The Week

Stephan Babuljak: Little Tibet co-owner Tseten Khangsar helps UC Berkeley student Shelley Meabon try on clothing at the shop on Wednesday..
Stephan Babuljak: Little Tibet co-owner Tseten Khangsar helps UC Berkeley student Shelley Meabon try on clothing at the shop on Wednesday..
 

News

Council Approves Loan For Brower Center By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Friday January 27, 2006

Berkeley city councilmembers voted Tuesday to pledge $4 million in federal funds to pay for community services and affordable housing as collateral for a federal loan to help fund the David Brower Center and Oxford Plaza. -more-


Boom Ends For South Asian Shops Competition Heats Up in Berkeley’s ‘Little India’ By Riya Bhattacharjee Special to the Planet

Friday January 27, 2006

Sitting in his curio shop on University Avenue, Tsewang Khangsar recalls the onerous journey that he had made almost 45 years ago across the Himalayas from Tibet. -more-


Focus on West Berkeley Getting the Job Done By MARTA YAMAMOTO Special to the Planet

Friday January 27, 2006

There’s no denying that Berkeley has a worldwide reputation, not always positive. From humble beginnings in the 1850s, through the turbulent 1960s and up to today, Berkeley’s citizens are seldom shy about voicing their passions. -more-


Density Bonus Committee Explores Retail, In-Lieu Fees By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Friday January 27, 2006

Members of the joint commission formed to look into the city’s density bonus are moving closer to formulating suggestions for a new ordinance. -more-


Report: Oakland May Be Closer to a Teacher Strike By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Friday January 27, 2006

A report on negotiations between the Oakland Unified School District and the Oakland Education Association has brought the city closer to a teacher strike or closer to a settlement. -more-


Planners Ponder Creeks, Car Dealers, Transportation Fees By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Friday January 27, 2006

Planning Commissioners tackled creeks, cars dealerships and a proposed transportation services fee Wednesday—long-term issues that will eventually result in new city ordinances. -more-


Captain Yee: The Truth About Guantanamo By Pacific News Service

Friday January 27, 2006

In September 2003, two days after receiving an excellent evaluation, Chaplain James Yee was arrested, charged with espionage and thrown into solitary confinement for 76 days. When he left the Army in 2005 after all charges were dropped, he received a medal. He recounts his journey from Muslim American poster boy to “enemy of the state” in his memoir, For God and Country. Yee was interviewed by Sandip Roy, host of “UpFront,” New America Media's radio program. -more-


The Paper Ceiling By NICK GUROFF Pacific News Service

Friday January 27, 2006

Brenda ran Los Angeles’ citywide marathon representing John Adams Middle School. After finishing at the top of her age group, she felt “on top of the world.” -more-


Fire Department Log By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Friday January 27, 2006

Two-alarm blaze -more-


Police Blotter By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Friday January 27, 2006

Burglar nailed -more-


Berkeley Mourns Slain Teenager By RIO BAUCE Special to the Planet

Tuesday January 24, 2006

Hundreds of people gathered at St. Joseph the Worker Church on Friday to mourn the death of 15-year-old Berkeley High School sophomore Alberto Salvador Villareal-Morales. -more-


Legal Setback for Marin Ave. Change By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Tuesday January 24, 2006

A Hayward judge has handed down a mixed victory for Raymond Chamberlin’s lawsuit challenging the reduction of traffic lanes on Marin Avenue. -more-


KPFA Chief Steps Down After Troubled Reign By SUZANNE LA BARRE Special to the Planet

Tuesday January 24, 2006

Amid a flurry of controversy, KPFA-FM General Manager Roy Campanella II has stepped down. -more-


Lake Merritt Tree Supporters Unmoved By Public Works Tour By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Tuesday January 24, 2006

If an Oakland Public Works Agency guided walk around the south end of Lake Merritt was designed to dampen criticism of the city’s plan to remove more than 200 trees, it didn’t exactly work. -more-


AC Transit Plan to Delete Stops Draws Riders’ Ire By DANIEL DeBOLT Special to the Planet

Tuesday January 24, 2006

AC transit’s plan to “delete” 44 bus stops in Berkeley, Alameda and Oakland next week to provide faster and more reliable service has angered many riders who depend on those stops. -more-


