The Week

B-Tech senior Tommy Copes hugs Principal Victor Diaz 
          during the commencement ceremony at St John’s Presbyterian Church Friday. Many students credited Diaz for their success. Photograph by Riya Bhattacharjee.
B-Tech senior Tommy Copes hugs Principal Victor Diaz during the commencement ceremony at St John’s Presbyterian Church Friday. Many students credited Diaz for their success. Photograph by Riya Bhattacharjee.
 

News

Barton Responds, Calls for Review of City Attorney

By Judith Scherr
Tuesday June 12, 2007

Eighteen-year city employee Stephen Barton, asked to resign last Tuesday, was publicly pummeled in a memo by the Berkeley city attorney Wednesday, a six-page document addressed to the mayor and City Council and filled with attacks aimed primarily at Barton, but also at the city manager, deputy city manager and other city staff. -more-


B-Tech Graduates 23

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Tuesday June 12, 2007

Twenty-three young men and women were sent out to conquer the real world on Friday. -more-


City Council To Consider Public Commons Initiative—Again

By Judith Scherr
Tuesday June 12, 2007

The Berkeley City Council tonight (Tuesday) will take another look at the mayor’s controversial Public Commons for Everyone Initiative. At the last meeting, an exhausted council did not address the specifics in the measure intended to enhance shopping areas by removing persons whose behavior is unacceptable. -more-


Berkeley Police Probe Year’s Second Murder

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday June 12, 2007

Berkeley police found the body of the year’s second murder, 46-year-old Terrence Marlow Broadnax, shortly after noon Friday in a fourth-floor apartment at University Avenue Homes. -more-


Activist Group Urges Students to Protest Military Opt-Out Policy

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Tuesday June 12, 2007

World Can’t Wait called on all Berkeley High School students Monday to sign a letter protesting the U.S. military’s requirement that Berkeley High give student information to military recruiters unless the students request the school not to. -more-


BUSD, City Discuss Pool, Derby Plan, Safety Issues

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Tuesday June 12, 2007

Littering, downtown safety issues and plans for the warm water pool dominated the meeting held between representatives of the city and the Berkeley Unified School District Friday. -more-


Zoning Board Preview

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Tuesday June 12, 2007

The Zoning Adjustments Board (ZAB) will once again hear the appeal of an administrative use permit for a residential addition to 2008 Virginia St. -more-


Housing Committee Calls for Investigation

By Judith Scherr
Tuesday June 12, 2007

The Housing Advisory Commission is asking the Berkeley City Council to have an independent investigation conducted into allegations made by City Attorney Manuela Albuquerque regarding former Housing Director Steve Barton’s alleged refusal to take her advice and similar allegations directed at City Manager Phil Kamlarz, Deputy City Manager Lisa Caronna and other staff. -more-


New Housing Board Meets Tonight

By Judith Scherr
Tuesday June 12, 2007

The new Berkeley Housing Authority Board will meet in joint session with the City Council at 5 p.m. -more-


Dellums Tours Fruitvale, Promises Relief

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Tuesday June 12, 2007

In a scene that invoked historical images of a lanky President Abraham Lincoln walking through the streets of a liberated Richmond shortly before the end of the Civil War, Ron Dellums took a 15-block walking tour of International Boulevard in the Fruitvale District Friday evening surrounded by a phalanx of city officials, local residents, staff, police and private security packed around him so dense that the tall Oakland mayor could only be viewed by his snow-haired head towering above the crowd. -more-


Police Underestimated Number Of Sideshow Cars Confiscated

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Tuesday June 12, 2007

The Oakland Police Department official in charge of Oakland’s sideshow enforcement activities may have seriously understated the number of vehicles towed in Oakland in connection with a state sideshow car towing law. -more-


Landmarks Commission Deadlocks on BHS Gym

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday June 12, 2007

Berkeley landmarks commissioners failed to reach a consensus on the old Berkeley High School Gymnasium Thursday, with a motion to declare the aging structure a landmark failing on a 4-3-1 vote. -more-


Final Landmarks/DAPAC Meetings Scheduled

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday June 12, 2007

A joint subcommittee hammering out a proposal that would define the role of historic buildings in the center of downtown Berkeley will hold its final meeting Tuesday night. -more-


Upcoming Workshop Eyes Downtown Plan

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday June 12, 2007

Berkeley residents will have another chance to weigh on with their visions of the future of downtown Berkeley during a Saturday workshop at the Berkeley Public Library. -more-


Downtown Panel, Planners Ponder Bus Rapid Transit

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday June 12, 2007

Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) tops the agendas of two city panels this week, the Planning Commission and a DAPAC subcommittee. -more-


