The Week

Diaz in his office at the newly christened B-Tech.
          Photograph by Suzanne La Barre.
Diaz in his office at the newly christened B-Tech. Photograph by Suzanne La Barre.
 

News

Flash: Golden Gate Fields Threatens Lawsuit

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday May 30, 2006

Stop that initiative or we’ll sue, an attorney for Golden Gate Fields has warned Albany officials. Citizens for the Albany Shoreline (CAS) filed the initiative in question, an attempt to stop shoreline development, with Albany City Clerk Jacqueline Bucholz on May 16. -more-


Flash: Caltrans Nixs Ashby Bart Planning Grant

Tuesday May 30, 2006

The City of Berkeley will not get a Caltrans Community-based Transit Planning Grant to plan a large condo development for the west parking lot of the Ashby BART station. Winning cities were posted on the Caltrans web site late Friday afternoon, and Berkeley was not among them. -more-


Diaz Sets Out to Save Berkeley Alternative

By Suzanne La Barre
Tuesday May 30, 2006

As a teacher for a GED program in San Francisco, Victor Diaz floated a novel notion: He would prepare students to earn high school diplomas. -more-


Confusion Surrounds Possible Eviction of Nexus Collective

By Ricghard Brenneman
Tuesday May 30, 2006

The Nexus Institute, a prominent West Berkeley artists’ collective, faces eviction from its home of 20 years when their lease expires Thursday. -more-


Commission Blasts Review of Mayor’s Landmarks Proposal

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday May 30, 2006

“All these years I’ve been speaking about the Landmarks Demolitions Ordinance, and here it is,” said Carrie Olson. -more-


BUSD Rebuffs City Review Process

By Suzanne La Barre
Tuesday May 30, 2006

Development of a portion of a defunct Berkeley Unified School District (BUSD) campus will move forward without city review, whether city officials and community members like it or not. -more-


Landmarks, Downtown Plan Panel Hold Joint Meeting

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday May 30, 2006

DoubleTree Hotel Workers Protest Stalled Negotiations

By Judith Scherr
Tuesday May 30, 2006

Billed as a wake-up call to management, some 80 DoubleTree Hotel workers and their supporters held a 6:30 a.m. rally Friday, circling the hotel at the Marina with chants and drums, in an attempt to advance what their union, Hotel Employees Restaurant Employees 2850, says are “stalled” contract negotiations. -more-


Shattuck Cinemas Employees To Vote on Forming a Union

By Judith Scherr
Tuesday May 30, 2006

Workers at the downtown Shattuck Cinemas, owned by Landmark Theaters, who earn just above minimum wage with no health benefits, will have their say about whether they form a union. -more-


OUSD Postpones Trustee Meeting Over Sale of Properties

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Tuesday May 30, 2006

The state-appointed administrator of the Oakland Unified School District has postponed a meeting with OUSD Advisory Trustees, leaving trustees in the dark as to the future of nearly 10 acres of valuable midtown district properties, including the district administration headquarters. -more-


PRC Reviews Police Policies in Case of Stolen Drug Evidence

By Judith Scherr
Tuesday May 30, 2006

The Police Review Commission on Wednesday established a subcommittee to review police policies related to the case of convicted felon Sgt. Cary Kent, who stole drugs from the police evidence vault of which he was in charge. -more-


A Guide to Ballot Measures in the June Election

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Tuesday May 30, 2006

The last two times Alameda County voters have gone to the polls, they were inundated with ballot measures (eight state propositions along with local measures in Albany and Emeryville in the off-year election in November 2005; 16 state propositions along with 13 Berkeley, one Albany, two Emeryville, and two Oakland measures, as well as special measures for BART, AC Transit, and the East Bay Regional Park District in the general election of November 2004). -more-


Superintendent, Secretary of State Races Heat Up

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Tuesday May 30, 2006

The race for the Democratic nomination for California attorney general has become something of a referendum on Oakland, with candidates Rocky Delgadillo and Jerry Brown debating over how good a job Brown has done in his two terms as Oakland mayor. -more-


Planners Tackle Creeks Group Representation, Stadium

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Tuesday May 30, 2006

The Planning Commission meeting on Wednesday centered on two main issues. -more-


A Wake-Up Call for Telegraph Avenue

By Judith Scherr
Tuesday May 30, 2006

Calling the looming closure of Cody’s Books on Telegraph Avenue a “wake-up call,” Councilmember Kriss Worthington has announced a community rally to save the celebrated bookstore and support Telegraph Avenue area businesses. -more-


