The Week

Bateman Mall Park neighbor Kathy Brady moves her dog away from the rotting grass on the mall while out for a stroll Monday afternoon. Neighbors have shoveled the newly constructed grass-paver installation to prevent water from clogging there. Photograph by Riya Bhattacharjee.
Bateman Mall Park neighbor Kathy Brady moves her dog away from the rotting grass on the mall while out for a stroll Monday afternoon. Neighbors have shoveled the newly constructed grass-paver installation to prevent water from clogging there. Photograph by Riya Bhattacharjee.
 

News

Flooding, Odors Still Plague Alta Bates Drain

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Tuesday November 28, 2006

The Bateman Mall Park has been restored, but drainage problems at the site continue. -more-


Holiday Shock: Berkeley Loses Courts to Oakland

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday November 28, 2006

Berkeley’s traffic court is moving to Oakland as of Jan. 1, taking eight jobs and Court Commissioner Jon Rantzman along for the ride. -more-


Election Complaints Continue to Target Chamber

By Judith Scherr
Tuesday November 28, 2006

The Berkeley Chamber of Commerce Political Action Committee may have violated local election laws, according to Councilmember Dona Spring who says she is preparing a formal complaint against Business for Better Government Berkeley Chamber of Commerce PAC. -more-


Commission Blasts Condition of Oakland’s Youth of Color

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Tuesday November 28, 2006

A recently released report on young men of color by a national commission chaired by the incoming Oakland Mayor Ron Dellums may provide a roadmap to priorities and policies in the city for the next four years. -more-


Big Berkeley Projects Move Forward Slowly

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday November 28, 2006

While its musical form, an arpeggio, consists of the notes of a chord played in rapid succession, the progress of the Berkeley Arpeggio has been anything but speedy. -more-


City Council Tackles Creeks Issue Again

By Judith Scherr
Tuesday November 28, 2006

While the City Council passed an updated Creeks Ordinance in concept Nov 14, approval is back before the council tonight (Tuesday), so the body can vote on the formal ordinance, said City Councilmember Laurie Capitelli. -more-


Planning Commission, DAPAC to Meet

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday November 28, 2006

Two city land use meetings are scheduled for Wednesday night, both at the same time—7 p.m.—and in the same building—the North Berkeley Senior Center. -more-


Berkeley High Hosts LGBT Forum

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Tuesday November 28, 2006

A forum to discuss how Berkeley public schools can be more welcoming toward lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender families in the community will be held at the Berkeley Technology Academy today (Tuesday). -more-


Thanksgiving Murders May Have Been Act of Vengeance

Bay City News
Tuesday November 28, 2006

A family feud over a brother’s death likely led to the Thanksgiving Day shooting in an Oakland apartment complex that killed two women and one man and injured two more, Oakland Police Department spokesman Roland Holmgren said. -more-


Oakland Man Gets 9 Years For Berkeley Shooting

Bay City News
Tuesday November 28, 2006

A 19-year-old Oakland man was sentenced Monday to nine years in state prison for shooting to death a Berkeley man who was hosting a party for his three children and their friends in March. -more-


Richmond Council Approves $335 Million Casino Package

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday November 28, 2006

On a divided vote, Richmond city councilmembers last week approved a contract to provide services for a casino planned for unincorporated North Richmond. -more-


First Person: Mayhem and Mustard On 53rd Street

By Suzan Ormandy, Special to the Planet
Tuesday November 28, 2006

The Dijon mustard that was called for in the brussel sprouts recipe was in my garage. I couldn’t get to it because the cops posted outside my 53rd Street duplex had ordered me to “Stay inside, Lady.” Their drawn revolvers convinced me to obey. I did, for the next few hours on Thanksgiving Day, as a huge tragic drama unfolded across the street at the Keller Plaza apartments. -more-


A ‘Living Graveyard’

By Judith Scherr
Friday November 24, 2006
A ‘Living Graveyard’

Kali Grosberg of Berkeley lay down on the sidewalk in front of the Oakland Federal Building on Tuesday. Two friends wrapped her in a shroud and placed green rosemary springs on her still body. -more-


