The Week

Jakob Schiller: 
          
          Desiree Lambert tries to close one of her living room windows, which consistently leak and occasionally spring open due to bad design. Ocean View residents complain of missed repairs. See story, Page Three.
Jakob Schiller: Desiree Lambert tries to close one of her living room windows, which consistently leak and occasionally spring open due to bad design. Ocean View residents complain of missed repairs. See story, Page Three.
 

News

Deputy Superintendent Announces Resignation From BUSD Post

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday March 19, 2004

Just as its balance sheets finally approach equilibrium, Berkeley Unified School District is losing its top numbers cruncher—the man universally credited with helping to erase a $6.5 million deficit and getting the district out of the red for the first time in three years. -more-


Berkeley Music Teacher Dies in Scotland

By BECKY O’MALLEY
Friday March 19, 2004

Anne Crowden, the beloved music teacher who founded the Crowden School in Berkeley in 1983, died Monday morning in her birthplace of Edinburgh, Scotland, of pancreatic cancer. She was 76. Berkeley composer John Adams, in a 1997 tribute, said that Crowden used “her enormous energy and powers of persuasion to create a place where children from all economic backgrounds could immerse themselves in music while enjoying the highest levels of academic schooling.” A violinist herself, passionate about chamber music, she started her school with eleven junior high school children in a church basement. -more-


Disabled Community Hopes Touch-Screen Voting Continues

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Friday March 19, 2004

Berkeley resident Karen Rose did not have to hire someone to accompany her to the voting booth during the March primary and read the ballot to her. With no one looking over her shoulder, Rose was able to vote without having to reveal to anyone else who she voted for. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Friday March 19, 2004

FRIDAY, MARCH 19 -more-


Tenants Complain About Ocean View Management

By JAVACIA N. HARRIS Special to the Planet
Friday March 19, 2004

It was about a year ago, according to Ocean View Gardens tenant Desiree Lambert, that water began to drip from her living room ceiling whenever it rained. One day the drip from the weak spot turned into a pour. In December of 2003, the weight of the water sent plaster crashing onto her sofa, leaving a hole in her ceiling the size of a basketball. -more-


Council Deadlocks On Public Election Finance

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday March 19, 2004

Berkeley’s mayor and eight city councilmembers, who all together spent a total of approximately $456,000 to get elected to their present terms, failed to reach a consensus Tuesday on presenting a ballot measure to voters that would shift at least some of those expenses to the public. -more-


Police Blotter

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday March 19, 2004

City of Berkeley Issues Rabies Alert

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Friday March 19, 2004

The City of Berkeley has issued a rabies alert after a bat infected with rabies was removed from the 2300 block of Warring Street on Monday. -more-


11-M: A New Symbol in the Lexicon of Terror

By MARCELO BALLVE Pacific News Service
Friday March 19, 2004

The terror attacks in Madrid have done more than put Europe on warning and shake up Spain’s politics. Because of deep historical and emotional ties to Madrid, the entire Spanish-speaking world now feels directly implicated in the 21st century dilemma of how to respond to terrorism. Struggling to make sense of the deadly bombing that struck the traditional heart of Hispanic culture, Spanish-language media on both sides of the Atlantic adopted their own typographical shorthand for the catastrophic event: 11-M. -more-


A Teenager Looks At Oakland’s Murderous Row

By Rosie Nguyen Pacific News Service
Friday March 19, 2004

Editor’s Note: A 14-year-old Oakland, Calif., resident who’s father was shot to death interviews her friends about what they think causes all the violence in “Tha Town.” -more-


Oakland Mural Destroyed

Friday March 19, 2004

On Friday afternoon of last week, apparently without warning to Burbank administrators, workers from the Oakland Unified School District’s central office demolished a portable building and the mural that had decorated it for several years. The work was done in full view of students present for after-school activities. State Administrator Randolph Ward said later that the portable had long been scheduled for demolition, and its destruction had nothing to do with the possible pending closure school. -more-


