The Week

Shipyard artists Kimric Smythe and Shannon O’Hare move a sculpted head/succulent planter that once adorned the top of a shipping container studio at West Berkeley’s Shipyard, which has been closed after the city served notice of code violations. Looking on is artist Peter Luka. Photograph by Richard Brenneman.
Shipyard artists Kimric Smythe and Shannon O’Hare move a sculpted head/succulent planter that once adorned the top of a shipping container studio at West Berkeley’s Shipyard, which has been closed after the city served notice of code violations. Looking on is artist Peter Luka. Photograph by Richard Brenneman.
 

News

City Letter Prompts Shipyard Artist Exodus

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday May 15, 2007

The eclectic assembly of artists who have made The Shipyard a hub of creativity for the past six years was packing up over the weekend, evicted—they say—by the city. -more-


Commissioners Condemn Bigoted E-mail

By Judith Scherr
Tuesday May 15, 2007

A few weeks ago members of the southeast Berkeley community found newspapers and hate-filled flyers on their sidewalks and front porches targeting Jews, blacks, Hispanics and immigrants. -more-


The Public Eye: Big-Box Shopping Center on Fourth Street?

By Zelda Bronstein
Tuesday May 15, 2007

One of the city’s most valuable services is the NewsScan, the free, online daily compilation of media references to Berkeley. You find things there that you wouldn’t know about otherwise. Last Friday, I happened across just such an item, an article pulled down from the website of GlobeSt.com that reported the upcoming auction of two parcels totaling 5.8 acres at Fourth and Gilman, a.k.a. the former site of Flint Ink. -more-


Critical Mass Cyclists Confront Driver in Melee

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Tuesday May 15, 2007

Chaos broke loose at the intersection of The Alameda and Monterey Avenue during an otherwise peaceful Berkeley Critical Mass bicycle demonstration late Friday. -more-


City Looks to Improve Earthquake Standards for Homes

By Judith Scherr
Tuesday May 15, 2007

Developing earthquake standards for cities is hard enough, but writing rules to strengthen homes to withstand serious temblors—rules that apply to a large number of homes, including those built on hillsides, and are flexible enough to use a variety of materials and building techniques—is a challenge. -more-


Hunger Strikers Protest Lab Management

By Judith Scherr
Tuesday May 15, 2007

On May 8, the Department of Energy announced the new management team for the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL): the University of California, Bechtel National, BWX Technologies and others. -more-


Berkeley High Grad Mourned in Richmond Funeral

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Tuesday May 15, 2007

Canon Christian Jones II came home a week too soon from school in Alabama. The 18-year-old Berkeley High School graduate had planned to spend the summer with his family in Pinole starting May 14. -more-


Legislative Briefs

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Tuesday May 15, 2007

SB 67 (Sideshow bill) -more-


Zoning Board Approves Arpeggio Building Changes

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Tuesday May 15, 2007

The Berkeley Zoning Adjustments Board (ZAB) approved a use permit to establish a 24-Seven fitness center of approximately 2,000 sq. ft. in an existing commercial building at 1775 Solano Ave., but decided to discuss its parking provisions as an informational item at the next ZAB meeting. -more-


People’s Park Planners Meet With Community

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Tuesday May 15, 2007

MKThink—the San Francisco-based consultants hired by UC Berkeley to develop a community-based needs assessment plan to improve People’s Park—met with the park’s Advisory Committee members and park users for their first public meeting last Monday, May 7. -more-


Historic Building, Green Design Planning Elements Take Shape

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday May 15, 2007

Members of the two city bodies looking at the future of the Berkeley’s historic buildings are nearing completion of a key element of the new downtown plan. -more-


Emerson, Jefferson Schools Turn 100

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Friday May 11, 2007

A celebration of smiles will be held at Emerson and Jefferson Elementary Schools this weekend. -more-


Public Commons Plan Draws Fire, Praise

By Judith Scherr
Friday May 11, 2007

A weary mayor and seven councilmembers—with Councilmember Betty Olds having gone home—and more than two dozen members of the public waited in the council chambers past midnight Tuesday to address the mayor’s controversial Public Commons for Everyone initia-tive, a proposal aimed at curbing inappropriate behavior in shopping areas by intensifying law enforcement in an initial phase and adding social services later as funding will allow. -more-


Dellums Outlines Tight Budget Vision

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Friday May 11, 2007

With the release last week by Oakland Mayor Ron Dellums of a budget that proposes to spend $1.1 billion per year over the next two fiscal years, the focus of Oakland’s budget discussion now shifts to the Oakland City Council. -more-


Co-op Resident Hospitalized After Beating

By Richard Brenneman
Friday May 11, 2007

Two operations and five days after he was beaten outside a Berkeley student co-op, a San Francisco State student remains under medical care at Summit Alta Bates Hospital. -more-


