The Week

CREATING THE MURAL was a festive occasion for neighbors. 
          See story Page Twenty.
CREATING THE MURAL was a festive occasion for neighbors. See story Page Twenty.
 

News

Confusion Surrounds Killed Football Game

By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR
Tuesday September 09, 2003

Five days after this week’s Berkeley High-Oakland Technical High football game was abruptly canceled by Principal Jim Slemp, Berkeley school officials were still trying to reschedule the game for an alternate site—but apparently not in coordination with their counterparts at Oakland Tech. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Tuesday September 09, 2003

TUESDAY, SEPT. 9 -more-


Hello and Goodbye Mayor, Council

Becky O’Malley
Tuesday September 09, 2003

So, now begins the season of mists and mellow fruitfulness, as the English poet John Keats described it. Labor Day is over. Squirrels are having noisy battles in oak trees over this year’s acorn crop. The swallows are packing up to leave Capistrano. And here in Berkeley, citizens can celebrate the seasonal return of the City Council to take up their civic responsibilities—for a couple of weeks at least. Since we’re in California instead of England, we can expect the mists of August to lift somewhat in September and October. But the miasma that lately seems to hang over decision-making in Berkeley shows no signs of abating. -more-


Arts Calendar

Tuesday September 09, 2003

TUESDAY, SEPT. 9 -more-


Claremont Picket Line Maintains Good Spirits

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Tuesday September 09, 2003

A year and a half of walking picket lines in the heat and rain is not enough to deter the Claremont Hotel employees who are currently organizing to form a union and sign a new contract at the upscale hotel on the Oakland-Berkeley boarder. -more-


Letters to the Editor

Tuesday September 09, 2003

WELDON RUCKER -more-


Schwarzenegger Furor Amuses Profile Writer

By RICHARD BRENNEMAN
Tuesday September 09, 2003

For the last quarter-century, writer Peter Manso’s notes from an old interview for a now-defunct magazine have gathered dust, locked away in storage and largely forgotten. -more-


The City vs. the Public

By SHAHRAM SHAHRUZ
Tuesday September 09, 2003

Residents in North Berkeley have been trying to stop wireless base-station antennas proposed by Sprint at 1600 Shattuck in a residential area. This battle has been going on for 10 months. After months dealing with the City, neighbors of 1600 Shattuck have reached the conclusion that some city staff are back stabbing them to support Sprint by any means possible. Misconducts and actions of the City has caused monetary damages and emotional distress to the neighbors. Neighborhood groups around Berkeley might have similar experiences with the City. A chronology of events regarding antennas is as follows: -more-


AC Bus Drivers OK Deal

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Tuesday September 09, 2003

Bus drivers have abandoned plans for a one-day walkout after cash-strapped AC Transit temporarily restored some of the service cuts they had scheduled for December. -more-


Profligate Consumers Pose Dilemma for Homeless

By CAROL DENNEY
Tuesday September 09, 2003

With her Cody’s bag clutched to her Armani suit, 44 year old Buffy McNoodles doesn’t look like a threat to Telegraph’s streetlife, yet three decades of local Berkeley coverage prove she is. -more-


Berkeley Supporters Rally to Dean Campaign

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Tuesday September 09, 2003

Enthusiastic supporters from Berkeley crossed the Bay Saturday to hear presidential hopeful Howard Dean address 1,100 unionized health care workers in San Francisco. -more-


Mark Morris Dances to Bob Wills

By FRED DODSWORTH Special to the Planet
Tuesday September 09, 2003

Mark Morris and his Dance Group regularly perform for Cal Performances at UC Berkeley’s Zellerbach Hall—so much so that some claim the globally renowned dancer/choreographer as an honorary citizen of the People’s Republic of Berkeley. -more-


After 57 Years on College, Bob Gilmore Calls it Quits

By FRED DODSWORTH Special to the Planet
Tuesday September 09, 2003

Way back in 1947 Roger “Bob” Gilmore went to work for Byron and Rhoda Bolfing at their Elmwood Hardware store on College Avenue in Berkeley’s Elmwood neighborhood. -more-


Berkeley Briefs

Tuesday September 09, 2003

People’s Park Boardmember Sought -more-


Change in Parking Permit Rules Vexes Residents

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Tuesday September 09, 2003

Berkeley residents holding visitor parking permits must either use or exchange them by next Monday, thanks to a change in city parking ordinances. -more-


Police Blotter

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Tuesday September 09, 2003

Murder in South Berkeley -more-


Ethnic Media Digest

By PUENG VONGS Pacific News Service
Tuesday September 09, 2003

Blacks Struggle With Including Gay Rights Under Civil Rights Banner -more-


BOSS Blames New Rules For Delay in Worker Pay

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Tuesday September 09, 2003

The latest round of labor troubles at Berkeley-based non-profit Building Opportunities for Self Sufficiency (BOSS) stemmed not from managerial malice but from improperly filed time sheets that delayed paychecks to employees last week, Executive Director boona cheema said Tuesday. -more-