Peralta District Officials Delay Release of Report By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Tuesday January 24, 2006

A much-anticipated Board of Trustees presentation on the Peralta Community College District International and Global Education Department has been postponed. -more-


Attorney General Signs Off on Point Molate Settlement By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Tuesday January 24, 2006

With the approval of state Attorney General Bill Lockyer, the lawsuit filed by environmentalists over the sale of Richmond’s Point Molate is history. -more-


Liquor Store Appeal, Brower Plaza Lead City Council Agenda By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Tuesday January 24, 2006

Berkeley city councilmembers will hear an appeal Tuesday by the owner of Dwight Way Liquor, who wants to overturn a Zoning Adjustments Board (ZAB) decision declaring the store a public nuisance. -more-


Density Bonuses, Creeks and Liquor Store on Land Use Meeting Agendas By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Tuesday January 24, 2006

Density bonuses, West Berkeley zoning changes and creeks are among the land use issues city officials will be considering this week. -more-


Golden Gate Fields Mall Opponents Hold Rally By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Tuesday January 24, 2006

Opponents of a plan to build a shopping mall in a Golden Gate Fields parking lot are holding a rally Thursday in the form of an old-fashioned ice cream social. -more-


Immigration Agents Hunt for 500,000 Absconders From the Filipino Reporter

Tuesday January 24, 2006

In an unprecedented crackdown on more than 500,000 absconders—illegal immigrants who have not followed deportation orders—U.S. authorities this year are nearly tripling the number of federal officers assigned to round up such fugitives. -more-


Police Blotter By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Tuesday January 24, 2006

Brandisher boogies -more-


News Analysis: Evo Morales and the Roots of Revolution By ROGER BURBACH Pacific News Service

Tuesday January 24, 2006

COCHABAMBA, Bolivia—The inauguration of Evo Morales as the first president of Bolivia of indigenous origins marks a watershed in the history of the Americas. The “caras,” whites and mestizos who have dominated Bolivia for centuries, are being replaced by an Indian who represents the country’s true majority. -more-


Opinion

Editorials

Editorial Oakland’s Charms Often Unappreciated By BECKY O'MALLEY

Friday January 27, 2006

Today’s letters column contains an indignant response from an Oakland booster to a recent commentary from a Berkeley man who seems to think that Oakland will be getting a lot of new residents who won’t have much to entertain them. And also, that Berkeley’s much-hyped new Arts District is entertainment central, but there are not enough downtown residents to enjoy the fun. Oakland has every right to be annoyed. -more-


Editorial: Speaking Truth, Getting Power By BECKY O'MALLEY

Tuesday January 24, 2006

Bernie Sanders has been in town this week, and he’s, to coin a phrase, a breath of fresh air. This is a man who seems never to hesitate to say and do exactly what he thinks is right, and it’s only been good for him. He was once the mayor of Burlington, Vermont, and for years he’s been the sole member of the U.S. House of Representatives from that small state. His biggest claim to fame is that he’s an independent, not a Democrat, in a state where Democrats and Republicans have traded off in political jobs most of the time. Now he’s running to replace retiring independent (formerly Republican) Senator James Jefferds, against someone he describes as “the richest person in Vermont,” a real Republican candidate who’s expected to spend as much as he wants of his own considerable fortune to beat Bernie. The Sanders camp thinks that they can hold their own, in a state where only about 600,000 souls live with three or four hundred thousand voting, for about $5 million. That’s a big number, but nothing like as big as expenditures in more populous states like California, where the war chest for a senate race is more like $15 million. So Bernie is touring the country unabashedly trying to raise what he needs to win, and judging by the enthusiasm with which he was received at the Berkeley function I attended, he’s well on his way. Turns out a lot of people still admire a person who speaks his mind. -more-


