Willis-Starbuck Remembered At Berkeley High Memorial By MATTHEW ARTZ
Berkeley said goodbye to Meleia Willis-Starbuck Friday. -more-
Berkeley said goodbye to Meleia Willis-Starbuck Friday. -more-
A deal is in place to sell the illegal West Berkeley warehouse where several long-time residents have refused to leave their homes, owner Lawrence White said Friday. -more-
Six months into its tenure, the newly constituted Peralta Community Colleges Board of Trustees has gotten mixed reviews. -more-
The young man who police say shot and killed Meleia Willis-Starbuck telephoned the former Berkeley High boys’ basketball coach over the weekend as he continued to hide from the law. -more-
The deal that ended the city’s lawsuit against the UC Berkeley’s Long Range Development Plan has survived yet another challenge. -more-
A panel of citizens, government officials and community activists appointed to advise the state on toxic waste cleanups in south Richmond will hold its second session Thursday. -more-
The fate of two landmark structures located just east of Telegraph Avenue rests in the hands of three Berkeley developers, two of them planning major developments and the third planning a new home for the vintage dwellings. -more-
A group of neighbors that unsuccessfully fought an affordable housing project all the way to the state appeals court learned Wednesday that Berkeley would have to pay for part of their legal costs. -more-
With the annual August recess approaching, the city’s land use panels will be voting this week on several major hot button planning issues and development projects. -more-
The article “Arsenal Found in Adeline St. Apartment” in the July 22 issue incorrectly reported that Black & White Liquor Store owner Sucha Singh Banger also owned Grove Market at 2948 Martin Luther King Jr. Way. -more-
One of Oaxaca, Mexico’s two major newspapers suffered a violent attack by a group of union enforcers in what some say is a part of the state government’s attempt to shut the paper down. -more-
http://www.jfdefreitas.com/index.php?path=/00_Latest%20Workµ -more-
Popular culture has given us a series of memorable duos—Laurel and Hardy, Sonny and Cher, Batman and Robin. Now the Republicans have produced George Bush and his alter ego, Karl Rove. Because of “Plamegate,” the relationship of the GOP’s dynamic duo dese rves close attention. -more-
Last week, as I was reluctantly writing a $1,500 check to send my two kids to a Berkeley summer camp, I started to think of what my parents, uncles and aunts did in the 1950s and ‘60s to provide childcare for their families during the summer months when school was out full-time. -more-
Saturday night I’m upstairs lying on my couch, which is also my bed, when my computer makes a little pinging sound alerting me that a new e-mail has arrived. I can barely get myself disengaged from the covers but since I’ve been secretly hoping that something might entice me off the couch, I get up and check my inbox. It’s a rant from my friend Karen and a part of it reads, “I’m SO useless. It’s Saturday night and I’ve got nothing to do. No life, no energy, nada. I’m reading New Yorkers dating back to March 28. What are you doing?” -more-
On July 13 at their monthly meeting, the Berkeley Board of Library Trustees announced a forum to be held Aug. 1 at the South Berkeley Senior Center, titled “RFID: What’s it all about?” The supposed aim of this forum is to assemble a group of experts who will discuss the pros and cons of radio frequency identification (RFID) equipment and the appropriateness of its installation in the Berkeley Public Library system. -more-
The installation of radio frequency identification devices in the Berkeley Public Library is a complex issue that deserves everybody’s attention. The devices are comprised of an antenna and a microchip embedded in a 2x2 inch square tag. The microchip contains information and the antenna conveys this information to readers/scanners/sensors that are within a distance of 18 inches. Often described as promiscuous, the tags will “talk” to any reader. So, if you were to borrow a book from the Central Branch and then walk into the Ross Dress for Less Store a block away, the readers in the security gates at the door will read whatever information is on the microchip that is embedded in your library book. Privacy, health, labor and costs issues come with the application of RFID in libraries. Privacy advocacy groups like Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) and the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU ) are opposed to RFID in libraries because its application is new and untested. Both groups are convinced that the privacy of library users will be compromised. For more information you can visit their websites at www.eff.org and www.aclu.org. -more-
