The Week

UC Berkeley students protesting the $500 million BP research agreement march through Sather Gate during a May 8 demonstration that ended in chants outside the administration building. Photograph by Richard Brenneman.
UC Berkeley students protesting the $500 million BP research agreement march through Sather Gate during a May 8 demonstration that ended in chants outside the administration building. Photograph by Richard Brenneman.
 

News

Big Trees, Big Building and Big Oil Highlighted UC Berkeley’s 2007

By Richard Brenneman
Friday December 28, 2007

For California’s premier public university, 2007 was a year of big trees, big buildings and Big Oil. -more-


News Analysis: Looking Back on The Year in Berkeley

By Judith Scherr
Friday December 28, 2007

Take a look back at Berkeley in 2007. -more-


How Green did Berkeley Get in 2007?

By Judith Scherr
Friday December 28, 2007

2007 has been a year of hype and hope about how green Berkeley is and might be. -more-


Year Saw New Plans for Downtown and West Berkeley

By Richard Brenneman
Friday December 28, 2007

Berkeley ended the year with the draft of a new downtown plan and a strong push to change the existing plan for West Berkeley. -more-


A Year of Mixed Results for Dellums’ Administration

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Friday December 28, 2007

There is only one phrase to properly describe the first year of the administration of Oakland Mayor Ron Dellums: “mixed results.” -more-


A Year of Political Turnaround in the Oakland Schools

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Friday December 28, 2007

If a high school English class were assigned to write a summary of the Oakland Unified School District for 2007, they would probably borrow and paraphrase from the opening lines of Dickens’ A Tale of Two Cities: The year started out as the worst of times, and though by the end of 2007 it wasn’t the best of times, yet, it had certainly gotten decidedly better. -more-


2007 in the Berkeley Unified School District

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Friday December 28, 2007

2007, a year of many good-byes for the Berkeley Unified School District, ended with one notable welcome: the hiring of a new superintendent who is expected to take over the helm in Feburary. -more-


Injured Pedestrian Struck By Car Dies

By Judith Scherr
Friday December 28, 2007

Erica Madrid, a supervising public health nurse in the Berkeley Public Health Department, died Friday, as a result of injuries sustained when she was hit by an automobile Dec. 12 at about 4:25 p.m., while crossing Solano Avenue going south at Fresno Avenue. -more-


Opinion

Editorials

Editorial: Keep Those Letters Coming In, Folks

By Becky O’Malley
Friday December 28, 2007

Year-in-Review issues of papers like ours (well, there aren’t many papers like this one, but let’s say of any periodical publication) are anomalies. -more-


Public Comment

Letters to the Editor

Friday December 28, 2007

-more-


Commentary: A First Look at New School Superintendent

By Julie Holcomb
Friday December 28, 2007

I was pleased to accompany our school board on an excursion on December 18, to visit the Lodi Unified School District to learn about their superintendent, Bill Huyett. It’s a large and diverse school district, with over 31,000 students (36 percent Hispanic, 17 percent Asian, 9 percent African American, 30 percent white) and 51 school sites. By comparison, BUSD has about 9000 students (17 percent Hispanic, 7 percent Asian, 29 percent African American, 30 percent white, 16 percent mixed or decline to state), and 16 school sites. -more-


Commentary: AC Transit Will Not Replace Parking Loss

By Sharon Hudson
Friday December 28, 2007

Regarding Bus Rapid Transit (BRT), it’s time for Charles Siegel to put up or shut up. -more-


Commentary: Protecting the Silent Majority

By Jonathan DeYoe
Friday December 28, 2007

Berkeley residents are proud of our well-deserved reputation for being passionate about our beliefs and committed to our causes. Most of us are dedicated to the diverse individuals and opinions that make our community truly unique, and we have the courage in our convictions to defend them to the utmost of our abilities. -more-


Columns

Column: Dispatches From the Edge: The Surge: Illusion and Reality

By Conn Hallinan
Friday December 28, 2007

“Where the dead are ghosts on the fragile abacus -more-


Column: The Public Eye: 2007: Winners and Losers

By Bob Burnett
Friday December 28, 2007

2007 wasn’t a happy year, as the major political stories were mostly downers. Here are my choices for the big winners and losers. -more-


East Bay Then and Now: Two East Bay Churches Mark Christmas Centennials

By Daniella Thompson
Friday December 28, 2007

In the aftermath of the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, the East Bay population ballooned practically overnight, absorbing 200,000 refugees of which three-quarters remained permanently. To accommodate their burgeoning communities, Berkeley and Oakland acquired new housing developments, factories, and transportation routes, as well as a good number of churches. -more-