Appeal on South Shattuck Antennas Comes to Council

By Judith Scherr
Friday May 11, 2007

Nextel and Verizon representatives at Tuesday’s council meeting squared off with irate neighbors of UC Storage at 2721 Shattuck Ave., with the communications companies getting what they wanted—the promise of a public hearing to review a zoning board decision which denied the powerful companies permits to install their antennas atop the Shattuck Avenue building. -more-


Two-Year Berkeley City Budget Unveiled

By Judith Scherr
Friday May 11, 2007

The Berkeley City Council got a first look at the draft two-year 2008-2009 $614,050 budget at a workshop before its regular meeting on Tuesday. Final budget decisions will not be made until the June 26 council meeting. -more-


Planners Reject Ban on Fast Food Chains on Telegraph

By Richard Brenneman
Friday May 11, 2007

If a Burger King wants to set up shop on Telegraph Avenue, the Berkeley Planning Commission decided Wednesday night that they’re not inclined to block it, though they don’t expect the fast food chain to open up on Berkeley’s emblematic commercial street. -more-


District Seeks New Home for Independent Study

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Friday May 11, 2007

The Berkeley Board of Education delayed its vote on a controversial proposal to establish a Community Day School on the B-Tech campus Wednesday. -more-


BHS Graduate Killed in Alabama

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Friday May 11, 2007

Tuskegee police have charged Quentin Motez Davis, 18, of Macon County, and Romanita Michelle Cloud, 18, of Tuskegee, Ala., with the murder of Berkeley High Graduate Canon Jones, who was shot after he left his dorm to buy food on April 29. -more-


Opinion

Editorials

Editorial: Academic Freedom Changes its Shape

By Becky O’Malley
Tuesday May 15, 2007

The words “academic freedom” have been tossed around a lot lately. They seem to mean different things in different contexts, and as a result they seem to be losing meaning altogether. Chancellor Birgeneau invoked them sanctimoniously in defense of his university’s god-given right to sell off a good bit of Strawberry Canyon, complete with associated faculty members, to British Petroleum, to aid in BP’s search for new and more lucrative ways to allow the rich nations to prolong their excessive energy consumption. A self-selected percentage of UC Berkeley’s faculty senate endorsed his position, which was possibly enhanced by the $500 million payoff, as did the Bates/Hancock apparatus and other local politicos. Now academic freedom seems to be expanding to protect UC’s right to add a 60-room hotel to the environmentally impacted canyon site, presumably so that BP’s visiting scholars won’t have to endure the horrors of the Hilton. -more-


Editorial: Another Foggy Night on the Public Commons

By Becky O’Malley
Friday May 11, 2007

It’s been almost 40 years since I gave up smoking, but watching Tuesday’s City Council meeting made me feel for the first time in years that I’d really like a cigarette. Why? Well, watching the City Council stumble and stutter their way through an agenda which came with a 1,400-page packet which they clearly hadn’t bothered to read was a nerve-racking experience. It culminated in a pathetic charade which purported to address the mayor’s heartfelt interest in “improving the quality of life of public commons in the city.” -more-


Public Comment

Letters to the Editor

Tuesday May 15, 2007

PUBLIC COMMONS -more-


Commentary: Community Partnerships Academy Seniors Leave Us Stronger

By Susannah Bell
Tuesday May 15, 2007

I have taught the Community Partnerships Academy (CPA) Class of 2007 every year since they were freshmen. Never in my 18-year career have I taught the same group of students over a four-year period and never before has teaching a group of students make me feel sincerely that they are my family. -more-


Commentary: Premature Ejaculation

By Wilson Riles
Tuesday May 15, 2007

Among other things, the timing was wrong. The Dellums’ taskforce recommendations were turned over to the Oakland Chamber of Commerce before they were finished. They were released before they were merged into a coherent plan and before there was sufficient indication of agreement from the mayor on the individual recommendations or priority order of implementation. The Oakland Chamber took these raw recommendations, used the pro bono services of a consultant with particular biases (McKinsey), and presented the framework they had already been working on as Oakland’s economic future at the mayor’s Economic Summit. Unlike McKinsey’s spokesperson, the taskforce presenters were literally chosen at the last minute. Was this the mayor’s timing or the chamber’s timing? The chamber wants to get out in front of an economic development process that it is not in control of for the first time in the history of Oakland? -more-


Commentary: Moms Wear Combat Boots, Too

By Eli PaintedCrow
Tuesday May 15, 2007

At the age of 20, being a mother of a 3- and 5-year-old was not easy. Being a single mom on welfare living in a cockroach-infested apartment was not living. I thought I needed to learn discipline, so I walked into the army recruitment office. I spent my 21st birthday in boot camp on a five-mile road march. Many a mom has gone through boot camp. I was no exception. -more-


