The Week

Photo by Richard Brenneman: Sitting besides the shrine that friends were erecting, Afeni Gaines describes her encounter with the tattooed gunman who shot and killed her husband Aderian in the front bedroom of their home on Prince Street in South Berkeley Saturday night.Ã
Photo by Richard Brenneman: Sitting besides the shrine that friends were erecting, Afeni Gaines describes her encounter with the tattooed gunman who shot and killed her husband Aderian in the front bedroom of their home on Prince Street in South Berkeley Saturday night.Ã
 

News

Man Killed, Another Injured at Birthday Fete By Richard Brenneman

Tuesday March 28, 2006

A South Berkeley birthday party for a 15-year-old turned lethal Saturday night after the host tried to relieve a heavily tattooed man of a black pistol. -more-


It’s the End For Act 1&2 Theatre By SUZANNE LA BARRE

Tuesday March 28, 2006

A Berkeley cinema staple for 35 years has closed. -more-


Peralta Considers Compton College By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor

Tuesday March 28, 2006

The state chancellor of the California Community College system has asked the Peralta Colleges to become the administrative agent for Compton Community College in an effort to keep the troubled, 6,600-student Southern California school from being disbanded on June 30 because of loss of accreditation. -more-


The Plunge—Volunteers Save Point Richmond Landmark By Richard Brenneman

Tuesday March 28, 2006

Richmond’s getting ready to take the Plunge. -more-


ZAB Votes for New Hearing on Gaia Building Culture Use By Richard Brenneman

Tuesday March 28, 2006

The ongoing saga of the Gaia Building took a new turn Thursday night when members of the Zoning Adjustments Board (ZAB) voted to reopen the thorny issue of culture. -more-


ZAB Declares Black & White A Nuisance, Pans Bell Tower By Richard Brenneman

Tuesday March 28, 2006

The Zoning Adjustments Board voted to declare Black & White Liquors a public nuisance Thursday after attempts at a compromise were torpedoed by state law and city code. -more-


Berkeley Schools Moving Up in the Ranks By SUZANNE LA BARRE

Tuesday March 28, 2006

Berkeley’s public schools are ranking higher than ever in the Academic Performance Index when compared with similar schools, according to data released Wednesday. -more-


Latinos Call for Peace, Denounce Legislation By Judith Scherr

Tuesday March 28, 2006

Calling for peace in Iraq and denouncing federal legislation that would criminalize undocumented U.S. residents, the 27-day Latino March for Peace from Tijuana to San Francisco took a detour through Oakland Monday morning. -more-


Sex-Slavery Opponents Picket Girl Fest Venue By Judith Scherr

Tuesday March 28, 2006

Candida Martinez, booking agent for the Shattuck Down Low, stood in the drizzle Friday evening watching the picketers in downtown Berkeley and remarked on the irony that women opposing sexual slavery would demonstrate against Girl Fest, another organization fighting sexual exploitation of women. -more-


Study Links Childhood Insecurity to Conservatism By SUZANNE LA BARRE

Tuesday March 28, 2006

Depending on your political leanings, you may be exceedingly glad—or plumb horrified—to learn your child is maladjusted. -more-


Immigrant Rights Protests Spread—New Civil Rights Translated and Compiled by Elena Shore New America Media

Tuesday March 28, 2006

Hispanic media report that hundreds of thousands of immigrants and their supporters are marching in cities across the country on behalf of immigrant rights. -more-


Berkeley Hosts Forum to Address Teen Party Issues By Riya Bhattacharjee

Tuesday March 28, 2006

The Berkeley Police Department addressed growing concerns related to teen parties in Berkeley at the Northbrae Church Community Center last Thursday, two days before a teenage party in the city ended in the death of one of the parents. -more-


Hundreds of Teens Join SF BattleCry Rally By Riya Bhattacharjee

Tuesday March 28, 2006

San Francisco was the site of a “reverse rebellion” last weekend. -more-


Alameda County Is Defendant in Lawsuit By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Friday March 24, 2006

A group of voting rights activists—including nationally known labor leader Dolores Huerta—filed a lawsuit in Superior Court in San Francisco this week, seeking to halt the use of the Diebold paper trail electronic voting machines in California, but it is uncertain what affect it will have on electronic voting in Alameda County in the November elections and beyond. -more-