About the House: Remodeling the Single Bath

By Matt Cantor
Friday December 28, 2007

Hi, My name’s Matt and I’m a recovering general contractor. It’s not easy to talk about, but I know it makes it better to get it out in the open and discuss it. -more-


Arts & Events

Arts Calendar

Friday December 28, 2007

FRIDAY, DEC. 28 -more-


S.F. Chamber Orchestra Season Begins with Free Area Concerts

By Ira Steingroot, Special to the Planet
Friday December 28, 2007

This New Year’s Eve, for the 23rd year in a row, the San Francisco Chamber Orchestra kicks off its new season with a free concert in Berkeley. In fact, remarkably, all of their concerts are free. The concerts are subsidized by grants and membership, which guarantees you the best seats. The theme of this year’s New Year’s Eve concert is Prodigies with music by Mozart and Mendelssohn as the examples. -more-


A Look Back at 2007 in Local Theater

By Ken Bullock, Special to the Planet
Friday December 28, 2007

Following a year that unfolded with more than a few surprises on East Bay stages, 2007 opened up with a bang and never really settled back. Big and small companies alike put on memor-able shows, and the overall level of theatricality appeared a couple notches higher than in the past. -more-


Books: Oscar and Me: An Appreciation

By Dan Wick
Friday December 28, 2007

I first read Oscar Wilde in 1954 at age 10. This was in an exceptionally cheap and poorly printed edition of his collected works published by Walter J. Black & Co. My parents, knowing I was an insatiable reader (the first full-length book I recall having read was David Copperfield when I was eight) dutifully subscribed at my request to Black’s series of classics, which included the works of practically everybody of note in English literature, including those bête noirs of highbrow snobs Arthur Conan Doyle, H. Rider Haggard, and Rudyard Kipling. -more-


Four Poems

By John Rowe
Friday December 28, 2007

ALL IN MY HEAD -more-


Hush Money

By Gilbert G. Bendix
Friday December 28, 2007

Whenever I pass the site now, I instinctively glance at that little sentry booth, and it’s never occupied. I wonder whether it’s been that way ever since that day in 1984, when the lawyer deposited two big cartons of documents on the floor of our office. Selina, chemist, toxicologist, and my wife and professional partner, offered him one of the chairs surrounding her cluttered desk, and he wasted no time coming to the point. -more-


A Poem for Peace

By Morton Felix
Friday December 28, 2007

For Jesse -more-


Grapes of Wrath Revisited

By Marianne Robinson
Friday December 28, 2007

It’s still the same, Tom Joad, -more-


‘Don’t Shoot! Don’t Shoot!

By Judith Hunt
Friday December 28, 2007

For thirty miles a black car had followed her closely at the posted maximum speed—by dark night on a lonely two-lane road. -more-


The Spirit of Giving Gets Contagious

By Suzie Skugstad
Friday December 28, 2007

For her sixth birthday this year, first-grader Casey Lane decided that she didn’t want a “typical” party. She wanted to have fun with her friends AND help homeless kids while she was at it—even if it meant not receiving presents from her friends (pictured with all the gift bags). -more-


In the Beginning is the Word

By Joey Yovino-Young
Friday December 28, 2007

In the late 1970s, when we were about 19 years old, my friend Russ and I got jobs as teachers at a before-and-after-school program that was housed in a separate bungalow from the school. Largely left to our own devices, we made up the day’s activities as we went. After several months we had our routine down with circle-time, drawing-time and outside playtime being everyone’s favorites. -more-


Berkeley

By Nance Wogan
Friday December 28, 2007

[after Basho’s longing for Kyoto] -more-


East Bay Then and Now: Two East Bay Churches Mark Christmas Centennials

By Daniella Thompson
Friday December 28, 2007

In the aftermath of the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, the East Bay population ballooned practically overnight, absorbing 200,000 refugees of which three-quarters remained permanently. To accommodate their burgeoning communities, Berkeley and Oakland acquired new housing developments, factories, and transportation routes, as well as a good number of churches. -more-


About the House: Remodeling the Single Bath

By Matt Cantor
Friday December 28, 2007

Hi, My name’s Matt and I’m a recovering general contractor. It’s not easy to talk about, but I know it makes it better to get it out in the open and discuss it. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Friday December 28, 2007

FRIDAY, DEC. 28 -more-