Police Blotter

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday May 30, 2006

May 13 -more-


Flash: Caltrans Nixs Ashby Bart Planning Grant

Friday May 26, 2006

The City of Berkeley will not get a Caltrans Community-based Transit Planning Grant to plan a large condo development for the west parking lot of the Ashby BART station. Winning cities were posted on the Caltrans web site late Friday afternoon, and Berkeley was not among them. -more-


Landlords Blamed for Telegraph’s Troubles

By Judith Scherr
Friday May 26, 2006

Responding to a package of proposals aimed at shoring up struggling businesses on Telegraph Avenue—more police, social services, better marketing, upgraded facades, brighter lighting, faster permitting and a new green machine to scrub the sidewalks—Marc Weinstein, owner of Amoeba Music, shared a unique perspective on the Avenue’s economic downturn at Tuesday’s City Council meeting. -more-


Jeers Greet Ashby BART Task Force Members at First Meeting

By Richard Brenneman
Friday May 26, 2006

Tempers flared and jeers erupted Monday night at the first public meeting of the task force outlining the scope of a major private development on public land. -more-


Budget Crunch Kills Laney Child Center

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Friday May 26, 2006

A group of Laney College students received an unpleasant surprise in the mail earlier this month: a notice that because of budget problems, the Laney College Children’s Center was closing its infant and toddler day care program effective the end of this school year. -more-


Friends Remember Andrew Martinez

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Friday May 26, 2006

Andrew Martinez’s funeral was Thursday, but a memorial will be held Saturday at 1 p.m. in People’s Park. -more-


Berkeley High Student Elections Hit Rules Impasse

By Suzanne La Barre
Friday May 26, 2006

Students are set to vote in the Berkeley High School elections Wednesday, but a communications snafu is casting a shadow over the democratic process. -more-


Spanish-Speaking Families Warned to Skip Demonstrations

By Suzanne La Barre
Friday May 26, 2006

More than 200 Spanish-speaking parents and students received calls from Berkeley schools late last month, urging students to attend school May 1 or suffer consequences. -more-


Council Postpones Finance Law, Votes Yes on Rebuilding

By Judith Scherr
Friday May 26, 2006

Public financing of election campaigns is one way to shield public officials from the influence of big money. But when the question of placing a measure on Berkeley’s November ballot calling for public financing for all local elected offices came before the City Council Tuesday, councilmembers hesitated. -more-


Newcomer Steps Into Mayor’s Race

By Judith Scherr
Friday May 26, 2006

A recent Stanford grad, Christian Pecaut, 25, is ready to change the world. He wants to start as Berkeley’s next mayor. -more-


Willa Klug Baum, 1926-2006

By Brandon Baum
Friday May 26, 2006

Willa Klug Baum, an internationally respected oral historian, passed away on May 18, 2006, following back surgery. Her pioneering work in oral history methodology and interview techniques served as the foundation for the establishment and growth of oral history as a unique academic discipline. -more-


Fire Department Log

By Richard Brenneman
Friday May 26, 2006

Power outage -more-


Police Blotter

By Richard Brenneman
Friday May 26, 2006

May 5 -more-


Opinion

Editorials

Suspension and Accusations at the Berkeley YMCA

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Tuesday May 30, 2006

Editorial: Remembering the Cost of War

By Becky O’Malley
Friday May 26, 2006

When I was a child, Memorial Day was called Decoration Day. It functioned as a paler Midwestern version of Mexico’s colorful Dia de Los Muertos, a day for the dead. We went out to a big cemetery where several deceased family members were buried—our family plot included the grave of my uncle who had died not long before in World War II—and actually decorated the graves, or at least straightened them up. We helped clear away the weeds which had accumulated since the last winter, ran around a bit, and thought as much as children can about what it means to be dead. -more-


Public Comment

Letters to the Editor

Tuesday May 30, 2006

CALTRANS GRANT -more-


Commentary: Where the Rhetoric Meets the Creek

By Patrick Finley
Tuesday May 30, 2006

One afternoon this past March, after several consecutive days of rain, the clouds cleared and I walked the length of upper Cerritos Creek in north Berkeley. This humble creek—and likely many others—fails to conform to the impassioned rhetoric and vision of the creek ordinance hawks. Such creeks should not be governed by any of the “one-size-fits-all” creek ordinance amendments proposed. Allow me to introduce to you upper Cerritos Creek as it appeared that March afternoon so you can understand why. -more-


