The Week

Jakob Schiller: Nancy Mancias of CodePink arranges one of 2,000 candles, marking the number of American deaths in Iraq, lit Tuesday night during a ceremony at Lake Merritt. The candles were later floated in the lake. The event, sponsored by Veterans for Peace, was also meant to remember the thousands of Iraqis killed in the war.
Jakob Schiller: Nancy Mancias of CodePink arranges one of 2,000 candles, marking the number of American deaths in Iraq, lit Tuesday night during a ceremony at Lake Merritt. The candles were later floated in the lake. The event, sponsored by Veterans for Peace, was also meant to remember the thousands of Iraqis killed in the war.
 

News

City Property Crimes High, Violence Drops By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Friday October 28, 2005

For the first eight months of the year, Berkeley proved the East Bay’s hot spot for thefts, burglaries and other forms of property crime—topping the rates for Richmond and Oakland—while the city’s crimes of violence ranked in the mid-range. -more-


Planners Consider Rezoning West Berkeley to Allow Auto Dealerships By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Friday October 28, 2005

Staring in the face of a potential $1.4 million loss in annual sales tax revenue, Berkeley Planning Commissioners decided to look further into a plan to set up portions of West Berkeley as auto sales zones after hearing a bleak preliminary report from city staff at the commission’s regular meeting Wednesday night. -more-


Volunteers Help Avert Poll Worker Crisis By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Friday October 28, 2005

Suppose they held an election in Berkeley, but no one showed up to open the polls? -more-


Construction Begins on Richmond Transit Village By F. TIMOTHY MARTIN Special to the Planet

Friday October 28, 2005

Plans for a new transit station in Richmond took a big step forward this week. -more-


Richmond Woman Killed in University Ave. Crash By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Friday October 28, 2005

A 20-year-old Richmond resident died in a fatal traffic accident at the intersection of University and San Pablo avenues at 2:30 a.m. Thursday. -more-


City Council Approves Soft Story, Condo Measures By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Friday October 28, 2005

Berkeley city councilmembers passed the second and final readings of the soft story and condominium ordinances Tuesday, as well as the city plan and zoning changes needed to construct the Gilman Street Playing Fields complex. -more-


Looking for Work and a Dry Place to Rest

Friday October 28, 2005

Photograph by Jakob Schiller: Kelly English, 35, rests under a makeshift rain shelter he made in People’s Park during the rain showers on Tuesday. A graduate of Kennedy High in Richmond and of Diablo Valley College, he handed out his resume, which said, “I bring work and personal attributes that foster positive, respectful and peaceful relationships with my co-workers and customers. I want responsible employment with a team that also values these attributes.” -more-


Police Blotter By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Friday October 28, 2005

iJacked -more-


Mary Yamashiro Otani 1923-2005 By TOM BUTT

Friday October 28, 2005

Mary Otani was born in Berkeley to hardworking immigrant parents from Okinawa. One of six children, she was a good student, and loved to play basketball. As a student at UC Berkeley, Mary was already interested in social justice, and worked with other YWCA students to support fair housing legislation. -more-


Putting on ‘The Laramie Project’ at BHS By RIO BAUCE Special to the Planet

Friday October 28, 2005

Do you ever not know what to do on a Friday or Saturday night? Do you feel like there is something going on you’re missing out on? -more-


Outsourcing Ethnic Media Knight Ridder Closes ‘Nuevo Mundo By Elena Shore Pacific News Service

Friday October 28, 2005

Latino journalists are disturbed by what they fear could be a new trend in the Hispanic media market: the outsourcing of ethnic media. -more-


Editorial Cartoon By JUSTIN DEFREITAS

Friday October 28, 2005

To view Justin DeFreitas’ latest editorial cartoon, please visit -more-


Sale of Viet Mercury Troubles Bay Area Vietnamese By ANDREW LAM Pacific News Service

Friday October 28, 2005

Unlike some ethnic enclaves, the Vietnamese-American community in Santa Clara county, does not lack for news in its own language. If anything, the community can access more news than a mainstream population reading in English only. -more-