Cartoons

Correction

Friday January 27, 2006

Public Comment

Editorial Cartoon By JUSTIN DEFREITAS

Friday January 27, 2006

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


Letters to the Editor

Friday January 27, 2006

TRANSIT VILLAGE -more-


Commentary: Is a Transit Village Economically Feasible? By Robert Lauriston

Friday January 27, 2006

Since I first saw the city’s Caltrans grant application last month, I had the gut feeling that the 50 units per acre it envisioned was nowhere near dense enough to make a for-profit project on the site economically feasible. This week, I finally found the data to back up that guess: a 2004 study performed by the Berkeley consulting firm Strategic Economics for the East Bay Community Foundation. -more-


Commentary: Karl Marx Was Right By Alan Christie Swain

Friday January 27, 2006

Karl Marx was right; he only had to wait a little longer. Marxists once claimed that European capitalism was advancing into its final stages, decadence would overwhelm the West and capitalism’s contradictions would cause the system to collapse. Today, demographic collapse and cultural decadence may finally usher in the end stage of the ancient culture we share with Europe. -more-


Commentary: The Destruction of Lake Merritt By James Sayre

Friday January 27, 2006

Thank you for publishing your Jan. 24 front-page story, “Lake Merritt Tree Supporters Unmoved by Public Works Tour.” It revealed some new and troubling details about the Oakland city staff’s mentality behind its pig-headed plans to “rebuild” the Lake Merritt shorelines by killing more than 200 mature trees. This mentality seems to be “we had to destroy the shoreline to save it.” This would seem to parallel the Bush plan for Iraq: first destroy it and then rebuilt it at an obscene profit, as per the notorious no-bid contracts let to Halliburton. -more-


Letters to the Editor

Tuesday January 24, 2006

CORRECTION -more-


Editorial Cartoon By JUSTIN DEFREITAS

Tuesday January 24, 2006

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


Commentary: Pension Fund Problems Behind Berkeley Honda Dispute By JIM DOTEN

Tuesday January 24, 2006

First of all, I want to say that despite all the turmoil that has occurred since I sold my Honda dealership, I have been pleased at so many positive references to how Jim Doten Honda was viewed by the Berkeley community. That is very important to me. I want to assure all the citizens of Berkeley that I sold the franchise to a group in whom I have the utmost confidence. I believe that they are committed to being good corporate citizens and have the talent, dedication and wherewithal to grow the business to new levels, providing many more jobs and sales tax revenues to the community that I have served for 31 years. -more-


Commentary: Cultural Space Not for Private Parties By ANNA DE LEON

Tuesday January 24, 2006

Thank you for this community forum to discuss issues that affect the whole community. I feel compelled to respond to the letter written by Gloria Atherstone, owner of Glass Onion Catering Company, also the tenant who rents the performance space and mezzanine at the Gaia Building. She signs her letter as Gaia Arts Management, Inc. She asserts that the private party-turned-melee on Jan. 7 was “not facilitated in any way by Glass Onion Catering, Gaia Arts Management or Panoramic Interests.” The party was held in a building owned by Panoramic Interests, in a space rented and managed by Ms. Atherstone. Yet no one takes responsibility for this private party that attracted hundreds, kept my customers away and had to be shut down by the police. -more-


Commentary: Berkeley Needs More Density on BART Site By Jonathan Stephens

Tuesday January 24, 2006

The reason that I moved to South Berkeley a few years ago was to become part of a community that shared my vision for an inclusive society that valued diversity and compassion above all other things. While I still feel deeply committed to a world that is centered more on the common good of its citizens than petty economic pursuits, I do feel that there needs to be a little flexibility and open mindedness when it comes to the growing need for high-density housing options here in Berkeley. -more-


Commentary: Line Rage By WINSTON BURTON

Tuesday January 24, 2006

Before you read this article, take a five count. Slowly inhale through your nose for five seconds, hold your breath for five seconds and then slowly exhale through your mouth counting to five. -more-



Columns

Column: The Public Eye: The Death of the Triumphant Individual By Bob Burnett

Friday January 27, 2006

In a March article in The New Republic, Robert Reich wrote of four essential American stories. One of these is “the triumphant individual,” the little guy who pulls himself up by the bootstraps. Thanks to the Bush administration, that story has died for most Americans. -more-


Column: Undercurrents: Debating the Future of Oakland By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Staff
Friday January 27, 2006

Competitive elections give citizens a rare opportunity: a chance to participate in a discussion that could actually affect the future of their community. -more-