City Challenges UC’s Stadium-Area Project

By Richard Brenneman
Friday November 24, 2006

UC Berkeley officials are pushing ahead with plans to transform Bowles Hall into a corporate executive education center with a new call for a seismic consultant. -more-


B-Tech Academy Students Get to View College Life On Tour of South

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Friday November 24, 2006

It’s not often that Berkeley Technology Academy students get a chance to fly, but last week was different. -more-


New Housing Authority Board in the Works

By Judith Scherr
Friday November 24, 2006

While a new governance structure for the Berkeley Housing Authority may buy federally subsidized renters more time in their Berkeley homes, subsidy cuts could force them out. -more-


Oakland’s IRV Author Believes System Will Work

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Friday November 24, 2006

The man who was the lead drafter of the Instant Runoff Vote language that eventually became Oakland’s Measure O says that the chance that differences in vote-counting procedures in various forms of IRV could affect the outcome of an election are “incredibly small,” and the example cited in a recent Daily Planet article would not affect an election outcome at all. -more-


UC Students Protest Taser Gun Incident at UCLA Library

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Friday November 24, 2006

The incident involving 23-year-old UCLA student Mostafa Tabatabainejad, who was shot with a taser by campus police officers last week, has sparked off debate in the national media and led to protests at the UC Berkeley. -more-


Solano Merchants Uncertain About Business Improvement District

By Judith Scherr
Friday November 24, 2006

Jim Slaten’s sewing machine service shop has been on Solano Avenue for more than four decades. Slaten says he doesn’t need an organization to help keep his sidewalks clean and certainly doesn’t need a new planter in front of his store. -more-


Two Men Shot in Sacramento Street Attack

By Richard Brenneman
Friday November 24, 2006

Two men—and possibly a third—were shot Tuesday night as gunfire shattered the evening on Sacramento Street. -more-


PRC Meets with Council in Closed Session Monday

By Judith Scherr
Friday November 24, 2006

The Berkeley City Council and Police Review Commission will meet behind closed doors on Monday to discuss a Berkeley Police Association lawsuit against the city, although the requirement for a closed session meeting is disputed by a least one councilmember. -more-


SF Opera Comes to Malcolm X

Friday November 24, 2006

San Francisco Opera singers and fourth-graders at Malcolm X Elementary School joined forces in a one-hour production of Rossini's Barber of Seville at Malcolm X last week. -more-


Police Blotter

By Richard Brenneman
Friday November 24, 2006

Fowl delivery -more-


Fire Department Log

By Richard Brenneman
Friday November 24, 2006

New station opens -more-


Opinion

Editorials

Editorial: Setting the Historic Record Straight

By Becky O’Malley
Tuesday November 28, 2006

Not too long ago the Planet received a letter from a reader asserting that E.Y. Harburg, the author of “Happy Days are Here Again,” was once a Republican. The writer is a frequent and cordial correspondent, and we didn’t want him to embarrass himself in public, so instead of running the letter we wrote back respectfully and said that we were positive that Yip Harburg, whose son we had known, was never a Republican. We didn’t cite sources, since we didn’t have any on hand, but we urged the writer to check his. After a bit of back and forth, he discovered that the author of the Democratic fight song “Happy Days” was indeed a Republican, but that Yip Harburg (a noted leftist) didn’t write it. Case closed. -more-


Editorial: Shopping Locally During the Holidays

By Becky O’Malley
Friday November 24, 2006

Today (the day after Thanksgiving) is widely believed to be the biggest shopping day of the year in the United States. Actually, according to the invaluable and entertaining Wikipedia, the days before and after Christmas are days when more retail dollars change hands, but Black Friday, as it’s called, wins out in terms of bodies on the streets and in the malls, though some of them are just shopping, not buying. One folk explanation for the name is that retailers finally make it into the black on that day after almost a year of red ink. -more-


The Editor's Back Fence

Correction

Friday November 24, 2006

Eisa Davis’ upcoming play by Shotgun Players is Bulrusher, not Bulrushers as was printed in the Nov. 17 issue of the Planet. One of the characters is a visitor from Birmingham, Ala., not Montgomery, as was printed. And, Davis first saw Aaron Davidman, now the artistic director of A Traveling Jewish Theatre, as Mack the Knife in a 1985 Berkeley High production of Threepenny Opera. -more-