Bronstein Challenges Incumbent By JUDITH SCHERR

Friday March 24, 2006

When Mayor Tom Bates ran for office against former mayor Shirley Dean four years ago, then-Planning Commission Chair Zelda Bronstein stood among his supporters. -more-


Bomb Threat Halts BART Service to East Bay By Riya Bhattacharjee

Friday March 24, 2006

Wednesday BART services were disrupted for the second time around in two weeks when a bomb threat on a San Francisco-bound train at the 12th Street Oakland station resulted in services to all East Bay stations being cancelled for over an hour. -more-


Rat Control at Willard Park Declared Success By Riya Bhattacharjee

Friday March 24, 2006

The Willard Park tot lot will be officially reopening today (Friday) after remaining closed for two weeks in order to take care of rat infestation. -more-


Oakland Teachers Cast Strike Votes By SUZANNE LA BARRE

Friday March 24, 2006

Oakland teachers are one step closer to going on strike. -more-


Council Puts Pool on Hold By Judith Scherr

Friday March 24, 2006

On the agenda at Tuesday’s City Council meeting was a motion to ask the Berkeley School Board to add partial funding for a new warm pool at Berkeley High to the list of projects to be supported by the voters in a November parcel tax ballot measure. At the meeting, however, councilmembers argued that the addition could endanger the passage of the tax. -more-


Development Corp. Seeks Task Force By Richard Brenneman

Friday March 24, 2006

The group chosen by the city to oversee development at the Ashby BART parking lot wants recruits for a task force panel to recommend projects to the city council. -more-


Redevelopment to Fund Housing By Judith Scherr

Friday March 24, 2006

A $61 million project that will combine housing for the most disadvantaged, an environmental center, retail and underground parking got a set of approvals Tuesday, bringing the Oxford Plaza and David Brower Center proposed for Oxford Street and Allston Way closer to reality. The project was before both the Berkeley Redevelopment Agency and the Berkeley City Council, two bodies composed of the same elected councilmembers. -more-


Officials Discuss Disaster Preparedness By Riya Bhattacharjee

Friday March 24, 2006

Top state, county and city emergency services officials from the State of California and Alameda County met with senior officials from UC Berkeley, Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, Alta Bates Summit Medical Center, Vista College, the Berkeley Unified School District (BUSD) and Bayer Health care yesterday to discuss emergency preparedness coordination and communication plans in the event of a major disaster in Berkeley. -more-


Derelict Richmond Mines Out of City’s Control By SUZANNE LA BARRE

Friday March 24, 2006

When it comes to regulating local quarries, the city of Richmond is between a rock and a hard place. -more-


Iraqi Woman Tours U.S. to Tell True Story of Iraq War By Judith Scherr

Friday March 24, 2006

Faiza Al-Araji, a middle-class Iraqi woman, was able to pay her innocent son’s way out of jail last summer. That’s when she understood that she had to leave. With her husband and three sons, she went to Jordan, leaving behind the chaos and misery of the country of her birth. -more-


Many Homeowners Pan Creeks Ordinance Recommendations By SUZANNE LA BARRE

Friday March 24, 2006

Though “balance” was the buzzword at Wednesday’s joint meeting between the Creeks Task Force and the Planning Commission, creeks faction wars were as heated as ever. -more-


County Medical Center Payroll Continues to Malfunction By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor

Friday March 24, 2006

The latest local public agency to be hit by the automated payroll blues is the Alameda County Medical Center. -more-


Richmond Shoreline Condos Face Opposition By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Friday March 24, 2006

It’s a familiar story in Richmond. A developer wants to build expensive condos on what looks like a prime shoreline spot but there’s one catch. -more-


School Board Weighs Impact of New Tax By Riya Bhattacharjee

Friday March 24, 2006

At the school board meeting on Wednesday, Paul Goodwin from Goodwin Simon Strategic Research presented board members and the public with the findings of the voter survey conducted to assess community support for reauthorizing the BSEP and Measure B of 2004 Special taxes which expire at the end of the 2006-07 school year. -more-


Waving Man Remembered By Riya Bhattacharjee

Friday March 24, 2006

Commuters driving by Martin Luther KIng, Jr. Way and Oregon on Wednesday morning had a chance to smile and wave again, this time not at one pair of hands but thirty. -more-