About the House: Detailed Inspections Can Benefit Sellers By MATT CANTOR

Friday January 27, 2006

Eighteen years ago, when I started in the inspection business, my clients were always buyers and never sellers. In fact, sellers and, all too often, their agents, viewed the inspection as an assault on their homes. This was often miserable and I was sometimes foolish enough to take the bait and join in the adversarial tone of the conflict. When sellers insisted on being home, pitch-fork in hand to defend their turf from my unfair assertions, I would debate and even argue on occasion. -more-


Garden Variety: Garden Preparation Means Getting to Know the Dirt By RON SULLIVAN

Friday January 27, 2006

Last week I counseled patience with a newly acquired garden. Honest to Ceres, it really does pay off, or at least cost less in terms of lost plants and ego-damage, to wait a full year before doing anything major and permanent to your land. You don’t have to sit on your thumbs: put in some encouraging annuals, watch when sprouts from whatever was left behind, and get your hands in the dirt in the meantime. You know you want to. -more-



Column: Late December, 1963 (Oh, What a Night) By SUSAN PARKER

Tuesday January 24, 2006

My New York friends took me to see the musical Jersey Boys at the August Wilson Theatre on 52nd Street in Manhattan. They thought that because I grew up in the Garden State I would identify with, at the very least, the title. And in some ways I did. Jersey Boys, the story of Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons, was familiar because, like almost everyone from the ‘burbs in the early ‘60s, I grew up with their music. -more-


Trees Manage Water to the Benefit of the Atmosphere By RON SULLIVAN Special to the Planet

Tuesday January 24, 2006

It’s only on my worst, most misanthropic days that I suspect most of my fellow humans of not noticing that the trees around us are more than overdecorated hatracks. We all know they’re alive, right? And we all know, or ought to, that they’re in motion, growing, moving (though at a pace we’re ill-equipped to see), performing, building the massive edifices of themselves with light and carbon and air. -more-


Arts & Events

Arts Calendar

Friday January 27, 2006

FRIDAY, JAN. 27 -more-


Arts: A Graceful and EvocativeOne-Woman Performance By KEN BULLOCKSpecial to the Planet

Friday January 27, 2006

“Early in the morning, always early, I come to throw dead shoes in the river ... today the river must eat.” -more-



About the House: Detailed Inspections Can Benefit Sellers By MATT CANTOR

Friday January 27, 2006

Eighteen years ago, when I started in the inspection business, my clients were always buyers and never sellers. In fact, sellers and, all too often, their agents, viewed the inspection as an assault on their homes. This was often miserable and I was sometimes foolish enough to take the bait and join in the adversarial tone of the conflict. When sellers insisted on being home, pitch-fork in hand to defend their turf from my unfair assertions, I would debate and even argue on occasion. -more-


Garden Variety: Garden Preparation Means Getting to Know the Dirt By RON SULLIVAN

Friday January 27, 2006

Last week I counseled patience with a newly acquired garden. Honest to Ceres, it really does pay off, or at least cost less in terms of lost plants and ego-damage, to wait a full year before doing anything major and permanent to your land. You don’t have to sit on your thumbs: put in some encouraging annuals, watch when sprouts from whatever was left behind, and get your hands in the dirt in the meantime. You know you want to. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Friday January 27, 2006

FRIDAY, JAN. 27 -more-


Arts Calendar

Tuesday January 24, 2006

TUESDAY, JAN. 24 -more-


Arts: Ragged Wing Is a Welcome Addition to Local Theater By KEN BULLOCK Special to the Planet

Tuesday January 24, 2006

“When we reach the end, we shall know more than we know now. Once upon a time...” -more-


Trees Manage Water to the Benefit of the Atmosphere By RON SULLIVAN Special to the Planet

Tuesday January 24, 2006

It’s only on my worst, most misanthropic days that I suspect most of my fellow humans of not noticing that the trees around us are more than overdecorated hatracks. We all know they’re alive, right? And we all know, or ought to, that they’re in motion, growing, moving (though at a pace we’re ill-equipped to see), performing, building the massive edifices of themselves with light and carbon and air. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Tuesday January 24, 2006

TUESDAY, JAN. 24 -more-