Healthy Heavenly Foods proprietor Ann Vu prepares Vietnamese chicken noodle salad at her shop at the Bear’s Lair Food Court Monday morning.
Riya Bhattacharjee
Healthy Heavenly Foods proprietor Ann Vu prepares Vietnamese chicken noodle salad at her shop at the Bear’s Lair Food Court Monday morning.

Extra

Man Gets Five Years Probation in Connection With Fatal Berkeley Shooting

By Bay City News
Tuesday July 21, 2009 - 03:00:00 PM

A Berkeley man who had been charged with murder in connection with the shooting death of a former friend near the University of California at Berkeley campus three years ago will be released from jail today after serving only 18 months. -more-


Berkeley Police Seize Explosives From Grizzly Peak House

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Monday July 20, 2009 - 09:31:00 PM

A 911 call led to an arrest and seizure of explosives by Berkeley police Saturday. -more-


Daily Cal Receives Debt Relief, Three-Year Lease

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Monday July 20, 2009 - 03:31:00 PM

The Daily Californian, UC Berkeley’s independent student newspaper, can stay put—for now. -more-


Berkeley Police Investigate Sex Assaults

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 04:13:00 PM
Sketches of the suspects in the Cedar (left) and Hillegass (right) sexual assaults.

Berkeley police are investigating two sexual assaults which took place early Thursday morning. -more-


Berkeley Financier Faces Tax Woes

By Richard Brenneman
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 04:08:00 PM

David Teece is having a bad year. For a man once dubbed “an economics rock star,” 2009 is shaping up more like The Rocky Horror Picture Show. -more-


UC Regents Approve Pay Cuts

Bay City News Service
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 02:25:00 PM

The University of California Board of Regents Thursday morning voted unanimously to approve a plan that will institute employee furloughs along with other cuts and fee hikes to offset an anticipated $813 million budget shortfall. -more-



Page One

Students Plan UC Berkeley’s First Student Food Cooperative

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 02:30:00 PM
UC Berkeley alumna Alex Stone sets up the produce stand on Upper Sproul Hall Monday to inform students about the Berkeley Student Food Cooperative.

At first glance, the cute little blueberry baskets might seem out of place among the maze of political posters, stickers and T-shirts inside UC Berkeley’s Sproul Plaza. -more-



Bear’s Lair Vendors Threatened by Rent Hikes

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:35:00 AM

Plans to revitalize UC Berkeley’s Lower Sproul Plaza may have dire consequences for small, family-owned businesses on campus. -more-



Pacific Steel Lays Off Half Its Work Force

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:37:00 AM

West Berkeley’s Pacific Steel Casting, the nation’s fourth largest surviving steel foundry, is hurting badly. -more-



City Council Passes Downtown Plan

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:37:00 AM

The Berkeley City Council worked late into the night Tuesday to pass a modified Downtown Area Plan (DAP), setting the direction and goals for development in the city center for the foreseeable future. -more-



City Receives $1.3 Million in Homelessness Prevention Funds

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:37:00 AM

Berkeley was awarded $1.3 million in federal homelessness prevention funds Thursday under President Barack Obama’s American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. -more-



Laser-Powered Accelerator Plan Gets Boost From Recovery Act

By Richard Brenneman
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:38:00 AM

A strangely colored beam pouring out a quadrillion watts of peak power spewing out subatomic particles juiced up by a ten-billion-electronic-volt laser plasma accelerator housed in a facility dubbed the “experimental cave”? -more-



Features

West Berkeley Zoning Struggle Heats Up as Deadline Nears

By Richard Brenneman
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:57:00 AM

The fate of large-scale West Berkeley developments—pushed by both Mayor Tom Bates and officials at UC Berkeley and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory—continued to preoccupy city planning commissioners Wednesday. -more-


Planners to Vote on Subdividing in West Berkeley

By Richard Brenneman
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:56:00 AM

Planning commissioners will take up controversial zoning code changes for West Berkeley when they hold their last session before the August break on July 22. -more-


Environmental Review Details Richmond Casino Alternatives

By Richard Brenneman
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:57:00 AM

The long-delayed environmental impact report on the proposed Point Molate $1.5 billion casino resort complex is finally finished, four years after the first public meeting to gather public comment. -more-


UC Announces Sliding Scale Cuts; Regents to Act on Stadium Finances

By Richard Brenneman
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:56:00 AM

The University of California Board of Regents was expected to slash pay for faculty and staff Thursday, July 16, during the same three-day meeting at which they were set to approve funds for rebuilding Memorial Stadium. -more-


UC Buys Another Berkeley Office Building

By Richard Brenneman
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:56:00 AM
UC Berkeley has acquired another Berkeley office building, paying Seagate Properties $21.8 million for 2850 Telegraph Ave. The UCB law school already occupies about two-thirds of the six-story building.