Albany City Council Rejects Call For Action On Anti-Bush Resolution By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Friday March 24, 2006

The Albany City Council declined to tackle the White House Monday. -more-


Police Blotter By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Friday March 24, 2006

Cycling bandit -more-


Opinion

Editorials

Editorial: Keeping an Eye Open By Becky O'Malley

Tuesday March 28, 2006

It’s been three years since the United States invaded Iraq, so the press this month has been full of reminiscences tempered by a pinch of self-doubt. Some of the many high-visibility commentators, both press and politicians, who were dead wrong about what was going on have acknowledged that they were duped by the official story, but many have not. The Daily Planet was in the process of re-inventing itself that same month three years ago, and we’re proud to say we’ve been aware of how bogus this invasion was from our first day, and have told our readers about it (not that many of them were fooled anyhow.) -more-


Editorial: Police Priorities: Are We Safer Yet? By Becky O’Malley

Friday March 24, 2006

One of the few jokes I can remember is the one about the drunk who staggers from the bar to his car, only to realize that he’s dropped his keys somewhere. A friend comes across him two hours later, on his hands and knees under the lamppost on the corner. “Why are you still looking here?” the friend asks. “You must have dropped them nearer to the car.” The drunk responds that it’s too dark to see the keys on the ground near the car, which is why he’s still looking under the lamppost, where it’s easier to see. -more-


Public Comment

Letters to the Editor

Tuesday March 28, 2006

MONSTROSITY -more-


Commentary: Regulation Field Serves Just a Few By MARK McDONALD

Tuesday March 28, 2006

Who could oppose something as apple pie as a baseball facility? Anybody, as long as the impacts and costs are too severe. -more-


Commentary: West Berkeley Bowl: Community Needs vs. Power of the Wealthy By Steven Donaldson

Tuesday March 28, 2006

The approval of the West Berkeley Bowl has turned into an absurd saga, strung out over two years by a hand full of people with the money and time to use the system for their own personal agendas completely ignoring the needs of the local community. It’s the power of the moneyed few over the working families of West Berkeley. -more-


Commentary: Adeline Should Not Be So Wide By DAVID SOFFA

Tuesday March 28, 2006

The prospect of rebuilding the gutted neighborhood at the Ashby BART station brings fresh awareness of older problems in our area. For the new life to take root and grow we have to dig out the gravel in the garden that is stunting the existing growth. Every gardener knows this is where the real work is. It is an essential effort that will enable the whole place to thrive. -more-


Commentary: War Programming II By H. SCOTT PROSTERMAN

Tuesday March 28, 2006

When Bush Jr. first launched the Iraq war three years ago, I published an article titled “War Programming,” which took him to task for the timing of it.” I argued: -more-


Letters to the Editor

Friday March 24, 2006

URBAN LEGEND -more-


Commentary: The Problem with Leadership By KEN STANTON

Friday March 24, 2006

In recent years, academics and consultants have emphasized the critical importance of leadership to the success of government and business enterprises. Leadership conveys an image of military daring, while management has come to be viewed as a technical subject, of interest only to those who have not yet reached positions of leadership. This attitude fits well with the interests of politicians, who are unlikely to have management experience, but may feel well qualified to offer leadership. Moreover, attacks on the failings of government bureaucracy—real or imagined—resonate with voters. -more-


Commentary: Greedy Development Threatens Oakland By Pamela A. Drake

Friday March 24, 2006

I have traveled to far-off places just to visit quaint waterfronts where industrial detritus is turned into quirky outdoor art and the artists live in cohesive communities that also welcome strangers and wayfarers. In these funky enclaves, artisans, bohemians, working-class artists, students, and professionals live comfortably on the leftovers of former times-where recycle and reuse come naturally and beautifully. How does this sort of “organic” development grow and can you still find it in Oakland? You’d better look quickly before it is gentrified, calcified, and homogenized away leaving no open spaces, no gathering places, no real studios or workshops-only darkened patches of private yards. -more-


Columns

Column: The Public Eye: Who Killed Tom Fox? Why and What’s the Reason For? By Bob Burnett

