News

Three UC Berkeley Graduates Detained in Iran

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Tuesday August 04, 2009 - 09:20:00 AM

The three American hikers who recently disappeared in Iran have been identified as UC Berkeley graduates. At least two are journalists based in Africa and the Middle East. -more-


BP’s Biofuel Lab Heads to Downtown Berkeley

By Richard Brenneman
Friday July 31, 2009 - 02:45:00 PM

UC Berkeley is moving the site of its BP-funded agrofuel research from the hills above Strawberry Canyon to the heart of downtown Berkeley. -more-


Tentative Agreement Reached on Contracts for BART Workers

Bay City News
Thursday July 30, 2009 - 02:25:00 PM

BART management and union leaders this morning announced a tentative agreement on new four-year contract that, if given final approval, will avoid a strike by BART workers. -more-


Chemical Spill Forces REI Store Evacuation

By Richard Brenneman
Thursday July 30, 2009 - 09:59:00 AM
The Berkeley Fire Department's HazMat team evacuated the REI store on San Pablo Avenue Wednesday.

A chemical spilled from a backpack at West Berkeley’s REI store Wednesday afternoon forced the evacuation of scores of customers and employees. -more-


Campaign Gets Underway for Referendum on Downtown Plan

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Thursday July 30, 2009 - 10:44:00 AM

In a move that was widely expected, opponents of the city of Berkeley’s Downtown Area Plan have begun a petition drive for a voter referendum on the plan. -more-


Planners Adopt West Berkeley Subdivision Regulations

By Richard Brenneman
Thursday July 30, 2009 - 10:46:00 AM

Planning commissioners finished the easy part of their West Berkeley zoning changes Wednesday, July 22, but the hardest part will be on their agenda after their August break. -more-


George Yoshida: Still Swingin’

By Dorothy Bryant Special to the Planet
Thursday July 30, 2009 - 10:46:00 AM
George Yoshida.

When George Yoshida greets his South Berkeley Senior Center class of “modified” tai chi and leads us into the first stretch, we see a compact, supple, dark-haired man—pushing 70? Wrong. George was born in 1922. The teaching career he began in Berkeley in 1952 continues to this day. Devoted to teaching? Yes, but his great passion is music—swing and jazz. -more-


Berkeley’s First Teen Center Planned for Downtown

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Thursday July 30, 2009 - 10:59:00 AM
2109 Martin Luther King, Jr. Way as it currently exists.

Berkeley teenagers may finally have a solution to their boredom. -more-


Rumors of Eastshore Park Closure Untrue

By Richard Brenneman
Thursday July 30, 2009 - 11:00:00 AM

Despite reports from the state Department of Parks and Recreation, Eastshore State Park isn’t about to close, reports Larry Tong, interagency planning manager for the park district. -more-


Correction

Thursday July 30, 2009 - 11:00:00 AM

Russell Grant, the homeless man pictured on the front of the Daily Planet’s July 23 edition, states emphatically that he is not “Holy Man,” as stated in the accompanying caption and story. Other people have called him a holy man, he says, but he would never himself claim to be a holy man. -more-


Point Molate Casino Plan Draws Concerns, Praise

By Richard Brenneman
Thursday July 30, 2009 - 11:00:00 AM

The massive draft environmental impact report on what could become California’s first Las Vegas-style metropolitan casino reveals sharp divisions among Richmond residents. -more-


Oakland Runner Heads to Nationals

By Rio Bauce Special to the Planet
Thursday July 30, 2009 - 11:01:00 AM
Tayo Ogunmayin.