UC Berkeley has quietly occupied yet another Berkeley building, with the law school taking occupancy of 2850 Telegraph Ave. -more-


Hall of Health Museum Closes After 35 Years

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:55:00 AM

A downtown Berkeley based health museum that once drew 24,000 visitors a year is closing its doors this week because of falling attendance and a loss of grant funding. -more-


Three Arrests in Berkeley-Oakland Gang War

Bay City News Service
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:55:00 AM

An investigation into two rival gangs from North Oakland and South Berkeley led to the arrests Friday, July 10, of several suspects, including one who was shot by a police officer, authorities said. -more-


Former Cal Bear Sentenced for Student Rapes

Bay City News Service
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:54:00 AM

Former University of California at Berkeley football player Noah Smith was sentenced Wednesday to four years in state prison for sexually assaulting two female students. -more-


Gang of Five Robs Pair of Pedestrians

By Richard Brenneman
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:54:00 AM

Campus and Berkeley police are looking for a gang of five that robbed a pair of pedestrians at the corner of Oxford Street and University Avenue Sunday night, July 12. -more-


Albany Activist’s Family Wins Wrongful Death Settlement

By Richard Brenneman
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:53:00 AM

The family of much-loved Albany environmentalist Ruth Meniketti has won a $500,000 settlement for her wrongful death, said family lawyer and former Albany Mayor Robert Cheasty. -more-


Drought

By Shirley Barker Special to the Planet
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:52:00 AM

In the Bay Area we have the so-called Mediterranean climate, with cool rainy winters and warm dry summers. Rarely does measurable rain fall between May and September, five dry months. -more-


Public Comment

Letters to the Editor

Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:50:00 AM

WEST BERKELEY -more-


Lab Snookers Council Over Tiny Laser Accelerator’s Big Wallop

By Gene Bernardi
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:49:00 AM

With its typical modus operandi, the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) mailed the BELLA High Energy Laser Accelerator environmental assessment notification such that it was received circa June 23, when many concerned citizens are vacationing. (Look for next lab environmental assessment at Christmastime!) The notice stipulated that the cut-off date for public comment is July 18, just 25 days after receipt of notice. Furthermore, the lab sent a contingent to lobby councilmembers prior to the July 7 meeting at which this proposed High Energy Laser Accelerator was on the agenda. The agenda recommendation was that residents near the project be notified, the comment period be extended, and that city staff comment on the project. -more-


Coming Soon to a Neighborhood Near You!

By Pamela Shivola
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:50:00 AM

The Department of Energy (DOE) and the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) are proposing to build an experimental High Energy Plasma Laser Accelerator Facility (“BELLA”) just 448 feet from a residential neighborhood in Northeast Berkeley, and 516 feet from the Lawrence Hall of Science, a children’s school and museum. -more-


BELLA Project Slipping Through Under Cover of Summer

By Mark McDonald
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:49:00 AM

It’s summer with hordes of folks heading out of town and once again Lawrence Berkeley National Lab (LBNL) has decided this is the time to process their new controversial development projects like their proposed BELLA laser atom smashing accelerator. The Department of Energy (DOE) is skipping the normal environment impact review and instead have issued themselves an “environmental assessment” which means they have decided that the project offers “no danger to the public.” Proposed for site 71 which in the past has experienced unique seismic problems and located 500 feet from the Lawrence Hall of Science children’s museum should be enough reason to employ a normal review, but local folks have paid expert proof that they should be concerned about the operation of an accelerator in their neighborhood. -more-


The Real Issue is Freedom of Speech

By Joanna Graham
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:47:00 AM

Although I am delighted and grateful that some person or persons took the time and trouble to produce the full page ad which appeared in the July 9 issue of the Berkeley Daily Planet and even more so that 138 members of the Bay Area Jewish community were moved to sign it, I am also relieved not to be one of the signatories, as I have some deep reservations about what the ad does and doesn’t say. -more-


KPFA: Ten Years After the 1999 Hijack Attempt

By Richard Phelps
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:47:00 AM

After mass listener support rescued KPFA and Pacifica from a self-appointed Pacifica National Board (PNB) that was planning to sell KPFA or one of the other stations and take the “community” out of the network, new democratic bylaws were written and adopted. Pacifica’s bylaws state a commitment for peace and social justice, Article One, Section 3. It seems inconceivable that peace and social justice can even be approached with out a democratic process with transparency and accountability. As Gandhi said “Be the change you want to see in the world.” -more-


The Homeless Count and Accountability For Results

By Ann-Marie Hogan
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:47:00 AM