Tuesday March 28, 2006

If you’re a fan of Bob Dylan, you’ll remember his anti-boxing song, “Who Killed Davey Moore?” This song ponders the death of world featherweight champion Moore, who died of head injuries incurred in a bout on March 21, 1963. -more-


Column: Underestimating My Parents and the Power of ‘Brokeback Mountain’ By Susan Parker

Tuesday March 28, 2006

I told my parents not to see the movie Brokeback Mountain. “You won’t like it,” I said. -more-


First Person: In Praise of Jewish People by Harry Weininger

Tuesday March 28, 2006

I’ve never heard anyone call Jews lovable. The Irish are lovable, and the Italians. The French are admired for their savoir faire, the English for their gentility—still, “some of my best friends are Jews.” -more-


Column: Undercurrents:How BART and its Passengers Respond in an Emergency By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Friday March 24, 2006

On Tuesday afternoon coming back to the East Bay from San Francisco, the BART train stopped on the tracks just before the West Oakland station, and the driver got on the intercom to let us know that we were being delayed because of an earthquake. -more-


Welcome to Downtown Berkeley By MARTA YAMAMOTO Special to the Planet

Friday March 24, 2006

When you’re alone and life is making you lonely you can always go—downtown. -more-


East Bay:Then and Now High-Peaked Colonial Revival: A Bay Area Phenomenon By Daniella Thompson

Friday March 24, 2006

What are those curiously attractive houses whose second floor, contained within a steeply pitched main gable roof, is far larger than the first floor? Why do we see them standing in clusters of two or three in Berkeley and Oakland but rarely elsewhere? -more-


About the House: Home Repairs: Never Do Anything Twice By MATT CANTOR

Friday March 24, 2006

I was visiting with a client today and got into one of those if/and/or discussions that soon feels like your brain is stuck in either molasses or honey (depending on whether the job will actually pay anything). One possible course of action involved changing a faucet, which would have eliminated a broken component and almost certainly have solved a problem involving the reluctant flow of hot water. The other solution would make someone happy but seemed for all the world like the wrong thing to do. -more-


Garden Variety: Generic Gardening Only Makes Things Worse By RON SULLIVAN

Staff
Friday March 24, 2006

We just returned from an excursion to a friend’s new townhouse in Vacaville. I won’t riff on her lament that she can’t find bulk olives or a decent farmers’ market or bookstore there, but I will say that the landscaping scares me a bit. Scared her, too, and then some: The week before closing on the new place, Alamo Creek and its local tributaries flooded her first floor and most of her neighbors’. She got off lightly though and the seller replaced the carpet with the tile she prefers. The block still rings with repair and construction noises, and piles of ruined wallboard and household stuff persist. -more-


Arts & Events

Arts Calendar

Tuesday March 28, 2006

TUESDAY, MARCH 28 -more-


‘Death of a Salesman’ plays at Altarena Playhouse By Ken Bullock Special to the Planet

Tuesday March 28, 2006

“We’re free and clear, Willy. Did you hear me? Free and clear!” -more-


Books: Two Books Explore the Modern History of Torture By HENRY NORR Special to the Planet

Tuesday March 28, 2006

The Bush-Cheney regime may represent a radical break with this nation’s traditions in many areas, but in making torture a central weapon in its “war on terror,” the current administration is simply building on a body of theory and practice that goes back more than half a century. -more-


Books: Crews Skewers Follies of the Wise in New Collection By Jake FuchsSpecial to the Planet

Tuesday March 28, 2006

Frederick Crews’ latest book, Follies of the Wise: Dissenting Essays, will be published next week by Shoemaker & Hoard. -more-


Books: Thoughts on the Notion of Fictional Suicide By DOROTHY BRYANT Special to the Planet

Tuesday March 28, 2006

In the 1950s, Albert Camus famously wrote, “There is but one truly philosophical problem, and that is suicide. Judging whether life is or is not worth living amounts to answering the fundamental question of philosophy.” -more-


Songs and Stories: Native Americans in the East Bay By PHIL McARDLE Special to the Planet

Tuesday March 28, 2006

When Europeans came to the Berkeley area in 1772 they encountered the Native Americans known today as the Ohlones. Anthropologists speculate that several waves of immigration preceded them, and linguistic evidence suggests that they arrived here around 500 A.D. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Tuesday March 28, 2006