While Bush’s mantra is “WMD,” the Berkeley Board of Library Trustees’ is “WCC” (workers compensation claims for repetitive stress Injuries). Expect to hear more about the radio frequency identification (RFID) system having been installed in the Berkeley Public Libraries to reduce WCCs for RSI; that is, unless the trustees change their minds about having Councilmember Gordon Wozniak as the panelist on RFID safety issues at their Aug. 1 RFID community forum. -more-
The recently recommended revisions to the Landmarks Preservation Ordinance are basically intended to simply and clarify a process that is currently very interpretive, often ambiguous, creating landmarks that are later overturned by the City Council. Clarifying the ordinance would help everyone by creating standards everyone understands. This would improve the functionality of the commission, assist historic preservationists in preserving unique Berkeley buildings and clarify to builders what’s an appropriate site to build on. -more-
Zelda Bronstein’s “Planner’s Alchemy” column opinion correctly pointed to a problem that’s salient in our own Planning Department—staff’s interest in having greater independence and authority even while staying professionally committed to objective service and communication. But it would be helpful to separate that from the speculation about an embedded political agenda in favor of growth at any price—what she might deplore as “dumb growth.” The two dynamics are probably not connected. -more-
I scarcely believed my ears last week when I heard Councilmember Wozniak ask staff if there was a list of all the landmarks designated thus far in Berkeley, including their dates of designation. -more-
I sure learned a lot about guns and those who love them from the recent letters to the Daily Planet that were prompted by the slaying of Meleia Willis-Starbuck and the editor’s subsequent commentary on gun control. One letter writer claims that all women should be armed with handguns in order to fend off would-be rapists. Presumably gun possession would also help prevent muggings; thus men should pack heat every time they leave the house too. While it’s true that with everyone carrying guns the potential for the damn things to go off increases and they may be used in anger rather than self defense and their proliferation will increase the possibility of them finding their way into the hands of children, drunks and the mentally impaired, it will not be the gun’s fault if someone is killed or wounded in error (that is little solace to any victim’s family, I’m sure). -more-
You know the answer to the riddle: Where does a 900-pound gorilla sit? Anywhere he wants. Forty-one years ago, during the Free Speech Movement (FSM), we learned that there is indeed a gorilla in town, but camouflaged in Blue and Gold and crying out “Go Bears!” Questions about nuclear weapons labs, the treatment of UC workers and teachers’ assistants, or deals with the City of Berkeley are finessed by the administration ultimately down—or up—to the Regents, the university’s own college of cardinals. -more-
I was standing in a gallery in the New York MOMA in April when I saw it. “Invisible Man?” I went straight across the room toward the huge photograph of a young black man, seated on a stool, hunched over a pad of paper, writing, as hundreds of electric li ght bulbs glared yellow from the walls and ceiling only an arm’s length from him. -more-
“Our Father who art in heaven ... how, how ... how?” -more-
Standing on a West Berkeley sidewalk, I watched three young barn owls jostling around in an Atlas cedar near the palm tree where they had hatched. The light was fading, but you could still see their ghostly shapes among the branches. And you couldn’t miss their incessant “feed me” calls—a vocalization described by ornithologists as the “snore.” The parents were nowhere in sight; maybe out hunting, more likely roosting nearby, away from the racket. -more-
The most appalling aspect of the bombings in Spain, in England and in Egypt in the past weeks is that the choice of victims is indiscriminate. Though it appears that the bombers have some general connection to the Islamic religion, many of the victims, perhaps most of them, do too. -more-