How did the City of Berkeley manage to reduce the 2003 rate of chronic homelessness by nearly half? They analyzed the data. They tried new approaches. This time, they had systems in place for setting goals, measuring progress, and establishing accountability for results. -more-


BRT’s Combined Service Will Benefit Riders, Drivers, Merchants

By Alan Tobey
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:46:00 AM

The 27-mile Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) project proposed for the East Bay will move into another phase this fall as final project parameters begin to be established. BRT is expected to provide bus service that’s faster and more reliable than the existing system through the use of dedicated bus lanes, signal priority, rapid boarding and prepaid fares. -more-


UC Hubris

By Stewart Emmington-Jones
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:46:00 AM

Last Friday’s Berkeley Voice front-page article and picture flaunting the decimated oak grove and construction at the Memorial Stadium site really hurt. The picture in particular stung; it showed the cavernous pit dug along the west wall of the stadium where a year ago a grove of California oaks graced the stadium and historic Piedmont Way. Despite the personal pain it causes me, the controversy surrounding the oak grove demolition and the many remaining questions regarding the $100 million retrofit of a stadium sitting directly on the Hayward fault line are still of critical importance to the state-wide community and need to be talked about and explored by the media. Unfortunately the Voice’s article felt more like a UC press release than an investigative piece that could have explored ongoing concerns and responsibilities. -more-


Editorial

If Mass Transit Worked Here, It Might Look Like London

By Becky O’Malley
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:50:00 AM

For the East Bay’s many public transit groupies, London must seem like Nirvana. Cars are now taxed and otherwise restricted, so that in theory there are many fewer of them in central London. Parking, such as it is, is priced at premium rates, both on street in a few privileged neighborhoods and elsewhere. -more-


Columns

Dispatches From The Edge: The Settlements and the Quartet

By Conn Hallinan
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:53:00 AM

When President Barack Obama said in his Cairo speech that “The United States does not accept the legitimacy of continued Israeli settlements,” he cut to the heart of the four-decade old conflict in the Occupied Territories, slicing through the thicket of “confidence building,” “security walls,” and “road maps” that have derailed one peace attempt after another. -more-


The Republican Death Spiral

By Bob Burnett
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:51:00 AM

Out here on the left coast, we’re not big fans of the Republican Party. So we’ve taken a perverse delight in the events of recent weeks—the sordid Sanford and Ensign affairs and the awkward resignation of Sarah Palin. To these jaundiced eyes, it appears the Grand Old Party is locked in a death spiral, gathering speed as it plummets downward. -more-


Are Peralta Problems Symptoms of Long-Term Difficulties?

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:51:00 AM

Over the weekend, our friends over at the Tribune published a series of devastating and troubling articles by reporters Matt Krupnik and Thomas Peele alleging a recent pattern of fraud and fund misuse by the administration and board of the Peralta Community College District—“Alameda County college leader’s business partner gets $900,000 contract”; “Peralta raises at odds with district rules”; “Peralta district pays Harris for 57 weeks of work, and more.” -more-


Wild Neighbors: Seedy Business: Diet Secrets of the Goldfinch

By Joe Eaton
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 11:19:00 AM
Male (left) and female American goldfinches at thistle feeder.

Last weekend Ron and I were on the front porch late in the afternoon when we heard an unfamiliar bird call: not the towhee, not the wren, not a lesser goldfinch; something different. The source was revealed when an adult male American goldfinch flew out of the mulberry tree and onto a utility wire, followed by a second bird, greenish and frowsy-looking, fluttering its wings and repeating the odd call. It was a fledgling begging its father for food. -more-


Wiring to Avoid: Porcelain Fuses and Knife Switches

By Matt Cantor
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:39:00 AM

I’m a sucker for old things. Seventy-year-old cars, 100-year-old tools and Fiesta-ware pitchers. Actually, much of the reason I inspect houses for a living is my love of old things. Yes, there are those bothersome days when I have to inspect a brand new 4,000-square-foot house, but I generally manage to conceal my ennui. (And then there’s the money…) -more-


Arts & Events

Julia Morgan Center, Berkeley Playhouse Merge

By Ken Bullock Special to the Planet
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:40:00 AM

The Julia Morgan Center on College Avenue and the Berkeley Playhouse have announced their merger as the Julia Morgan Young People’s Performing Arts Center. -more-


Arts Listings

Arts Calendar

Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:43:00 AM

Inga Swearingen

From ‘Prairie’ to Freight and Salvage

By Ken Bullock Special to the Planet
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:44:00 AM

Midsummer? Then It Must Be Time for Mozart

By Ira Steingroot Special to the Planet
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:45:00 AM

Four Larks Presents ‘The Master and Margarita’