Letters to the Editor

Friday October 28, 2005

NO DEAL -more-


Column: Dispatches From The Edge Counting the Dead: The War Moves on to Iran, Syria By Conn Hallinan

Friday October 28, 2005

In the wake of a United Nations investigation implicating a number of Syrian and Lebanese officials in the assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, the Bush administration is calling for sanctions and leaking dark hints of war. But the United States is already unofficially at war with Syria. For the past six months, U.S. Army Rangers and the Special Operations Delta Force have been crossing the border into Syria, supposedly to “interdict” terrorists coming into Iraq. Several Syrian soldiers have been killed. -more-


Column: Undercurrents: Rosa Parks is Not the Beginning of the Story J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Friday October 28, 2005

If things continue upon their present course—which “things” have that interesting habit of not always doing—somewhere in a school in North Oakland 50 years from now, a teacher will stand before a class and tell her (his) students the story of the day in 2003 when a courageous black woman, grown weary of the lies of the Bush administration, stood up by herself in the United States Congress and cast the single vote against the Iraq War Authorization, thus sparking a national movement that eventually led to both the collapse of neoconism as well as the end of the stranglehold of the radical religious right on the government of the country. -more-


Commentary: South Berkeley’s Crime Enablers By Paul Rauber

Friday October 28, 2005

I’m sitting here Tuesday night in my South Berkeley home contemplating Andrea Pritchett’s venomous Oct. 25 commentary, “No Simple Solutions for Berkeley’s Drug Problems,” when six gunshots ring out close by. I instantly call 911 and report the number of shots, and estimate direction and distance. The scariest part about it was that this is a completely ordinary part of life here—counting the shots and praying they don’t come in your window. -more-


Commentary: Bush’s Veil Over History By Kitty Kelley

Friday October 28, 2005

Secrecy has been perhaps the most consistent trait of the George W. Bush presidency. Whether it involves refusing to provide the names of oil executives who advised Vice President Dick Cheney on energy policy, prohibiting photographs of flag-draped coffins returning from Iraq, or forbidding the release of files pertaining to Chief Justice John Roberts’ tenure in the Justice Department, President Bush seems determined to control what the public is permitted to know. And he has been spectacularly effective, making Richard Nixon look almost transparent. -more-


Commentary: In Defense of City Workers By MICHAEL MARCHANT

Friday October 28, 2005

The City of Berkeley projects budget deficits into 2007. Some argue that these deficits are due to excessive compensation received by city workers. While workers certainly receive fair compensation for their work, this compensation is not the source of the problem and is far from excessive. -more-


Commentary: Talkin’ No Free Box Blues By Saul Crypps

Friday October 28, 2005

Soup stains, skid marks -more-


Commentary: A Different View of the LRDP Case By PETER MUTNICK

Friday October 28, 2005

Concerning Antonio Rossman’s remarks in the Oct. 7 Daily Planet, I would like to make several comments. Rossman says the following: “In the court’s words, ‘It therefore appears compelling that the statutory allowance for settlements in closed session not override extrinsic requirements for public proceedings.’ In lay terms and common sense: more important than settling city litigation is the right of citizens to learn in advance and influence the settlement terms.” -more-


Arts: A Psychosexual Ghost Story in Time for Halloween By KEN BULLOCK Special to the Planet

Friday October 28, 2005

With cellphones off and no chance to call 911, the audience faces the ground floor interior of an old wood house in Seattle, strewn with packing boxes, the bannister of a staircase turning up and away from the tableaux of figures facing each other at the doorway, one in bright daylight, the next in darkness, as the grandfather clock tolls the hour. -more-


Arts: Recipe For a Play: A Cooking Report From the Front Lines By KEN BULLOCK Special to the Planet

Friday October 28, 2005

“We’re cooking live on-stage, every performance,” said director Clive Chafer of TheatreFIRST’s Northern California premiere of The Arab-Israeli Cookbook, opening tonight (Friday) at the Jewish Community Center. -more-