Commentary: A Better World Begins in Oakland

By Paul Rockwell
Tuesday May 30, 2006

There’s a popular saying in the Bay Area: “A better world is possible.” According to Aimee Allison, a young, dynamic candidate for the Oakland City Council, “A better world begins in Oakland.” For her it begins in District 2, where she’s waging a grass-roots campaign against the Brown–De La Fuente machine. Pat Kernighan, her opponent, is one of the Oakland insiders. She votes consistently with De La Fuente. In her first election, Kernighan raised $86,000, a lot of money for a small district. Some say she just bought the election. In contrast, Allison accepts no corporate donations. -more-


Commentary: Report from the State Democratic Convention

By Mal Burnstein
Tuesday May 30, 2006

The 2006 California Democratic Party convention was a far cry from that in 2005. Whereas progressives were trying to get organized and recognized (as the Progressive Caucus) in 2005, in 2006 we showed that we are a real force in the CDP. The 2006 convention was a “platform convention” in which the CDP adopts its platform for the next two years and endorses candidates for the Democratic nomination for partisan offices. -more-


Commentary: Enforce Labor Laws so Immigrants Aren’t Needed

By Adolfo Cabral
Tuesday May 30, 2006

Do I have a reasonable point? -more-


Commentary: BUSD Maintenance Department Misconceptions

By Ann Aoyagi
Tuesday May 30, 2006

Readers of the May 5-9 issue of the Daily Planet risk having some serious misperceptions of the Berkeley Unified School District’s Maintenance Department. I know that bad news is generally more exciting than good or okay news, but when a news article presents a misleading picture, those who know the true picture need to speak up. Since I was one of the persons quoted and since, after working here for almost four years, I know the department pretty well, I’d like to set the record straight. -more-


Letters to the Editor

Friday May 26, 2006

SAVE ICELAND -more-


Commentary: Dispensing Marijuana in El Cerrito

By Peter Loubal
Friday May 26, 2006

On May 15 the City Council voted in favor of a “Del Norte Marijuana Dispensary Zone,” without a public hearing or local presence. Oakland’s “Oaksterdam” district and Richmond’s Pot Shops have shown how hard it is to help chronic pain sufferers while evading potential damage to “society.” Top quality cannabis can cost more than gold. If legalized, it could be grown as easily as, say, basil. The sick clamor for “at cost” medical use attracts idealists, profiteers and attorneys. Drug companies devise new methods for medical “inhaling.” Tobacco and liquor interests ponder ways on how not to be cut out of potential profits. The State and federal legal standoff is unlikely to be resolved soon. The broader pros and cons of legalization are well beyond being a local matter. -more-


Shotgun’s ‘King Lear’ Takes Ashby Stage

By Ken Bullock, Special to the Planet
Friday May 26, 2006

“Blow winds, and crack your cheeks!” Nowhere else in Shakespeare are the elemental forces of nature so much in sync with primal human passions as in this tragedy of two dysfunctional families and a kingdom coming apart at the seams. -more-


Commentary: Chron Attack Machine Targets Ron Dellums

By Randy Shaw
Friday May 26, 2006

As the general election for Oakland mayor approaches, the San Francisco Chronicle is working hard to elect Councilmember Ignacio De La Fuente and to defeat his chief rival, former Congressmember Ron Dellums. -more-


Moving Pictures: Cheung, Nolte Take ‘Clean’ Beyond Cliché

By Justin DeFreitas
Friday May 26, 2006

Clean is a film about picking up the pieces and putting them back together, about kicking a drug habit, about winning back the love of one’s child, about forgiveness and compassion, and almost every other road-to-redemption cliché you can think of. And yet somehow it succeeds. -more-


Commentary: Support Creeks Task Force Recommendations

By Helen Burke
Friday May 26, 2006

After a year and a half of listening to many perspectives and extensive deliberations, the Creeks Task Force (CTF) has carefully crafted a set of recommendations to revise the Creeks Ordinance that respects private property owners’ interests and protects the natural environment. (See www.ci.berkeley.ca.us/ planning/landuse/creeks). The CTF Recommendations are now before the City Council. -more-