UC Stadium Roused Controversy Long Ago

By SUSAN CERNY Special to the Planet
Tuesday September 09, 2003

EDITOR’S NOTE: This is the second in a three-part series on the history of Memorial Stadium. -more-


South Berkeley Neighbors Show Pride With Mural

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Tuesday September 09, 2003

Members of one South Berkeley neighborhood say their home has a lot going for it, and they gathered Sunday to create a mural to share their exuberance with the world. -more-


Books: Oakland Author Writes Sequel to ‘Ugly’ Success

By SUSAN PARKER
Tuesday September 09, 2003

Oakland writer Mary Monroe is an inspiration in perseverance. She wrote her first book, “The Upper Room,” in 1974. After hundreds of rejection letters, and eleven years, the novel was finally published in 1985. It got great reviews and quickly disappeared. -more-


Books: Fun for Grownups, Thrilling for the Kids

By BECKY O’MALLEY
Tuesday September 09, 2003

Every Uncle Henry Book has the Uncle Henry Promise printed in the front. It takes up a full page, but the central premise is that “you will always have fun when you read it.” In fact, says Uncle Henry, sometimes “adults will laugh so hard they will fall on the floor and roll around clutching their stomach.” -more-


Books: Roadside Job Quest Leads to Insights

By PAUL KILDUFF
Tuesday September 09, 2003

Faced with a long stretch of unemployment the vast majority of upstanding, college-educated people who live indoors, bathe regularly and use deodorant would find the prospect of turning to panhandling intolerable. The sheer degradation of it would frighten even the most thick-skinned human from even considering it. -more-


Books: Breathing Fire, Spitting Blood, Sleeping Around

By SUSAN PARKER
Tuesday September 09, 2003

About the same time my memoir came out, Gene Simmons of the legendary glam-rock band Kiss published “Kiss and Make-Up,” his official biography. We share the same publishing house and the same New York publicist even though our life stories are astronomically different. -more-


Berkeley Manager To Leave Nov. 1st

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday September 05, 2003

Berkeley City Manager Weldon Rucker stunned city workers and councilmembers Thursday when he announced his retirement—saying he wanted more time to manage himself than his “24-hour, seven-day-a-week job” could offer. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Friday September 05, 2003

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5 -more-


Well Done, Weldon: You Will Be Missed

Becky O’Malley
Friday September 05, 2003

News, as of the morning of press day, is that Berkeley’s City Manager ( Weldon Rucker, known to almost everyone as Weldon) plans to retire in the very near future. This is not unexpected, since he admits to being in his early sixties, and is known to have had a few health problems in the past. It is, however, sure to be distressing news to Berkeley citizens who care about the health of the body politic. -more-


Watershed Fest Unites Artists for Strawberry Creek

By SUSAN PARKER Special to the Planet
Friday September 05, 2003

Former U.S. Poet Laureate Robert Hass brings his talents to the cause of liberating Berkeley’s Strawberry Creek—the city’s premier living stream—at the Eighth Annual Watershed Poetry Festival, to be held Saturday, Sept. 6 at Civic Center Park at Martin Luther King Jr. Way and Center Street. -more-


Arts Calendar

Friday September 05, 2003

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5 -more-


Are Crows Smarter Than We Thought?

By JOE EATON Special to the Planet
Friday September 05, 2003

We used to be pretty smug about our species’ ability to use tools—the dividing line, some thought, that separated humanity from the rest of the animal kingdom. But naturalists’ observations have laid that notion to rest. -more-


Temblor Shakes Up Berkeley

Friday September 05, 2003

Berkeley residents sitting down for dinner Thursday had an unexpected and unnerving guest—a magnitude 3.9 earthquake centered just three miles southeast of town, eight miles directly below Cochrane Avenue in Rockridge. -more-


Letters to the Editor

Friday September 05, 2003

ADULT SCHOOL MOVE -more-


Recall Foes Hit Streets Saturday

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Friday September 05, 2003

Berkeley activists will take to the streets Saturday to mobilize support to defeat the recall of Governor Gray Davis following a 10 a.m. rally at Washington School, 2300 Martin Luther King Jr. Way (across from Berkeley High School). -more-


For Young People, This Recall is For Real

By HECTOR GONZALES Pacific News Service
Friday September 05, 2003

To many voting Californians, the gubernatorial recall election is being taken as a joke—an unexpected and entertaining twist to the usually boring political scene. But for me and my community, this recall is very important. -more-


Homeless Youth Pose Telegraph Dilemma

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday September 05, 2003

With her soft brown hair that falls neatly to the sides of her unblemished 19-year-old face, Monique Desindes looks so wholesomely apple pie that it’s hard to believe she is homeless. Yet there she was on Tuesday evening, squatting outside Cody’s Bookstore on Telegraph Avenue, half-eaten food and torn garbage bags strewn to her right. To her left sat Trek, an 18-year-old from Utah, wearing a spiked collar and sporting unkempt blond curls. -more-