Arts Calendar

Friday October 28, 2005

FRIDAY, OCT. 28 -more-


Bringing Classics Into the Digital Age By Ira Steingroot Special to the Planet

Friday October 28, 2005

If you are one of those damned souls who has traveled “the primrose way to the everlasting bonfire,” the well-worn path from lisping your ABCs, to juvenile reader, to adolescent bookworm, to adult bibliophile, and finally to full-blown bibliomaniac, then you know that “of making many books there is no end and much study is a weariness of the flesh.” -more-


Berkeley This Week

Friday October 28, 2005

FRIDAY, OCT. 28 -more-


Commercial Growth Lags Behind Oakland’s Downtown Housing Boom By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Tuesday October 25, 2005

Seven years after Jerry Brown was elected mayor of Oakland in part on a promise that his “10K Initiative” would lead to a retail revival in the city’s downtown, the area where the housing component has been most successful has yet to see the promised commercial development. -more-


City Proposes Traffic Fee for Developers By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Tuesday October 25, 2005

Should Berkeley charge developers a fee to help alleviate traffic generated by their projects? And, if so, how much? -more-


Study Shows City Employees Opt for Alternative Transit By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Tuesday October 25, 2005

City employees are driving less and using more alternative forms of transportation, according to a survey unveiled at Thursday night’s Transportation Commission meeting. -more-


Professor’s Stance on Torture Sparks Protest By JAKOB SCHILLER

Tuesday October 25, 2005

Mark Treeker, an organizer with the organization The World Can’t Wait, led a mock detainee through Sproul Plaza Monday afternoon. Participants rallied against Boalt Hall Professor John Yoo’s role in drafting U.S. legal memos that the group says led to torture in places such as Guantanamo Bay and Iraq. -more-


By-Right Addition, Bevatron Measures on Council Agenda By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Tuesday October 25, 2005

City Councilmembers will face a relatively light agenda when they meet tonight (Tuesday), including a proposed revision to Berkeley’s “by-right” home addition ordinance and two competing resolutions on the demolition of a UC Berkeley landmark. -more-


Mayor Pushes West Berkeley Auto Dealership Plan By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Tuesday October 25, 2005

Berkeley planning commissioners will get their first chance Wednesday to ponder rezoning West Berkeley to attract car dealerships. -more-


Professor Drops Tenure Lawsuit Against UC Berkeley By Charlotte Buchen Special to the Planet

Tuesday October 25, 2005

Ignacio Chapela, the UC Berkeley professor whose tenure battle came to symbolize the movement to protect scientific research from corporate interests, withdrew his lawsuit against the school last week, but promised to continue to “expose a deeply damaging miscarriage of the university’s mandate.” -more-


Peralta Issues Progress Reports to Accreditation Organization By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Tuesday October 25, 2005

In response to accreditation warning letters sent out by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges (WASC) earlier this year, the Peralta Community Colleges District and its four member institutions released mandated reports last week outlining progress made in addressing WASC’s criticisms. -more-


Berkeley Nurse Haunted by Katrina’s Aftermath By MAGGIE GILMOUR Special to the Planet

Tuesday October 25, 2005

A month ago, for the first time in 40 years, Barbara Morita walked into a church in El Cerrito and sat quietly in a pew. -more-


Police Blotter By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Tuesday October 25, 2005

Sex abuse alleged -more-


Letters to the Editor

Tuesday October 25, 2005

CORRECTION -more-


Column: The Public Eye: The Politics of Bush’s Machiavellian Presidency By Bob Burnett

Tuesday October 25, 2005

In his Oct. 14 New York Times column, “Questions of Character,” Paul Krugman lamented the media’s failure to discern the true character of President Bush. Krugman observed that in 2000 the press portrayed George as an “honest, likable guy” and in 2004 as “a strong effective leader.” -more-


Column:A Lost But Not Forgotten Portholed View of the World By SUSAN PARKER

Tuesday October 25, 2005

In Tony Mirosevich’s non-fiction class at San Francisco State University, we are constantly asked to explore the soft, wavy lines between truth and fiction, between what is real and what is not real. For a recent assignment we were instructed to write about a personal memory and combine it with someone else’s memory of the same event, or write our remembrance of a singular occurrence at several junctures in our lives, filtered through time, emotion, and experience. -more-