Richmond Agencies To Discuss New Plan

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday June 12, 2007

While Berkeley struggles with drafting a legally mandated new plan for the city’s downtown, a committee of Richmond residents has been working toward a new plan for their city. -more-


Housing Director Barton Resigns Under Pressure

By Judith Scherr
Friday June 08, 2007

For some, Steve Barton’s an idealist who puts his principles into practice, advocating housing policies—rent control, subsidized housing, co-operative housing—aimed at keeping diverse populations in Berkeley. -more-


Cramped South Berkeley Library Considers Proposal to Relocate

By Judith Scherr
Friday June 08, 2007

Walk into the South Berkeley Library and you practically bump into the four computers near the entry way. If you want to browse the history section, you’ve got to move to a narrow hallway to find what you’re looking for. -more-


Policy Change Allows Sales in People’s Park

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Friday June 08, 2007

The People’s Park Community Advisory Board approved a policy Monday to allow a one-year trial for limited commercial activity at the park. -more-


Golden Gate Fields Resurfacing Plan Faces Challenges, Legal Hurdles

By Richard Brenneman
Friday June 08, 2007

The Sierra Club doesn’t object to a new track finish for Albany’s Golden Gate Fields; they just don’t like how it’s being done. -more-


Albany Activist Killed Crosssing Marin Avenue Intersection

By Richard Brenneman
Friday June 08, 2007

Well-known Albany environmentalist Ruth Meniketti died Wednesday night after she was struck by a pickup as she crossed Marin Avenue at Talbot Avenue, police report. -more-


BHS Student Arrested at Prom For Carrying Concealed Gun

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Friday June 08, 2007

A Berkeley High School senior and her date were arrested Saturday at the senior prom in San Francisco for possession of a loaded gun. -more-


The State of the Berkeley Housing Authority

By Judith Scherr
Friday June 08, 2007

Today, the Berkeley Housing Authority (BHA) is a division of the housing department that oversees federally-funded low-income housing. A board currently consisting of the mayor and City Council and two tenants oversees the authority. -more-


UC Seeks Architect for Planned Cloyne Court Renovation

By Richard Brenneman
Friday June 08, 2007

UC Berkeley issued notice Thursday that it plans a $3 million to $5 million renovation of Cloyne Court, a venerable shingle-sided landmark that has served both as a hotel and as student housing. -more-


AC Transit Line Changes, No Cuts, Planned for June 24

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Friday June 08, 2007

Changes, adjustments, or complete disbandment affecting some AC Transit 20 route lines are scheduled to go into effect June 24, but district representatives say that riders will be able to catch buses at almost all of the currently existing bus stops, and will be able to get to and from virtually all of the existing travel points. In several cases, however, riders may have to get where they are going on AC Transit a slightly different way than they have been used to. -more-


School Board Approves New ‘Opt-Out’ Military Recruitment Policy

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Friday June 08, 2007

The Berkeley Board of Education accepted the first reading of a policy reversal to release student information to the military for recruitment to be eligible for federal education grants. -more-


Berkeley High Inagurates Sports Hall of Fame

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Friday June 08, 2007

Berkeley High School unveiled its Athletic Hall of Fame last week to recognize former student athletes who have excelled in sports over the last century. -more-


Oakland Youth Violence Testimony Given

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Friday June 08, 2007

Members of the Assembly Select Committee On Youth Violence Prevention brought their third and final hearing to Oakland last week, hearing hours of expert testimony before an overflow crowd at the Port of Oakland boardroom on Friday on strategies that have been used to address and attack one of California’s most pressing problems. -more-


Police Blotter

By Rio Bauce
Friday June 08, 2007

Urban shoplifters -more-


First Person: Why I’m a Racist

By Madeline Smith Moore
Friday June 08, 2007

“When this war is over, there will be one between colored and white!” These were the words of my parents that I listened to in horror from the back seat of our car outside of the A&P in East Providence, R.I. I had seen war in the newsreels on Saturday afternoon. I had seen people shooting at other people from the protection of hedgerows. I pictured myself shooting at my eight-year-old white friends. My only friends of color were my cousin and Anna, and neither lived in my neighborhood. It was the early ‘40s and my parents were referring to the segregation of our armed forces in the Second World War. I got over that. -more-