Cartoons

Berkeley This Week

Friday November 24, 2006

Public Comment

Letters to the Editor

Tuesday November 28, 2006

TRADER JOE’S -more-


Commentary: UC Development in Southeast Berkeley

By Janice Thomas
Tuesday November 28, 2006

During the next 15 years, southeast Berkeley will be radically transformed by the realization of the 2020 Long Range Development Plan (2020 LRDP), the Southeast Campus Integrated Projects (SCIP), the Underhill Parking Lot, and the proposed development at and near Bowles Hall. The long range plan and parking lot are already approved; SCIP approval which includes another parking lot is imminent, while the Bowles Hall expansion and reuse proposal is a cumulative impact and inevitable byproduct of all that precedes it. -more-


Commentary: Election Wins For Green Party Were State-Wide

By Chris Kavanaugh
Tuesday November 28, 2006

The November election results represented an important political breakthrough for the Green Party of California. Nationally, including California, the Green Party fielded 375 candidates for 66 different elected offices in 38 states. Prior to the November general election, the party held at least 223 local, municipal, county and state elected offices nationwide. -more-


Commentary: Omissions and Commissions: Correcting the Facts

By Dan Knapp
Tuesday November 28, 2006

Now we’re told (Daily Planet, Nov. 24) that the misleading Chamber PAC mailer violated state and local election laws by omitting the identity of the groups who got it out to Berkeley voters just days before the election. Three of the potential four perpetrators have weighed in with denials: the Berkeley Chamber of Commerce (we’re not the PAC); the Chamber PAC (we outsourced the work and didn’t proofread prior to mailing); and the printer/mailer company (we just print and mail the stuff we’re given). That leaves the company that supplied the content and artwork, Brand Guidance/Design Intelligence, and its chief hooter Mr. Steven Donaldson. -more-


Letters to the Editor

Friday November 24, 2006

CORRECTION -more-


A Giant Leap For Momkind

By Jamie Woolf
Friday November 24, 2006

House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi isn’t checking her motherhood at the door. Addressing the House of Representatives, the microphones falter and she says, “Do I have to use my mother-of-five voice?” She has also begun numerous sentences with: “As a mother and grandmother and the leader of the House Democrats…” -more-


Falsehoods, Half-Truths and Innuendos

Friday November 24, 2006

Art Goldberg’s complaints (“Myopia, Not Vision, in North Shattuck Plan,” Daily Planet, Oct. 20) about the proposed North Shattuck Plaza amount to a cry of “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it!” -more-


Trying Parking Infractions in the Press

By Peter Glikshtern
Friday November 24, 2006

Unlike Mr. Rivera, I do not deem myself a student of violence. Rather, I like to think of myself as a student of human nature, of which violence is one facet. I have, however, been in dozens (possibly hundreds) of physical altercations in a professional capacity, as a doorman at some of the biggest and busiest nightclubs in San Francisco. -more-


The Benefits of The Warm Pool

By Robert Strom
Friday November 24, 2006

Berkeley’s Warm Pool is important and magical. It is important to everyone who goes there to partake of the healing waters. -more-


The Right Price for Downtown Parking Meters

By Charles Siegel
Friday November 24, 2006

Annette Fleming never used to stop to pick up dinner in Old Pasadena. It used to take five or 10 minutes each way to walk between the restaurant and the parking lot, and she did not have that extra time on her way home from work. -more-


Throwing the Baby Out With the Bath Water

By John F. Davies
Friday November 24, 2006

A few things need to be said regarding the issue of Pacific Steel Casting. While the following opinions could be controversial, and perhaps even disagreeable to some readers, I do believe that they need to be said. To begin with, I am a resident of West Berkeley, whose family has resided in the East Bay since about 1903. For most of my fifty plus years on this planet, I have been an environmentalist and a staunch advocate for a clean and healthy San Francisco Bay. During the most recent election, I voted Green. Nevertheless, I have certain reservations about the growing local movement against Pacific Steel Casting. While I most strongly agree that toxic pollution is a grave problem in our community, and must be rigorously contained and controlled, I do take issue with those who would want to find a solution by simply shutting down Pacific Steel’s foundry. -more-