Commentary: No Simple Answers for Berkeley’s Drug Problems By Andrea Prichett

Tuesday October 25, 2005

We all know that street crime is a problem in Berkeley. While we may differ as to its causes, we all understand that the economic transformation currently underway in South Berkeley is a huge contributor to that problem. Economic dislocation and gentrification are the realities of South Berkeley. In many neighborhoods, economic “gaps” between residents contribute to generate tension and suspicion. Newly arrived, white neighbors are offen are offended by the conditions they find in these neighborhoods. Working closely with police to identify “suspicious” people and “drug dealers,” neighborhood groups are finding “creative ways” to “combat” drug dealers. Apparently, this includes holding an 75-year-old woman responsible for “allowing” drug activity in her neighborhood. -more-


Commentary: The Dark Side of Cal By DAVID BAKER

Tuesday October 25, 2005

Smart students! Nobel prizes! Touchdowns! Is this what the “blue and gold” means to you? If so, you may not realize that along with the good comes a dark side that dominates the lives of those who live near UC. If gold reflects the prestige and glamor of UC Berkeley, then blue represents the bruised and distressed Berkeleyans who underwrite that glamor. -more-


Books: A Berkeley Philosopher’s Search for God and California By PHIL McARDLE Special to the Planet

Tuesday October 25, 2005

Josiah Royce (1855-1916) was born at 207 Mill St. in Grass Valley, high in the Sierra gold country, and spent the first 10 years of his life there. He remembered the town as full of weather-beaten old shacks and rusting machinery. Years later his wife described it as “a place that was nothing in a situation that was nowhere.” -more-


Soleri Gives Goodbye Tour With Piccolo Teatro di Milano By IRA STEINGROOT Special to the Planet

Tuesday October 25, 2005

Modern Italian theater began in the 16th century with the first commedia dell’arte troupes. Drawing upon a vast reservoir of fools from every village and town in Italy, they created the well-known masked characters of the lovers Pierrot and Columbine, the old dotard Pantaloon and his constant antagonist the ridiculous Doctor, the intriguer Brighella, the braggart Captain, cowardly Scaramouch, Punchinello, source of the English Punch, and, the most famous clown of all, Harlequin. -more-


Arts Calendar

Tuesday October 25, 2005

TUESDAY, OCT. 25 -more-


In Defense of the Sometimes Annoying Barn Owl By JOE EATON Special to the Planet

Tuesday October 25, 2005

I don’t usually do advocacy; sitting back and watching things go to hell is more my style. But with Halloween approaching, it seems like an auspicious time to make a pitch for the barn owls of Berkeley. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Tuesday October 25, 2005

TUESDAY, OCT. 25 -more-


Opinion

Editorials

Editorial: Complaints, Constitution Clash in South Berkeley By BECKY O'MALLEY

Friday October 28, 2005

In September of 2001, the average house in zip code 94703 sold for $375,000. In September of 2005, the average house in 94703 sold for $780,000. -more-


Guest Editorial: Arnold’s Very Special Election By JAN FREL AlterNet

Tuesday October 25, 2005

EDITOR’S NOTE: On Monday morning I sat down at the computer to do my duty by writing an editorial telling our (very few) clueless readers how to vote in the ridiculous special election. Before I wrote it, I checked my e-mail, and mirabile dictu, my friend Kim in Santa Cruz had already forwarded to me this excellent AlterNet piece on the very same topic. I took this as a sign from on high that I could skip my usual two hours of work, since I had nothing to add—except one thing. Here in Greater Berkeley a few of us have a tendency to think we’re so advanced we don’t need to vote anymore, and that our votes might not be counted right anyhow. This one’s different. We don’t just need to win, we need to rack up really big majorities to put Schwarzenegger in his place once and for all. Vote early and often, and tell your friends. -more-