TUESDAY, MARCH 28 -more-


Codornices Steelhead: Ghosts of the Winter Run By JOE EATON Special to the Planet

Tuesday March 28, 2006

A couple of weeks ago I got an e-mail message from Susan Schwartz, president of Friends of Five Creeks, about a recent sighting: two pairs of steelhead that had followed Codornices Creek in from the Bay, as far upstream as Masonic Avenue, where they appeared to be attempting to spawn. -more-


Arts Calendar

Friday March 24, 2006

FRIDAY, MARCH 24 -more-


Moving Pictures: Berkeley Filmmakers Explore the Lives of Women in Afghanistan By JUSTIN DeFREITAS

Friday March 24, 2006

Berkeley husband-and-wife filmmaking team Cliff Orloff and Olga Shalygin have taken several trips to Afghanistan since the fall of the Taliban, and their most recent visit has resulted in a poignant film about the lives of Afghan women. Cut From Different Cloth: Burqas and Beliefs, a one-hour documentary, will air on PBS at 5 p.m. Sunday and again at 8 p.m. Thursday. -more-


Moving Pictures: Total Immersion: The Life and Death of Brian By JUSTIN DeFREITAS

Friday March 24, 2006

Brian Jones seems all but forgotten these days, at least outside his native England. He founded the Rolling Stones, but they passed him by, leaving him to gather moss, or at least ingest a great deal of grass. -more-


Theater: Fast-Paced ‘Zorro in Hell’ at the Berkeley Rep By Ken Bullock

Friday March 24, 2006

In front of an enormous projection of the Bear Flag, alternately in full color and eerie x-ray blue, morphing into the view through the windshield of a fast superhighway, there’s a masked man seated onstage at “The Berkeley Rep of Alta California”—but he bears no resemblance to the masked man of the title, a kind of processed Latino Lone Ranger. This one’s not caped in black with black silk mask and mounted on a saddle. This figure’s in restraints, effaced (while a bitchy burlesque nurse tries to force m eds on him, then goes for the suppositories) mumbling “I’m the Wal-Mart price slasher! ... one man can start a revolution or recall a standing governor ...” And when a couple of Homeland Security-type spooks put him through whatever degree, demanding “Why did you threaten the governor? Who are you really?”, the man in a bind replies, “I’m bi-cultural, bi-curious and bipolar ... My California is now an endless series of strip malls ... I am Zorro! I must be Zorro! A muhajadeen Zorro! I have my own guitar flourish! There was a time when I was a normal Chicano ...” -more-


Welcome to Downtown Berkeley By MARTA YAMAMOTO Special to the Planet

Friday March 24, 2006

When you’re alone and life is making you lonely you can always go—downtown. -more-


East Bay:Then and Now High-Peaked Colonial Revival: A Bay Area Phenomenon By Daniella Thompson

Friday March 24, 2006

What are those curiously attractive houses whose second floor, contained within a steeply pitched main gable roof, is far larger than the first floor? Why do we see them standing in clusters of two or three in Berkeley and Oakland but rarely elsewhere? -more-


About the House: Home Repairs: Never Do Anything Twice By MATT CANTOR

Friday March 24, 2006

I was visiting with a client today and got into one of those if/and/or discussions that soon feels like your brain is stuck in either molasses or honey (depending on whether the job will actually pay anything). One possible course of action involved changing a faucet, which would have eliminated a broken component and almost certainly have solved a problem involving the reluctant flow of hot water. The other solution would make someone happy but seemed for all the world like the wrong thing to do. -more-


Garden Variety: Generic Gardening Only Makes Things Worse By RON SULLIVAN

Staff
Friday March 24, 2006

We just returned from an excursion to a friend’s new townhouse in Vacaville. I won’t riff on her lament that she can’t find bulk olives or a decent farmers’ market or bookstore there, but I will say that the landscaping scares me a bit. Scared her, too, and then some: The week before closing on the new place, Alamo Creek and its local tributaries flooded her first floor and most of her neighbors’. She got off lightly though and the seller replaced the carpet with the tile she prefers. The block still rings with repair and construction noises, and piles of ruined wallboard and household stuff persist. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Friday March 24, 2006

FRIDAY, MARCH 24 -more-