Moving Pictures: Real Face of ‘Baby Face’ Finally Revealed

By Justin DeFreitas
Friday May 26, 2006

Pacific Film Archive’s “A Theater Near You” series is a showcase for films that don’t make it to your local megaplex. This week PFA is featuring an encore screening of Baby Face, the notorious 1933 Pre-Code film that for decades was only seen in a heavily censored version. A negative of the original version was discovered in 2004 and the restored film has been circulating for about a year in advance of its upcoming DVD release. -more-


Commentary: Brower Center: Over-Hyped, Over-Sized, Over-Budget

By Michael Katz
Friday May 26, 2006

The “David Brower Center and Oxford Plaza,” intended to replace the city-owned parking lot at Oxford Street and Allston Way, recently received a key City Council endorsement. That’s noteworthy because this six-story development embodies admirable environmental and housing-equity goals. -more-


Commentary: The Oakland Land-Grab Conspiracy: Setting the Record Straight

By Sheila Jordan
Friday May 26, 2006

Columnist J. Douglas Allen-Taylor is to be commended for devoting attention to the situation in the Oakland schools. It is unfortunate that he did not take the trouble to check his facts and ask for comments from the people directly involved before committing his thoughts to print. His grand conspiracy theory, in which the Oakland schools crisis was just a pretext for an alleged land grab, would not have survived performance of these basic journalistic obligations. -more-


Columns

Column: The Public Eye: Downtown Will Be Berkeley’s Next BART Fiasco

By Michael Katz
Tuesday May 30, 2006

The bad news is that Berkeley’s downtown retail district is sick, and Telegraph Avenue is catching the disease. -more-


Column: Keeping Order in the Classroom

By Susan Parker
Tuesday May 30, 2006

She’s Got the Paddle and We’re Up the Creek,” screamed last week’s headlines in a local weekly. -more-


Hooray for Hollywood Junipers

By Ron Sullivan
Tuesday May 30, 2006

Hollywood juniper—Juniperus chinensis “torulosa” or J. chinensis “Kai-zuka”—is one of those trees you know even if you’ve never heard of it. It’s all over the place, one of those Sunset magazine California place markers, the twisty green thing waving its arms outside half the apartment buildings on the West Coast. It’s a city feature like pigeons, and like pigeons you hardly ever see a dead one. -more-


Column: Dispatches From the Edge: On the War Path in Iran, Nepal and Somalia

By Conn Hallinan
Friday May 26, 2006

Anyone who thinks the Bush administration is too far down in the polls to even contemplate attacking Iran should consider the following developments: -more-


Column: Undercurrents: The Pressing Problems of Public Transportation

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Friday May 26, 2006

Transportation—the stepchild of public issues—has suddenly resurfaced as a concern in certain Oakland political circles. -more-


A Tour of Richmond’s WWII Historic Sites

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Friday May 26, 2006

It’s not at all strange for a bus half-filled with important local officials to roll through the streets of a California city, pointing out tracts and plots and buildings along the way. It is unusual when the other half of the bus is filled with longtime city residents and community activists, and the purpose of the tour is not so much to plot the city’s future as it is to make sure its past is understood. -more-


Lingering in the Elmwood District

By Marta Yamamoto, Special to the Planet
Friday May 26, 2006

It’s a warm, breezy spring day. I’m sitting in the courtyard at Espresso Roma, lunching on a terrific spinach-mushroom frittata and watching the world of Elmwood pass by. Inside laptops silently hum while lattes are sipped. Though my meter is ticking I’m in no hurry to move. Once here, why would I want to leave? -more-


East Bay Then and Now: Pattiani House Emerges From Restoration

By Daniella Thompson
Friday May 26, 2006

In the 1880s and ‘90s, few East Bay architects were as fashionable as Alfred Washington Pattiani (1855–1935). Italian name notwithstanding, Pattiani, who was born in Chillicothe, Ohio, was descended from a well-to-do German family. His paternal grandfather, Alois Fahrnbacher of Landshut, Bavaria, was a tobacco manufacturer, commercial court assessor, and a member of the Bavarian parliament. -more-


About the House: Some Cures For Noisy Neighbors

By Matt Cantor
Friday May 26, 2006

A friend of mine has a bassist living upstairs who is still working out the chords to In a Gadda Da Vida after living there for about 12 years. My friend is a patient person but she’s begun to exhibit something of a tick and often looks dolefully into space for long periods of time, returning from her reverie only when the music has stopped for some short spell. -more-