Opinion

Editorials

Editorial: City Attorney’s Flaming Memo Out of Line

By Becky O’Malley
Tuesday June 12, 2007

There’s plenty of blame to go around in the Berkeley Housing Authority situation. A friend of a friend took a job there briefly a few years ago, after a successful career at similar agencies elsewhere, and left quickly after describing the organization to my friend as “sneaky, underhanded and dysfunctional.” An elderly tenant whose rent is supplemented with a Section 8 certificate says that her landlord successfully claimed that she hadn’t paid her rent when she actually had, and therefore he collected double rent for at least several months. Others complain that even though they had Section 8 certificates they were never able to get into Berkeley apartments because vacancies always went to friends of staff. -more-


Editorial: Being Color Blind is No Better than Being Tone Deaf

By Becky O'Malley
Friday June 08, 2007

San Francisco Opera General Manager David Gockley himself summed it up best in an interview with Daniel Wakin in Saturday’s New York Times: “Our business doesn’t work that way,” he said in a telephone interview. “It has been nobly color-blind over recent decades, and I certainly haven’t worked that way, and my record bears that out.” -more-


Public Comment

Letters to the Editor

Tuesday June 12, 2007

HOUSING DIRECTOR -more-


Commentary: University’s BP Farce Continues

By James A. Singmaster
Tuesday June 12, 2007

The UC infatuation with the BP con game grant goes on despite many comments, letters and op-ed articles in papers and magazines pointing out that fermentation of biofuel crops releases much carbon dioxide needlessly before getting the fuel and leaves much unused biomass in cellulose and lignin. This money would be much better used to find how to get solar energy combined with a catalyst to split water getting hydrogen, the clean fuel. Also the money could be doing much more in maximizing a pyrolysis process to make charcoal from our already harvested biofuel crops, our organic wastes. Their disposal costs many billions a year, while allowing, especially in composting, the recycling of trapped carbon back to the environment as carbon dioxide. Now in Naples, Italy, a major problem of no more disposal space for wastes is making a major ugly mess, which other cities may soon be snarled in, if we do not recognize those wastes can be utilized to get energy and some carbon removal. -more-


Commentary: Public Commons Initiative Not for Everyone

By Nancy Carleton
Tuesday June 12, 2007

I am writing to comment on some of the issues raised by the so-called Public Commons for Everyone Initiative on the City Council agenda for Tuesday evening. Without my belaboring the ironic and Orwellian implications of using the term “commons,” what concerns me most is the disproportionate emphasis on coming up with new laws rather than bringing community and city resources to bear directly on the issue of problematic street behavior. Has anyone analyzed how many taxpayer dollars would go to pay for the staff time of members of the city attorney and city manager’s offices to come up with new laws? We could be spending those funds on pragmatic solutions, such as instituting true community policing, funding peer counselors to work on the streets, and increasing services to address the real mental health and substance abuse issues that cause most of the problems. -more-


Commentary: Anti-Racist Etiquette and a Healthier Body Politic

By David Schroeder
Tuesday June 12, 2007

Thank you, Daily Planet, for publishing Madeline Smith Moore’s June 8 testimonial, “Why I’m a Racist.” I appreciate her honesty and accuracy. The article also deserved to be published in a paper that all too often (whether intentionally or subconsciously) reinforces the sensibilities of many of its privileged white liberal readers. Perhaps ironically, as one of those readers, I not only agree with the vast majority of Moore’s sentiments, but also hope to prevent the story’s content from being distorted, diluted, or forgotten. I am, unfortunately, socialized to be white (that makes me a racist). Yet I support the message that racism is real, all-pervasive, and experiences of it need to be heard, respected and acted on. I also apologize for, and in the future should avoid, needing a person of color to start and participate in this antiracist conversation. -more-


Letters to the Editor

Friday June 08, 2007

HOPE BRIGGS -more-


Commentary: Blacks Excluded from Yoshi’s And the Jazzschool? No!

By Robert Stewart
Friday June 08, 2007

As one of the most prolific Black saxophonists in the country, born and raised in Oakland, I’m ashamed of the hostility and triviality that has been directed toward SUSAN MUSCARELLA and the Yoshi’s establishment by Black musicians in the Bay Area. -more-


Commentary: Jazzschool Questions Long Overdue

By Esther Green
Friday June 08, 2007

As I see it, the recent public questioning of the hiring and operating practices of the Jazzschool in Berkeley by prominent jazz artists and their supporters living in the San Francisco Bay Area is long overdue. Here is just one local example of how the actions of self-appointed authorities on this cultural art form are marginalizing the musicians who are the direct connection to and inheritors of the legacy. This is being done by trivializing the dedication and level of artistic achievement of our resident musicians who were and are members of the real jazz community here, which existed long before all of these exclusive so-called jazz festivals and schools. -more-


Commentary: Elmwood Doesn’t Need a Big Bar Without Parking

By the Elmwood Neighborhood Association
Friday June 08, 2007

On Tuesday night, the Berkeley City Council will consider a project that could bring a restaurant with a bar and lounge on the scale of Spenger’s to the Elmwood. But there would be one crucial difference—it wouldn’t have any parking. -more-


Commentary: Will Berkeley Become a Company Town?