By Ken Bullock Special to the Planet
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:45:00 AM

Shadowlight Puppet Play at ‘The Rootabaga Opera’

By Ken Bullock Special to the Planet
Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:42:00 AM

Events Listings

Community Calendar

Thursday July 16, 2009 - 10:38:00 AM

Back Stories

Opinion

Editorials

If Mass Transit Worked Here, It Might Look Like London 07-16-2009

Public Comment

Letters to the Editor 07-16-2009

Lab Snookers Council Over Tiny Laser Accelerator’s Big Wallop By Gene Bernardi 07-16-2009

Coming Soon to a Neighborhood Near You! By Pamela Shivola 07-16-2009

BELLA Project Slipping Through Under Cover of Summer By Mark McDonald 07-16-2009

The Real Issue is Freedom of Speech By Joanna Graham 07-16-2009

KPFA: Ten Years After the 1999 Hijack Attempt By Richard Phelps 07-16-2009

The Homeless Count and Accountability For Results By Ann-Marie Hogan 07-16-2009

BRT’s Combined Service Will Benefit Riders, Drivers, Merchants By Alan Tobey 07-16-2009

UC Hubris By Stewart Emmington-Jones 07-16-2009

News

Man Gets Five Years Probation in Connection With Fatal Berkeley Shooting By Bay City News 07-21-2009

Berkeley Police Seize Explosives From Grizzly Peak House By Riya Bhattacharjee 07-20-2009

Daily Cal Receives Debt Relief, Three-Year Lease By Riya Bhattacharjee 07-20-2009

Berkeley Police Investigate Sex Assaults By Riya Bhattacharjee 07-16-2009

Berkeley Financier Faces Tax Woes By Richard Brenneman 07-16-2009

UC Regents Approve Pay Cuts Bay City News Service 07-16-2009

Students Plan UC Berkeley’s First Student Food Cooperative By Riya Bhattacharjee 07-16-2009

Bear’s Lair Vendors Threatened by Rent Hikes By Riya Bhattacharjee 07-16-2009

Pacific Steel Lays Off Half Its Work Force By Riya Bhattacharjee 07-16-2009

City Council Passes Downtown Plan By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor 07-16-2009

City Receives $1.3 Million in Homelessness Prevention Funds By Riya Bhattacharjee 07-16-2009

Laser-Powered Accelerator Plan Gets Boost From Recovery Act By Richard Brenneman 07-16-2009

West Berkeley Zoning Struggle Heats Up as Deadline Nears By Richard Brenneman 07-16-2009

Planners to Vote on Subdividing in West Berkeley By Richard Brenneman 07-16-2009

Environmental Review Details Richmond Casino Alternatives By Richard Brenneman 07-16-2009

UC Announces Sliding Scale Cuts; Regents to Act on Stadium Finances By Richard Brenneman 07-16-2009

UC Buys Another Berkeley Office Building By Richard Brenneman 07-16-2009

Hall of Health Museum Closes After 35 Years By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor 07-16-2009

Three Arrests in Berkeley-Oakland Gang War Bay City News Service 07-16-2009

Former Cal Bear Sentenced for Student Rapes Bay City News Service 07-16-2009

Gang of Five Robs Pair of Pedestrians By Richard Brenneman 07-16-2009

Albany Activist’s Family Wins Wrongful Death Settlement By Richard Brenneman 07-16-2009

Drought By Shirley Barker Special to the Planet 07-16-2009

Columns

Dispatches From The Edge: The Settlements and the Quartet By Conn Hallinan 07-16-2009

The Republican Death Spiral By Bob Burnett 07-16-2009

Are Peralta Problems Symptoms of Long-Term Difficulties? By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor 07-16-2009

Wild Neighbors: Seedy Business: Diet Secrets of the Goldfinch By Joe Eaton 07-16-2009

Wiring to Avoid: Porcelain Fuses and Knife Switches By Matt Cantor 07-16-2009

Arts & Events

Arts Calendar 07-16-2009

From ‘Prairie’ to Freight and Salvage By Ken Bullock Special to the Planet 07-16-2009

Midsummer? Then It Must Be Time for Mozart By Ira Steingroot Special to the Planet 07-16-2009

Four Larks Presents ‘The Master and Margarita’ By Ken Bullock Special to the Planet 07-16-2009

Shadowlight Puppet Play at ‘The Rootabaga Opera’ By Ken Bullock Special to the Planet 07-16-2009

Julia Morgan Center, Berkeley Playhouse Merge By Ken Bullock Special to the Planet 07-16-2009

Wiring to Avoid: Porcelain Fuses and Knife Switches By Matt Cantor 07-16-2009

Community Calendar 07-16-2009