Editorial: Talking Through the War on the World By BECKY O'MALLEY 07-26-2005
Willis-Starbuck Remembered At Berkeley High Memorial By MATTHEW ARTZ 07-26-2005
Developer to Buy Drayage, Owner Says By MATTHEW ARTZ 07-26-2005
Newcomers Remake Peralta College Board By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR 07-26-2005
LRDP Settlement Survives Challenge; Appeal Planned By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 07-26-2005
South Richmond Toxics Panel Meets Thursday Night By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 07-26-2005
ZAB to Hear Preview of Blood House Plans By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 07-26-2005
City Made to Pay Attorney Fees in Development Suit By MATTHEW ARTZ 07-26-2005
Major Decisions Confront ZAB, Planning Commission By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 07-26-2005
Correction 07-26-2005
Editorial Cartoon By JUSTIN DEFREITAS 07-26-2005
Letters to the Editor 07-26-2005
Column: Karl Rove: The Public Eye: George Bush’s Alter Ego By BOB BURNETT 07-26-2005
Column: First Person: Summer Fun Down Home on Virginia’s Eastern Shore By WINSTON BURTON 07-26-2005
Column: Finding a Bit of Comfort in a Horizontal Household By SUSAN PARKER 07-26-2005
Police Blotter By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 07-26-2005
Commentary:Residents Wronged By False Forum By SHIRLEY STUART 07-26-2005
Commentary: RFID is a Slippery Slope By WANDA CROW 07-26-2005
Commentary: Bush Tactics at the Local Level By GENE BERNARDI 07-26-2005
Commentary: Let’s Build Clarity Into the Landmarks Preservation Ordinance By STEVEN DONALDSON 07-26-2005
Commentary: Vigilance Needed to Thwart Power Grabs By ALAN TOBEY 07-26-2005
Commentary: Landmarks Website Provides Answers By DANIELLA THOMPSON 07-26-2005
Commentary: Hands-On Experience is Unnecessary By RICHARD HOURULA 07-26-2005
Commentary: Life in a Company—I Mean, University—Town By NEAL BLUMENFELD 07-26-2005
Books: Three Voices From the Underground By DOROTHY BRYANTSpecial to the Planet 07-26-2005
Fellowship Theater Guild Takes Jesus For a Ride By KEN BULLOCK Special to the Planet 07-26-2005
Arts Calendar 07-26-2005
Inescapable Predation: Part Of Life in the Food Chain By JOE EATON Special to the Planet 07-26-2005
Arsenal Found in Adeline St. Apartment By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 07-22-2005
Source: Murder Victim Summoned Suspects to Scene By MATTHEW ARTZ 07-22-2005
Commissioners Decry ‘Hostile Takeover’ By MATTHEW ARTZ 07-22-2005
Newspaper Must Pay To See Wal-Mart Files, Judge Says By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR 07-22-2005
Gilman Ball Fields Move Closer to Realization By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 07-22-2005
Council Debates Land Use, Affordable Housing By MATTHEW ARTZ 07-22-2005
Beth-El Parking Dispute May Be Nearing Resolution By MATTHEW ARTZ 07-22-2005
Senior Housing Development Will Honor Margaret Breland BY MATTHEW ARTZ 07-22-2005
LBNL ResearchersWork Toward Cures By CASSIE NORTON 07-22-2005
UC Regents OK Hikes in Professional School Fees By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR 07-22-2005
Brower Sculpture Decision Could Come Monday By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 07-22-2005
Police Blotter By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 07-22-2005
Filings Reveal Details of Point Molate Casino Plan By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 07-22-2005
Toxics, Traffic Top Officials’ Concerns By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 07-22-2005
Rev. Jim Wallis Mobilizes the Religious Left By BOB BURNETT Special to the Planet 07-22-2005
Column: Did L.A. Times Story Spark Brown’s Sideshow Law? BY J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR UNDERCURRENTS OF THE EAST BAY AND BEYOND 07-22-2005
Letters to the Editor 07-22-2005
Untamed Albany Bulb Enriches Our Culture By PETER JOSHEFF 07-22-2005
Union Best for Honda Employees By MICHAEL COOK 07-22-2005
Commentary: Peace and Justice Commission: What You Need to Know By MICHAEL SHERMAN 07-22-2005
Commentary: Let’s Build a Parking-Free Brower Center By STEVE GELLER 07-22-2005
Midsummer Mozart’s Final Program This Weekend By IRA STEINGROOT Special to the Planet 07-22-2005
Arts Calendar 07-22-2005
El Cerrito Cafe in Danger of Falling Under Starbucks’ Wheel By JOHN GELUARDI Special to the Planet 07-22-2005
Berkeley This Week 07-22-2005
Corrections 07-22-2005
Berkeley This Week 07-26-2005