By Merrilie Mitchell
Friday June 08, 2007

When we consider global warming, most of us know we must change our fuel-guzzling ways, not continue them with the UC-BP (British Petroleum) biofuels project. Here is a protest song about UC-BP recycled from the song “Simple Gifts”: -more-


Commentary: Bus Rapid Transit Plan is Bad Idea

By Peter Allen
Friday June 08, 2007

AC Transit’s proposed bus rapid transit (BRT) is just a bad idea. Here is why: -more-


Commentary: The Role of Transit in Berkeley, Bay Area: Taking a Stand Against Global Warming

By Joe DiStefano
Friday June 08, 2007

I want to weigh in on behalf of the vast majority of Berkeley citizens who voted a resounding yes on Measure G this past election. Voters said we want the city and its businesses and residents to comprehensively and effectively address the issue of climate change and energy policy. That means addressing this extremely important issue in many different ways, from the efficiency of individual buildings, to how we power, heat, and cool our homes, to how we get from place to place within Berkeley and the greater Bay Area. When it comes to transportation, this means viable alternatives to the private automobile, including bikes, walking, and transit. -more-


Columns

Column: The Public Eye: Good Bill, Bad Hillary

By Bob Burnett
Tuesday June 12, 2007

Hillary Clinton remains the favorite to be the Democratic presidential nominee at their August 2008 convention in Denver. However, while most Dems view her positively, she’s unpopular with Independents and Republicans. This is called “the Hillary problem,” but it’s really “the Bill problem.” -more-


Column: World’s Most Important Job Includes Climbing and Swinging

By Susan Parker
Tuesday June 12, 2007

On Friday I came home from my substitute teaching job at 4 p.m. I was in bed by 5:15. I slept for 14 hours and awoke refreshed and happy. School is out. Yeah! -more-


Wild Neighbors: Role Models: Where Song Sparrows Learn Their Songs

By Joe Eaton
Tuesday June 12, 2007

It may be a drab little brown bird, but the song sparrow has attracted a lot of scholarly attention. The song sparrows of San Francisco Bay alone support a kind of cottage industry. We have four distinct subspecies here, three confined to tidal marshes, the fourth to neighboring uplands. The marsh sparrows, generally smaller and grayer than the upland birds, have adapted to their environment by evolving a higher tolerance for salt water (although their insect prey appears to meet most of their water needs). -more-


Column: Dispatches from the Edge: Dark Plots in Byzantine Beirut

By Conn Hallinan
Friday June 08, 2007

According to the U.S. mainstream media and the Bush Administration, the fighting in Lebanon between Fatah al-Islam and the Lebanese Army is really a proxy battle between the Lebanese government of Prime Minister Fouad Siniora and Syria over efforts by Damascus to destabilize Lebanon and snuff a UN investigation into the assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri in 2005. -more-


Column: Undercurrents: Media Reports on Dellums’ First Months Miss the Mark

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Friday June 08, 2007

Investigative reporter Robert Gammon of the East Bay Express doesn’t reach Gary Webb status—who among us does, after all?—but he’s one of the best the Bay Area now has when it comes to uncovering essential information to the public that others don’t even think about looking for. -more-


About the House: Some Thoughts on Bathroom Remodeling

By Matt Cantor
Friday June 08, 2007

I just love aphorisms. They’re so … so … one-size-fits-all. No bother with versatility or adjustment for circumstances, just “Time and Tides wait for no man” (but they do wait for women as we all know), “Cast not your pearls before swine” (I like the idea of “casting for swine” although it may not be the right season for swine and I think you need a second set of tackle). “Never throw good money after bad” (now which was the bad money? Let me think). Actually, I think I can say something about the last one. -more-


Garden Variety: House and Garden Wares Worth A Look in West Berkeley

By Ron Sullivan
Friday June 08, 2007

When we’re in the Fourth Street shopomania neighborhood we’re usually on the way to buying groceries for Shep the snake, though if we get a parking space we might go see if Cody’s still exists, or stop for lunch at Tacubaya. So it’s no surprise I missed Eastern Classics while the store was nearby, and had go read the little A-frame signboard on the corner to see where the enterprise had gone. -more-