Ultimately, Women Will Have to Save the World

By MARLENE NADLE Pacific News Service
Friday September 05, 2003

President Bush may not face much opposition in Congress to his plan for perpetual preemptive war, but he better watch out for the women. -more-


Symphony Banner Bid Raises Free Speech Issues

By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR
Friday September 05, 2003

The upcoming celebration planned for a local arts icon has Berkeley city officials scrambling to avoid a potentially embarrassing free speech controversy. -more-


Prostitution Plea Entered

Jakob Schiller
Friday September 05, 2003

Shannon Williams, the 37-year-old former Berkeley High School employee busted by Oakland police, plead not guilty Wednesday to a misdemeanor count of soliciting prostitution. -more-


Student’s Father Dies Outside Berkeley High

By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR
Friday September 05, 2003

The parent of a Berkeley High School student died of apparent natural causes in his van parked in front of the school on Allston Way Thursday afternoon while waiting to pick up his son. The African-American man, appearing to be in his late 30s to mid-40s, was not identified to press by the Berkeley Police pending notification of next of kin. -more-


Ascher Does Business on Specs

By FRED DODSWORTH Special to the Planet
Friday September 05, 2003

Where some just see an old pair of glasses, Raymond Ascher, the 59-year-old owner of Phoenix Optical, sees both beauty and opportunity. -more-


Police Blotter

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday September 05, 2003

Prostitution Busts -more-


Activists Cite Prop. 54 Dangers

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Friday September 05, 2003

Proposition 54, the ballot measure proponents claim would lead to a colorblind society, poses serious dangers to the physical and social health of Californians, contend local opponents of the controversial ballot proposition. -more-


Folsom’s 45 Years On Telegraph Ave.

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Friday September 05, 2003

Morrill Folsom’s a survivor. Just ask any shopowner on Telegraph Avenue, where he’s been doing business longer than anyone else he knows. Specializing in Asian and Renaissance art, antiques and jewelry, Folsom’s House of Kuan Yin on Telegraph Avenue has been around for 45 years. -more-


San Francisco State: A Kafka-like Experience

From Susan Parker
Friday September 05, 2003

Last week’s column about my less than stellar experiences as a new graduate student at San Francisco State prompted e-mails from people recalling their own frustrations. -more-


UC Rejects 1,600 Transfers

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday September 05, 2003

Saddled with $410 million in state cuts this year, the University of California took an unprecedented cost-cutting measure Tuesday, rejecting out-of-hand transfer applications from about 1,600 students for the winter semester. -more-


Suspects Sought In Rape Attempt xx

Friday September 05, 2003

Berkeley Police have released sketches of one of two men sought in the attempted rape of a woman on Aug. 9 in the 1900 block of Addision Street. -more-


Connerly’s Wrong On Propostion 54

J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR
Friday September 05, 2003

Opposition to Ward Connerly’s Proposition 54—the “color conscious” initiative—has centered around what opponents call its “hidden agenda.” Prop 54, they say, is the unholy companion to Proposition 209, the 1996 initiative that gutted California’s affirmative action programs. Prop 209 made it more difficult to operate programs in California to counter discrimination against African-Americans and Latinos. In preventing the government from collecting race-based data, the argument continues, Prop 54 would cover up the effects of continuing anti-black and anti-brown discrimination. First the stab in the neck by the assassin’s stiletto. Then the assistant comes to sop up the blood and destroy any evidence of a crime. -more-


JCs Beat Berkeley?

Friday September 05, 2003

Heaven forfend! UC Berkeley beaten by the California Community Colleges? And for activism, no less! -more-


BHS Program Advances

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Friday September 05, 2003

The first step in a proposed plan to shift half of Berkeley High students into small school programs came Wednesday as the city school board unanimously bestowed formal small school designation on the already existing Communication Arts and Sciences program at the high school. -more-


BOSS Labor Woes Mount

Friday September 05, 2003

Continuing labor troubles at a non-profit Berkeley program that provides housing, health care, education and legal aid for the homeless reached a new level of intensity this week after the agency notified staff that their paychecks would be delayed up to five days because of cash flow problems. -more-


Opinion

Editorials

Berkeley to Mark Sept. 11 With a Variety of Events

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Tuesday September 09, 2003

Now that two years have passed since the numbers 9/11 burned themselves into the American consciousness, many in Berkeley feel that the time has come to take a different approach in commemorating the events of that awful day. -more-


La Val’s Offers Delightful Confection

By BETSY M. HUNTON Special to the Planet
Tuesday September 09, 2003

Reviewing Impact Theatre’s inaugural production at La Val’s Subterranean Theater is a little like trying to pin down a Baskin Robbins menu: Which tastes better: Chocolate Mint? Or maybe Strawberry Wonderful? -more-


Berkeley Merchants Urge City to Buy Local Goods

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday September 05, 2003

Berkeley merchants, fighting tooth and nail to survive tough economic times, say it’s time for the city to give them a fair shake. -more-