Garden Variety: Some Tools and Tips for Bigger Gardening Chores

By Ron Sullivan
Friday May 26, 2006

I rarely venture into my garden with constructive intent but without my Felco pruners and my hori-hori. Most of the time those hand tools are enough because I have a very small garden. Sometimes, though, I need to do something that requires two hands and a bigger tool, and I have my favorites among those too. -more-


Quake Tip of the Week

By Larry Guillot
Friday May 26, 2006

What’s Under Your Bed? -more-


Arts & Events

Arts Calendar

Tuesday May 30, 2006

TUESDAY, MAY 30 -more-


Moving Pictures: Kieslowski’s ‘Decalogue’ at PFA

By Justin DeFreitas
Tuesday May 30, 2006

Polish director Krzysztof Kieslowski made The Decalogue, a series of 10 one-hour films based on the Ten Commandments, for Polish television in 1988. Since that time it has rarely been screened commercially, other than in a handful of film festivals. -more-


Books: On the Trail of Hitler’s Nuremberg Laws

By Marty Schiffenbauer
Tuesday May 30, 2006

In June of 1945, General George S. Patton, Jr. returned from Germany to his native Southern California for a triumphant homecoming. Patton’s welcome included a parade and a movie star-studded celebration at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. Never known to shy away from the limelight, he exulted in playing the war hero to the cheering crowds. -more-


Theater: Weisman, Founder of The Marsh, Stages Own Show

By Ken Bullock, Special to the Planet
Tuesday May 30, 2006

Somewhere between writing and producing, Stephanie Weisman and her performance piece, Aphrodisia, ended up in The Marsh. -more-


Hooray for Hollywood Junipers

By Ron Sullivan
Tuesday May 30, 2006

Hollywood juniper—Juniperus chinensis “torulosa” or J. chinensis “Kai-zuka”—is one of those trees you know even if you’ve never heard of it. It’s all over the place, one of those Sunset magazine California place markers, the twisty green thing waving its arms outside half the apartment buildings on the West Coast. It’s a city feature like pigeons, and like pigeons you hardly ever see a dead one. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Tuesday May 30, 2006

TUESDAY, MAY 30 -more-


A Tour of Richmond’s WWII Historic Sites

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Friday May 26, 2006

It’s not at all strange for a bus half-filled with important local officials to roll through the streets of a California city, pointing out tracts and plots and buildings along the way. It is unusual when the other half of the bus is filled with longtime city residents and community activists, and the purpose of the tour is not so much to plot the city’s future as it is to make sure its past is understood. -more-


Lingering in the Elmwood District

By Marta Yamamoto, Special to the Planet
Friday May 26, 2006

It’s a warm, breezy spring day. I’m sitting in the courtyard at Espresso Roma, lunching on a terrific spinach-mushroom frittata and watching the world of Elmwood pass by. Inside laptops silently hum while lattes are sipped. Though my meter is ticking I’m in no hurry to move. Once here, why would I want to leave? -more-


East Bay Then and Now: Pattiani House Emerges From Restoration

By Daniella Thompson
Friday May 26, 2006

In the 1880s and ‘90s, few East Bay architects were as fashionable as Alfred Washington Pattiani (1855–1935). Italian name notwithstanding, Pattiani, who was born in Chillicothe, Ohio, was descended from a well-to-do German family. His paternal grandfather, Alois Fahrnbacher of Landshut, Bavaria, was a tobacco manufacturer, commercial court assessor, and a member of the Bavarian parliament. -more-


About the House: Some Cures For Noisy Neighbors

By Matt Cantor
Friday May 26, 2006

A friend of mine has a bassist living upstairs who is still working out the chords to In a Gadda Da Vida after living there for about 12 years. My friend is a patient person but she’s begun to exhibit something of a tick and often looks dolefully into space for long periods of time, returning from her reverie only when the music has stopped for some short spell. -more-


Garden Variety: Some Tools and Tips for Bigger Gardening Chores

By Ron Sullivan
Friday May 26, 2006

I rarely venture into my garden with constructive intent but without my Felco pruners and my hori-hori. Most of the time those hand tools are enough because I have a very small garden. Sometimes, though, I need to do something that requires two hands and a bigger tool, and I have my favorites among those too. -more-


Quake Tip of the Week

By Larry Guillot
Friday May 26, 2006

What’s Under Your Bed? -more-


Berkeley This Week

Friday May 26, 2006

FRIDAY, MAY 26 -more-