Columns

Column: The Public Eye: The Bush Administration: Failed Leadership, Failed Security

By Bob Burnett
Tuesday November 28, 2006

On the heels of the GOP’s resounding defeat in the mid-term elections came news that only 31 percent of Americans approve of President Bush’s handling of Iraq. This will increase pressure on the new Congress to do something about Iraq. -more-


Column: On Tuesday, I’ll Take the Hamster

By Susan Parker
Tuesday November 28, 2006

I have received a lot of advice since Ralph passed away. It has been given with good intention and compassionate concern. -more-


Osage Orange Trees — A Transplant in Time

By Ron Sullivan, Special to the Planet
Tuesday November 28, 2006

I’m stretching the boundaries of “East Bay” because I just like this odd tree. I first encountered it a few years back, along a dirt road east of Fairfield, where we look for mountain plovers. I spotted a number of unlikely objects on the grassy shoulder: Osage oranges, hedgeballs, Indiana brains, Maclura pomifera fruit. They were strewn along the roadside for yards, under a row of little deciduous trees. -more-


Under Currents: The Battle Over the Oakland City Council Presidency

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Friday November 24, 2006

One of the more persistent guessing games in Oakland politics these days is who will be the next president of the Oakland City Council. -more-


Dispatches From The Edge: The Democratic Majority and Iran

By Conn Hallinan
Friday November 24, 2006

As the dust begins to settle from the mid-term elections, popular thinking is that, over the next two years, the Democrats will force the Bush administration to edge away from the unilateral militarism that has entrapped the nation in two open-ended wars. -more-


First Person: What I Learned in China

By MARVIN CHACHERE
Friday November 24, 2006

Although travel is educational not much can be learned from short, packaged tours. You learn more from longer than from shorter tours especially if you’re on your own. I was in the Air Force in the 1950s and stationed on Guam for two years. I learned a little bit there but in two short trips to Japan I learned next to nothing. Not so when I earned my living in China for two years doing the same job Chinese did. -more-


First Person: What Time Is It?

By Harry Weininger
Friday November 24, 2006

It is not yet light, but the day has started, led by a conspiracy of gizmos throughout the house, each doing its assigned duty. These devices are awake already and, untouched by human hands, start to organize my day. The heat is on. The coffee is brewing. NPR lulls me awake with overnight news, weather, and traffic reports. -more-


Are The Newly Elected Democrats India’s Friends?

By Sandip Roy, New America Media
Friday November 24, 2006

For Indian-Americans it seems there is much to be thankful for this Thanksgiving. By and large they vote Democrat, and the Democrats have regained control of the House and the Senate. And the U.S.-Indian nuclear cooperation agreement just cleared the Senate by a whopping 85-12 margin. “Cold War blinkers have finally come off in India-U.S. ties,” rejoiced an editorial in The Times of India, remembering the days when no matter what the issue, the United States reflexively cold-shouldered India because it was perceived to be in the Soviet bloc. -more-


Garden Variety: In the Garden and the Wild, Ends Are Also Beginnings

By Ron Sullivan
Friday November 24, 2006

I suppose it’s the season that’s pulling my thoughts toward the organisms and processes of decay: molds, mildews, earthworms, compost in general. Certainly I’m encountering them a lot lately, in the garden and in the wilds. We’ve had just enough rain to encourage little brown mushrooms to pop up, and the more annoying fungi and their companions on plants and walls and books and shower curtains are getting bolder too. Our winter companions, fungi are often such agents of destruction that we can just plain hate them. -more-


Ask Matt: Questions About Insurance and Shingles

By Matt Cantor
Friday November 24, 2006

Dear Matt, -more-


Quake Tip of the Week

By LARRY GUILLOT
Friday November 24, 2006

Have You Met Your Neighbors? -more-


Property Perspectives: What’s Really Happening in The Local Real Estate Market?

