got lucky with a waitress 22 years ago, and the baby she had alone came out to California to see him. -more-


Police Blotter By MATTHEW ARTZ

Friday May 20, 2005

Computer Violence -more-


Busting the Fillibuster: GOP Goes Nuclear By CHRISTIAN HARTSOCK Commentary

Friday May 20, 2005

In the debate over President Bush’s appeals court nominees, Democrats are kicking and screaming over the possibility that Republicans may seriously use their congressional majority to their advantage, and in so doing force Democrats to play by the rules and actually vote on the nominees. -more-


Youth Deserve the Right to Vote By RIO BAUCE Commentary

Friday May 20, 2005

On May 2, the City of Berkeley Youth Commission voted 10-1-1 to approve a two-part proposal, recommending that the Berkeley City Council support state legislation to allow local choice in setting a voting age of 16 years or older and send the previously proposed ballot initiative back to the Youth Commission for them to hold a public hearing on the details of an amendment in Berkeley regarding lowering the voting age to 16, if and when the state permits such an action. -more-


Himalayan Fair Brings Celebrations to Live Oak Park By KEN BULLOCK Special to the Planet

Friday May 20, 2005

Opening with a Puja, a ritual of blessing conducted by lamas, and closing with the sounds of Karma Moffett’s Long Horns, the 22nd annual Himalayan Fair transforms Live Oak Park this weekend into an open-air market for art, antiques and clothing, with foodstalls and traditional performing arts from Tibet, Nepal, India, Pakistan, Afghanistan and Mongolia. -more-


Documentary Shows Living Glimpse of Berkeley Activism By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Friday May 20, 2005

If Michael Moore represents the modern face of documentary filmmaking—in which the filmmaker doubles as star of the show, dominating the onscreen time with questions and commentary—then Smith College Master of Social Work candidate Lindsay Duckles must be the old school, where the filmmaker gets out of the way and lets the subject tell the story. -more-


Arts Calendar

Friday May 20, 2005

FRIDAY, MAY 20 -more-


Walk Your Way Through Oakland’s Historic Districts By MARTA YAMAMOTO Special to the Planet

Friday May 20, 2005

Whenever I travel the first thing I search out is a guided walking tour. It’s my favorite way to get up close and notice the details that lend character and uniqueness to a business district or neighborhood. When the visual is supplemented with interesting stories and pieces of history, the experience is magnified. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Friday May 20, 2005

FRIDAY, MAY 20 -more-


AC Transit Directors Ponder 5 Ways to Increase Bus Fares By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Tuesday May 17, 2005

With continued budget shortfalls looming, the AC Transit Board of Directors has scheduled public hearings this week on proposed fare increases or fare restructuring, as well as a proposed new $24 parcel tax on the 2005 or 2006 ballot. -more-


City Council Considers UC Deal Behind Closed Doors By MATTHEW ARTZ

Tuesday May 17, 2005

The Berkeley City Council will meet in closed session today (Tuesday) to discuss its lawsuit against UC Berkeley. There will be a 20-minute public comment session at 9 p.m. before the council goes behind closed doors. Councilmember Dona Spring said that the council could take a vote at the meeting on a city deal to drop its lawsuit against the university. -more-


NeighborsPropose OwnDesign forWest Campus By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Tuesday May 17, 2005

Neighbors of West Campus, the school district’s property on University Avenue, got their first glimpse of the conceptual plan for the site Thursday night and most didn’t like it. -more-


Fate of Controversial Sculpture May Be Decided in Council Chambers By MATTHEW ARTZ

Tuesday May 17, 2005

A $50,000 public art project to delineate the border between South Berkeley and North Oakland has created a rift among Berkeley officials and appears headed for a City Council vote. -more-


Agency Finds a Better Way for Foster Children By MATTHEW ARTZ

Tuesday May 17, 2005

Shamean Trucks spent most of her youth as a foster kid, feeling like an unloved outsider in her own home. But thanks to a placement made three years ago by Berkeley’s only foster care and adoption agency, she is entering adulthood as a member of a tight-knit family. -more-


‘Flying Cottage’ Hits Turbulence Over Parking Lot By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Tuesday May 17, 2005

What was thought to have been a soft landing for South Shattuck Avenue’s long-disputed “flying cottage” may end up being a head-first crash into the hard asphalt of a backyard parking lot. -more-


ZAB Subcommittee Tackles Density Bonus By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Tuesday May 17, 2005

Members of a Zoning Adjustments Board (ZAB) panel took their first crack at a tough and complicated nut Thursday afternoon: the density bonus. -more-


Film Depicts Struggle at Alternative School By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Tuesday May 17, 2005

Earlier this year, students at Berkeley Alternative and Berkeley High schools joined together to challenge a decision by Berkeley High administrators to exclude BAHS students from several after-school Berkeley High activities. -more-


Paul Farmer to Graduates: Healthcare is a Human Right By JUDITH SCHERR Special to the Planet

Tuesday May 17, 2005

In the rich world, public health workers battle fat; where people are poor, they fight starvation. -more-


Tuk Tuk Thai & Asian Market Opens on University Ave. By LYDIA GANS Special to the Planet

Tuesday May 17, 2005

The shelves are lined with cans of jackfruit, mango, coconut, lychee, palm, pineapple, aloe vera, bananas; with sealed packages of dried radishes, turnips, fish, squid and anchovies; with jars of pickled gooseberries, cucumbers, salted prunes, garlic. There are dried spices, chilis of all degrees of hotness, nine different flavors of curry paste and dozens of varieties of bottled sauces. Except for some cans of Dole pineapple chunks and a bottle of Heinz ketchup everything else comes from Thailand. -more-