Letters to the Editor

Friday May 11, 2007

POWERBAR SIGN -more-


Commentary: HOMES Policy Betrays Low-Income Alameda Families

By David Howard
Friday May 11, 2007

Here in Alameda we recently marked that 10th anniversary of the closure of Naval Air Station Alameda, on the West end of the Alameda. The former base is heavily contaminated and is a federal Superfund site, and clean-up has been in progress for years. The land that comprised the base is now known as Alameda Point and is slated for housing development, and the City of Alameda has recently selected two developers - Catellus and Lennar - as co-developers for Alameda Point. Enacted in 1973, Alameda City Charter Amendment XXVI (known colloquially as “Measure A") restricts housing density for new construction within Alameda. -more-


Commentary: Strawberry Creek Presents City with Plaza Vision

By Elyce Judith
Friday May 11, 2007

The City of Berkeley is approaching the point when the long-held vision of a spectacular urban plaza featuring a daylighted Strawberry Creek can at last become a reality. Since the early 1980s, hundreds of Berkeley citizens have come forward to express their hope that the City would unearth Strawberry Creek which currently flows under several downtown buildings and streets. This long-buried waterway could become the centerpiece of a world class destination, the first example of environmental restoration in such a highly urbanized location. -more-


Commentary: Iraq Defeat Looms

By Karl Davis
Friday May 11, 2007

Below is an excerpt from “A failure in generalship”by Army Lt. Col. Paul Yingling, deputy commander, 3rd Armored Calvary Regiment, as published in the Armed Forces Journal, followed by a response by Karl Davis, a Berkeley High graduate currently on active duty as colonel in the National Guard. -more-


Commentary: War: State Hate Crime

By Frank Scott
Friday May 11, 2007

Dealing with serious social problems by creating laws which only protect certain individuals is a method for avoiding root causes by making small changes in their effects. Thus we have new legislation applied to old problems which exist, in part, because old legislation was never fairly enforced. The new laws make some people feel better, especially if they’re in the legal business. But the public is usually divided along familiar for or against lines, remaining in the mindset they had before the new laws were applied to the old problems. -more-


Commentary: Planning and Caring for Aging Loved Ones

By Keith Carson
Friday May 11, 2007

Sooner or later, we will be taking care of a parent or a loved one who is aging. According to the National Family Caregivers Association, “More than 50 million people provide care for a chronically ill, disabled or aged family member or friend during any given year.” Our State’s elderly population is expected to reach 12.5 million by 2040, an increase of 232 percent from 1990. Beginning in 2010, 1 in 5 Californians will be 60 years of age or older. As the average age of the population becomes older, the importance of a care giver becomes increasingly significant, both functionally and economically. -more-


Columns

Column: The Public Eye: Reconsidering the Need for Impeachment

By Bob Burnett
Tuesday May 15, 2007

In Berkeley, it’s difficult to travel more than a few blocks without seeing an “Impeach Bush” bumper sticker. And whenever I write a column about the 43rd president, I receive e-mails suggesting that the simplest solution to America’s problems is his impeachment. Nonetheless, I’d never taken the possibility of impeachment seriously until this week when I realized I’ve had enough: I want Dubya to go down. -more-


Column: Hey Diddle Diddle and Nine Naked Barbies

By Susan Parker
Tuesday May 15, 2007

Two weeks ago I wrote a column in which I described my adventures at Fairyland with a hyperactive kindergartener. I mentioned tagging along with him as he climbed up and over the Pirate Ship. I explained that I pursued him as he rushed from Hey Diddle Diddle to the Crooked House, past the Three Little Pigs and Little Miss Muffet on his way to the Jolly Trolly, Pinocchio’s Castle, and the Owl and the Pussycat. I reluctantly followed him down Alice’s Rabbit Hole. I stated that I popped up safely within the Maze of Cards. -more-


Wild Neighbors: The Travels and Tribulations of the Hoary Bat

By Joe Eaton
Tuesday May 15, 2007

Cal Day at the Museum of Vertebrate Zoology (MVZ) is a reliable venue for stories. Last year it was a conversation with a maybe eight-year-old naturalist about gopher snakes at the Berkeley Marina. This year I wound up talking to a young woman who was presiding over a tabletop display of dead bats. One in particularly caught my eye, a larger-than-average bat with a striking two-tone wing pattern: a hoary bat (Lasiurus cinereus). -more-


Column: Dispatches From the Edge: European Missiles and the Camel’s Nose

By Conn Hallinan
Friday May 11, 2007

The current brouhaha over a U.S. plan to deploy anti-ballistic missiles (ABM) in Poland has nothing to do with a fear that Iran will attack Europe or the United States with nuclear tipped Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles (ICBM), but a great deal to do with the Bush Administration’s efforts to neutralize Russia’s and China’s nuclear deterrents and edge both countries out of Central Asia. -more-