By TIM CANNON
Friday November 24, 2006

The news headlines resound of doom and gloom for the real estate market; but what is the back story? Most of these articles refer to the national scene, and to certain parts of the country that are the hardest hit. “18 percent drop here, 16 percent drop there, no relief in sight.” -more-


Arts & Events

Arts Calendar

Tuesday November 28, 2006

TUESDAY, NOV. 28 -more-


Arts and Entertainment: Around the East Bay

Tuesday November 28, 2006

MUSIC FROM THREE GREAT COMPOSERS -more-


Season Begins for Holiday Concerts and Events

By Ken Bullock, Special to the Planet
Tuesday November 28, 2006

As the holidays begin, so do the special performances that feature the kinds of song associated with the season, and other musical events that accent its profundity. This coming Sunday, Dec. 3, is Advent Sunday; many concerts are scheduled, some spilling over into the following week. All are an antidote to the canned Christmas music that provides a soundtrack to the rounds of shopping. -more-


Books: PEN Oakland Awards Honor Many Voices

Tuesday November 28, 2006

PEN Oakland’s 16th Annual Josephine Miles Literary Awards and 10th Annual Literary Censorship Award will be presented this Sunday at the Oakland Public Library. -more-


Osage Orange Trees — A Transplant in Time

By Ron Sullivan, Special to the Planet
Tuesday November 28, 2006

I’m stretching the boundaries of “East Bay” because I just like this odd tree. I first encountered it a few years back, along a dirt road east of Fairfield, where we look for mountain plovers. I spotted a number of unlikely objects on the grassy shoulder: Osage oranges, hedgeballs, Indiana brains, Maclura pomifera fruit. They were strewn along the roadside for yards, under a row of little deciduous trees. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Tuesday November 28, 2006

TUESDAY, NOV. 28 -more-


Arts Calendar

Friday November 24, 2006

FRIDAY, NOV. 24 -more-


Around the East Bay

Friday November 24, 2006

EAST BAY COMPANIES PERFORM ‘365 PLAYS’ -more-


The Battle for Good Modern Design on Campus

By John Kenyon Special to the Planet
Friday November 24, 2006

The splendid early buildings of UC Berkeley’s campus are more radical than first appears. California Hall from 1905, the first unit of John Galen Howard’s Beaux Arts ensemble, looks solidly traditional, yet one of its main features is an enormous skylight that illuminates not only the big attic, but, via a glass floor, an elegant atrium below. There was nothing more truly modern than this until the galleries-hanging-in-space of Mario Campi’s 1970 art museum. -more-


The Theater: Impact Theatre Stages ‘Jukebox Stories’ at La Val’s

By Ken Bullock, Special to the Planet
Friday November 24, 2006

Never has there been a more perfect show, site-specific in fact, for La Val’s Subterranean than Impact Theatre’s current production of Jukebox Stories, Prince Gomilvilas’ performance of his own prose alongside Brandon Patton singing songs and the interaction between the two—as well as with the audience. -more-


Moving Pictures: New to DVD: Doppelgangers and Femme Fatales

By Justin DeFreitas
Friday November 24, 2006

The holiday season is the time of year when the big Hollywood studios roll out their best films, the logic being that the Academy Award voters have short memories. But it is also the time when the studios and the smaller DVD companies bring out many of their most prestigious titles, often in special editions. -more-


Garden Variety: In the Garden and the Wild, Ends Are Also Beginnings

By Ron Sullivan
Friday November 24, 2006

I suppose it’s the season that’s pulling my thoughts toward the organisms and processes of decay: molds, mildews, earthworms, compost in general. Certainly I’m encountering them a lot lately, in the garden and in the wilds. We’ve had just enough rain to encourage little brown mushrooms to pop up, and the more annoying fungi and their companions on plants and walls and books and shower curtains are getting bolder too. Our winter companions, fungi are often such agents of destruction that we can just plain hate them. -more-


Ask Matt: Questions About Insurance and Shingles

By Matt Cantor
Friday November 24, 2006

Dear Matt, -more-


Quake Tip of the Week

By LARRY GUILLOT
Friday November 24, 2006

Have You Met Your Neighbors? -more-


Property Perspectives: What’s Really Happening in The Local Real Estate Market?

By TIM CANNON
Friday November 24, 2006

The news headlines resound of doom and gloom for the real estate market; but what is the back story? Most of these articles refer to the national scene, and to certain parts of the country that are the hardest hit. “18 percent drop here, 16 percent drop there, no relief in sight.” -more-