Twelve-year-old Tayo Ogunmayin may have been running track for just two years, but she is already gaining national attention. An incoming seventh-grader at Oakland’s Julia Morgan School for Girls, Ogunmayin will be participating in the North American finals of the Track and Field Games this Saturday in Hershey, Pennsylvania. -more-


Clif Bar Set to Move to Emeryville

By Rio Bauce Special to the Planet
Thursday July 30, 2009 - 11:02:00 AM

Energy snack manufacturer Clif Bar recently announced that it would be moving from Berkeley to Emeryville next year. -more-


City Council Approves Ashby Senior Housing Project

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Thursday July 30, 2009 - 11:02:00 AM

The Berkeley City Council broke for the summer on Thursday after unanimously approving a $1.4 million loan in Housing Trust Fund money for the 98-unit Ashby Arts Senior Housing project, after City Manager Phil Kamlarz came up with a proposal to replenish the trust fund monies with the sale and loan foreclosure of other properties. -more-


Council Tables Measure Endorsing SCA 21

By Rio Bauce Special to the Planet
Thursday July 30, 2009 - 11:03:00 AM

Last Thursday, the Berkeley City Council tabled a measure supporting a bill in the state Legislature that would strip the University of California’s Board of Regents of a certain measure of autonomy. -more-


School District Not Surprised by State Budget Cuts

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Thursday July 30, 2009 - 11:04:00 AM

The latest round of proposed state budget cuts to public education did not come as a surprise to the Berkeley Unified School District. -more-


Fate of Golden Gate Fields Still Uncertain

By Richard Brenneman
Thursday July 30, 2009 - 11:05:00 AM

The fate of Golden Gate Fields, the Bay Area’s last remaining horseracing venue, remains uncertain as parent Magna Entertainment continues to undergo bankruptcy proceedings in the United States and Canada. -more-


Berkeley and the General Strike of 1934

By Steven Finacom Special to the Planet
Thursday July 30, 2009 - 11:07:00 AM
Courtesy Berkeley Historical Society
                  July 25, 1934, the Berkeley Gazette carried this small advertisement calling for a “mass meeting” to protest the July 19 attacks in Berkeley.

In spring and summer 1934 San Francisco experienced one of the most dramatic labor confrontations in 20th century American history. -more-


Police Blotter

By Richard Brenneman
Thursday July 30, 2009 - 11:07:00 AM

Sexual battery arrest -more-


Fire Department Log

By Richard Brenneman
Thursday July 30, 2009 - 11:06:00 AM

Shattuck Avenue fire -more-


B.N. Duncan, 1943-2009

By Ace Backwords
Thursday July 30, 2009 - 11:09:00 AM
B.N. Duncan.

Telegraph Avenue legend B.N. Duncan died in June at the age of 65. I first met B.N. Duncan in 1979 at Krishna Copy on the corner of Telegraph and Dwight. He was xeroxing copies of Tele Times, a little homemade magazine he published. And I was xeroxing copies of Ass Backwards Comix #1. So we were on the same page, literally, from the word go. Geez, I must have been 23, so Duncan was 36. He looked like a weird old man with his disheveled hair and thick horn-rimmed glasses and ratty old clothes. He looked like your weird uncle that you kept in the basement out of sight. He was the arachetypal weirdo artist. -more-


B.N. Duncan: A Telegraph Avenue Fixture

By Dan McMullan
Thursday July 30, 2009 - 11:10:00 AM

B.N. Duncan had been a fixture at the corner of Haste and Telegraph for so long that the word “fixture” seemed to fit him well. He seemed as permanent as the street sign or as we once thought of Cody’s Books. His Telegraph Avenue Street Calendar, produced with longtime friend Ace Backwords, documented a street scene that was rapidly succumbing to the erroneous business and city view that people came to the Avenue to shop, not to experience its colorful denizens. -more-


Foreclosed and Evicted in Oakland

By David Bacon TruthOut
Thursday July 30, 2009 - 11:15:00 AM
Tosha Alberty’s father Charles speaks his mind.

At eight in the morning on Monday, July 20, 10 Alameda County sheriffs arrived in their patrol cars in front of the tan house on the corner of Tenth and Willow in West Oakland, the oldest African- American neighborhood in the city, and one of the oldest on the West Coast. The renovated home is surrounded by an iron fence, and the sheriffs poured through its open gate and up the stairs. -more-