Column: Undercurrents: The Question of Criticizing Oakland Mayor Dellums

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Friday May 11, 2007

How should East Bay progressives handle criticism of Mayor Ron Dellums and his administration, their own criticism, and that of others? It’s a complicated question without a quick and easy answer. -more-


Garden Variety: A Place with Natives and Edibles for a Good Cause

By Ron Sullivan
Friday May 11, 2007

Ploughshares Nursery is a unique operation. Located off Main Street on the former Alameda Naval Air Station, across from the Rosenblum Winery and the ferry terminal, it’s owned by the Alameda Point Collaborative. The Collaborative describes itself as a “supportive housing community,” with 500 formerly homeless people—veterans, domestic violence survivors, children and adults with disabilities—living in converted Navy housing. It offers counseling, life skills coaching, and job training, through the nursery and otherwise. Proceeds from the plants you buy at Ploughshares go to the Collaborative. -more-


About the House: What To Do About Mold Spores in the House

By Matt Cantor
Friday May 11, 2007

There are few things in life as embarrassing as having to ask your hostess what’s in the casserole. I know. I’ve been doing this for the last 15 years or so since having finally figured out after many distressing years that I’m not good friends with bovine products. -more-


Arts & Events

Arts Calendar

Tuesday May 15, 2007

TUESDAY, MAY 15 -more-


Fourth Street Hosts Annual Jazz Festival

By Ira Steingroot, Special to the Planet
Tuesday May 15, 2007

Photograph: Wayne Wallace will be appearing at the Jazz on Fourth Street Festival this weekend. -more-


The Theater: Eastenders Present ‘Fear and Misery of the Third Reich’

By Ken Bullock, Special to the Planet
Tuesday May 15, 2007

Before the opening scene of the Eastenders’ production of Bertolt Brecht’s Fear and Misery of the Third Reich—which opens Thursday, May 17, at the Jewish Community Center for a four-show run, after four days last week at San Francisco’s Traveling Jewish Theatre—there are projections of National Socialist posters of happy comrades, of mother and child, the cheerful false face of Nazi propaganda for the German public and the world. -more-


Wild Neighbors: The Travels and Tribulations of the Hoary Bat

By Joe Eaton
Tuesday May 15, 2007

Cal Day at the Museum of Vertebrate Zoology (MVZ) is a reliable venue for stories. Last year it was a conversation with a maybe eight-year-old naturalist about gopher snakes at the Berkeley Marina. This year I wound up talking to a young woman who was presiding over a tabletop display of dead bats. One in particularly caught my eye, a larger-than-average bat with a striking two-tone wing pattern: a hoary bat (Lasiurus cinereus). -more-


Berkeley This Week

Tuesday May 15, 2007

TUESDAY, MAY 15 -more-


Arts Calendar

Friday May 11, 2007

FRIDAY, MAY 11 -more-


Arts and Entertainment Around the East Bay

Friday May 11, 2007

OOGOG AT THE -more-


‘The Hip Hop Project: Rap Goes New Age

By Gar Smith, Special to the Planet
Friday May 11, 2007

You may not be a fan of the rap industry, but if you’re looking for a movie with more heart and soul than a dozen Dream Girls, check out The Hip Hop Project, which opens today (Friday). And there’s something else that sets this film apart: all the profits from ticket sales are being donated to youth art programs. -more-


Young, Salas and Lockett: Poetry at City College

By Ken Bullock, Special to the Planet
Friday May 11, 2007

“He can sing you jazz, the songs,” said Richard Silberg of Poetry Flash, introducing Al Young, California’s Poet Laureate, a Berkeley resident, as one of three readers, with Floyd Salas, also of Berkeley, and Reginald Lockett of Oakland, Tuesday night, in a round robin: “They’ll riff back and forth ... in sweet conclave!” -more-


Garden Variety: A Place with Natives and Edibles for a Good Cause

By Ron Sullivan
Friday May 11, 2007

Ploughshares Nursery is a unique operation. Located off Main Street on the former Alameda Naval Air Station, across from the Rosenblum Winery and the ferry terminal, it’s owned by the Alameda Point Collaborative. The Collaborative describes itself as a “supportive housing community,” with 500 formerly homeless people—veterans, domestic violence survivors, children and adults with disabilities—living in converted Navy housing. It offers counseling, life skills coaching, and job training, through the nursery and otherwise. Proceeds from the plants you buy at Ploughshares go to the Collaborative. -more-


About the House: What To Do About Mold Spores in the House

By Matt Cantor
Friday May 11, 2007

There are few things in life as embarrassing as having to ask your hostess what’s in the casserole. I know. I’ve been doing this for the last 15 years or so since having finally figured out after many distressing years that I’m not good friends with bovine products. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Friday May 11, 2007

FRIDAY, MAY 11 -more-