Arts & Events

Arts Calendar

Tuesday June 12, 2007

TUESDAY, JUNE 12 -more-


The Theater: TheatreFIRST Stages ‘365’ Play

By Ken Bullock, Special to the Planet
Tuesday June 12, 2007

TheatreFIRST, Oakland’s only resident theater company—and now bereft of their latest home in Old Oakland, will perform Week 31 of Suzan-Lori Parks’ year-long, nationwide 365 Days/Plays project 8 p.m. this Friday night, June 15, at the Temescal Arts Center at 48th and Telegraph in Oakland. -more-


Bolcom and Morris Return for SF Show

By Ken Bullock, Special to the Planet
Tuesday June 12, 2007

Composer-pianist William Bolcom and mezzo-soprano Joan Morris will make a rare Bay Area appearance 8 p.m. this Thursday (June 14) to present a “Red, White and Blue” Flag Day celebratory version of their popular recitals of American song of the past two centuries, at Piedmont Piano’s San Francisco store at 660 Third St. For information and reservations: (415) 543-9988 or www.piedmontpiano.com. -more-


Wild Neighbors: Role Models: Where Song Sparrows Learn Their Songs

By Joe Eaton
Tuesday June 12, 2007

It may be a drab little brown bird, but the song sparrow has attracted a lot of scholarly attention. The song sparrows of San Francisco Bay alone support a kind of cottage industry. We have four distinct subspecies here, three confined to tidal marshes, the fourth to neighboring uplands. The marsh sparrows, generally smaller and grayer than the upland birds, have adapted to their environment by evolving a higher tolerance for salt water (although their insect prey appears to meet most of their water needs). -more-


Berkeley This Week

Tuesday June 12, 2007

TUESDAY, JUNE 12 -more-


Open Call for Essays

Tuesday June 12, 2007

Healthy Living -more-


Arts Calendar

Friday June 08, 2007

FRIDAY, JUNE 8 -more-


Arts and Entertainment Around the East Bay

Friday June 08, 2007

PHOTOS OF MONGOLIA -more-


The Theater: Actors Ensemble Stages ‘A Dream Play’

By Ken Bullock, Special to the Planet
Friday June 08, 2007

Actors Ensemble of Berkeley has taken on an ambitious project—Strindberg’s shape-shifting A Dream Play as a site-specific performance, in and around the Berkeley Art Center in Live Oak Park, played during afternoons over the next few weekends. And admission is free. -more-


The Theater: A New Take on Dickens’ ‘Oliver Twist’

By Ken Bullock, Special to the Planet
Friday June 08, 2007

By KEN BULLOCK -more-


The Theater: Daisey Presents ‘Great Men of Genius’

By Ken Bullock, Special to the Planet
Friday June 08, 2007

“Brecht is a very challenging ‘Jeopardy’ question,” quipped a deadpan Mike Daisey at the start of the first in his series of four monologues, Great Men of Genius, at the Berkeley Rep thrust stage through July 1. -more-


About the House: Some Thoughts on Bathroom Remodeling

By Matt Cantor
Friday June 08, 2007

I just love aphorisms. They’re so … so … one-size-fits-all. No bother with versatility or adjustment for circumstances, just “Time and Tides wait for no man” (but they do wait for women as we all know), “Cast not your pearls before swine” (I like the idea of “casting for swine” although it may not be the right season for swine and I think you need a second set of tackle). “Never throw good money after bad” (now which was the bad money? Let me think). Actually, I think I can say something about the last one. -more-


Garden Variety: House and Garden Wares Worth A Look in West Berkeley

By Ron Sullivan
Friday June 08, 2007

When we’re in the Fourth Street shopomania neighborhood we’re usually on the way to buying groceries for Shep the snake, though if we get a parking space we might go see if Cody’s still exists, or stop for lunch at Tacubaya. So it’s no surprise I missed Eastern Classics while the store was nearby, and had go read the little A-frame signboard on the corner to see where the enterprise had gone. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Friday June 08, 2007

FRIDAY, JUNE 8 -more-


Correction

Friday June 08, 2007

According to city spokesperson Mary Kay Clunies-Ross, the city’s web page incorrectly states that there is a budget workshop preceding the regular council meeting on June 12. -more-


Open Call for Essays

Friday June 08, 2007

As part of an ongoing effort to print stories by East Bay residents, The Daily Planet invites readers to write about their experiences and perspectives on living healthy. Please email your essays, no more than 800 words, to firstperson@berkeleydailyplanet.com. We will publish the best essays in upcoming issues. -more-