Letters to the Editor

Tuesday May 17, 2005

PRESERVATION -more-


Column:The Public Eye: It’s Time to Demand a Common-Sense Energy Policy By Bob Burnett

Tuesday May 17, 2005

In response to rapidly rising gasoline prices, President Bush called for Congress to pass his energy plan even while admitting that such an action wouldn’t reduce costs. “I wish I could simply wave a magic wand and lower gas prices tomorrow … [my bill won’t] change the price at the pump today.” -more-


Column: Early Morning Earthquake Brings Thoughts of an Old Friend By Susan Parker

Tuesday May 17, 2005

Did you feel the earthquake two weeks ago at 4 a.m.? At our house there was pandemonium. Andrea ran into my room and threatened to jump into bed with me. Willie woke up and asked what was going on. Downstairs, Ralph and Whiskers slept through it, but upstairs was ablaze with light and activity. It was like a hysterical pajama party. -more-


Police Blotter By MATTHEW ARTZ

Tuesday May 17, 2005

Police Nab Fleeing Passengers -more-


Commentary: Citizens Have Right to Know How City is Run

Tuesday May 17, 2005

EDITOR’S NOTE: -more-


Commentary: Fay Stender, Good Samaritan By BRIAN GLUSS

Tuesday May 17, 2005

Fay Abrahams Stender, a world-renowned liberal lawyer and pacifist, died May 19, 1980, as a direct result of six gunshot wounds suffered in 1979, in her home in Berkeley. A city resident for most of her good life, she was born of a long line of Berkeley-born family. -more-


Commentary: Slaving for the Progressives By THOMAS GANGALE

Tuesday May 17, 2005

Remember the old progressive values: better working conditions, shorter work weeks, higher wages? These issues hark back to the capital “P” Progressive Era, when workers struggled to win decent wages and working conditions from the Robber Barons. The movement made great gains in the early and middle 20th century, and fell victim to its own success as its core values became less important, nearly forgotten altogether. These issues ought to be front and center on the progressive stage once again. American middle class incomes have been stagnant for 30 years, and income inequality is the highest it’s been since the Gilded Age of laissez faire capitalism. -more-


Commentary: Mexicans Want Not Just Choice, But Change By DAVID BACON Pacific News Service

Tuesday May 17, 2005

MEXICO CITY—On May Day 1.2 million people filled the streets of Mexico City, the largest protest demonstration in Mexican history. This great, peaceful outpouring cried out for formal democracy at the ballot box, true choice in the country’s coming national elections and a basic change in its direction. -more-


TheatreFIRST Stages Three Acts of War By KEN BULLOCK Special to the Planet

Tuesday May 17, 2005

With Making Noise Quietly, TheatreFIRST has something of an oxymoron: a low-key tour de force. Maybe a double oxymoron, considering the title. So many shows try in good faith to make statements about war, or about the social or simply human situation that leads up to it, taking on the subject either directly, or with a great deal of irony. In Making Noise Quietly, British playwright Robert Holman shows what comes out of it, with no big displays of violence, brutality or overwrought emotionalism, and only the driest, most transparent irony. -more-


Arts Calendar

Tuesday May 17, 2005

TUESDAY, MAY 17 -more-


Fighting the Bay Area Invasion of Signal Crayfish By JOE EATON Special to the Planet

Tuesday May 17, 2005

A couple of weeks ago, over Tuscan roast pork and some good wine, I asked a fellow dinner guest who works on the UC campus if there were still three-spined sticklebacks in Strawberry Creek. He wasn’t sure about the sticklebacks, but he said the crayfish were still around. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Tuesday May 17, 2005

TUESDAY, MAY 17 -more-


Opinion

Editorials

Keeping Our Cities Alive By BECKY O'MALLEY Editorial

Friday May 20, 2005

On the first of May we had the pleasure of dropping in at three homes on the Bringing Back the Natives garden tour which we learned about from Ron Sullivan’s article in these pages. This was not one of your elegant events featuring name architects and landscape designers which are staged, with pricey admission fees, for the benefit of good causes, though we’ve enjoyed some of those too. This one was more basic: just an outright public relations triumph designed to show anybody who’s interested what you can, yes, try at home. The three sites were in the Northeast Richmond flats, numbered streets not far from Barrett and San Pablo. The houses there are modest in scale, and the small gardens on flat city plots were designed and executed by the homeowners themselves. Showcasing native plants in luxuriant display, they demonstrated gardening with minimal water to attract butterflies and other wildlife to the city. That area is a fertile alluvial plain, better for gardening than hilltop view lots. Look at the web page bringingbackthenatives.net to get a glimpse of what they’re up to. -more-


Editorial: Social Notes From All Over By BECKY O'MALLEY

Tuesday May 17, 2005

Well, I think we can safely say that the fast-track canonization of John Paul II is a sure thing now. Not only has the new Pope waived the waiting period, but the requisite miracle has occurred. Anna DeLeon, the pride of Immaculate Heart High School, who has arm-wrestled for months or even years with developer Patrick Kennedy, has brought him to his knees. Anna’s Jazz Island bar opened on Saturday night in Kennedy’s Gaia Building. It is the heir to a long line of struggles and failures by wanna-be impresarios who didn’t have the muscle to collect on Kennedy’s promise to devote the first floor of the building to some cultural use in return for an extra story or two of student apartments upstairs. What Anna brought to the party that earlier would-be tenants lacked: (1) a law degree from Boalt, a good match for Kennedy’s Ivy League law degree; (2) extremely good political connections from years of swimming in leftish waters; (3) quick wits; (4) incredible tenacity and general chutzpah. -more-