When it Comes to Trade Deficits, The U.S. is The Town Drunk

By ROBERT B. REICH Featurewell
Friday March 19, 2004

The U.S. government just released the first trade figures for this year, showing a whopping $43.1 billion deficit for January – an all-time high. More than a quarter of that was with China, whose trade deficit with the United States expanded to $11.5 billion. During the normally staid annual Senate hearing March 9 on trade policy, Republican members pushed Robert Zoellich, the U.S. trade representative, to be tougher on China. That’s what a lot of Democrats want, too. Think again. -more-


Weekend War Protests Planned in SF

Bay City News
Friday March 19, 2004

San Francisco police are letting people know today that the downtown area may be subject to congestion and delays—particularly for drivers—due to anti-war protests starting Friday morning. -more-


UnderCurrents: What Ward Connerly Did and Did Not Say

J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR
Friday March 19, 2004

UC Regent Ward Connerly deserves some mention, both for something he recently said, and for something about which he was pointedly silent. -more-


Letters to the Editor

Friday March 19, 2004

JEFFERSON SCHOOL -more-


To Make the World Safe From Landmines

By RITA MARAN
Friday March 19, 2004

It’s a firm belief of mine—and I can’t help but believe that my Berkeley neighbors share it as well—that people in neighborhoods other than where I hang out are as entitled to walk down their neighborhood streets in safety, as I am in my neighborhood. If that other neighborhood happens to be located in Kabul’s busy streets, or near Cambodia’s rice paddies, or in any of the thousands of neighborhoods in the 71 countries around the world where over 100 million landmines are buried, that doesn’t change my far-off neighbors’ entitlement to walk in safety. It’s just that in fact they can’t—and don’t—not in their neighborhood. -more-


Thoughts on IRV

Marc LeBlanc Member, Citizens for Approval Voting
Friday March 19, 2004

IRV WITH PAPER BALLOTS -more-


Bearden’s Berkeley Mural Returns Home (Almost)

By PETER SELZ Special to the Planet
Friday March 19, 2004

The large mural, Berkeley—the City and Its People, which for more than 30 years has graced the City Council chamber, can now be seen in the fine Romare Bearden retrospective at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. -more-


Krazy Klezmer the Highlight of Jewish Festival

By BEN FRANDZEL Special to the Planet
Friday March 19, 2004

For many generations, the Jewish musicians of Eastern Europe played the raucous, emotionally charged dance music called klezmer. They absorbed the Slavic, Gypsy and Turkish musical styles of their neighbors into their own music and invested their playing with a soulful intensity. This coming week, as the Berkeley Jewish Music Festival (BJMF) begins its annual celebration of Jewish music from around the world, the focus will be on klezmer, celebrating its passing from one generation to the next and its connection to Berkeley itself. -more-


A Year-Round Guide to Maintaining Your Home

By LINDA FORMICHELLI Featurewell
Friday March 19, 2004

Just like your family, houses are full of things that need annual (and sometimes more frequent) checkups. Gutters crack, septic tanks leak, and furnaces stop working. Keep the following list on hand to remind yourself which household appliances and fixtures you can check yourself, which need professional attention, and approximately how much you’ll have to spend on maintenance and repair. -more-


Arts Calendar

Friday March 19, 2004

FRIDAY, MARCH 19 -more-


China Camp: A Spectacular Marin County Getaway

By KATHLEEN HILL Special to the Planet
Friday March 19, 2004

China Camp State Park at Marin County’s Point San Pedro is hidden a few miles behind the Frank Lloyd Wright Marin Civic Center and faces east across the southwestern tip of San Pablo Bay. Having passed the Marin Civic Center hundreds of times, I never even noticed the state’s brown directional sign to China Camp until last Sunday. -more-


Blood House Demolition Denied

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Tuesday March 16, 2004

Preservationists won a hard-fought battle Thursday when members of the Zoning Adjustment Board made clear that as far as they were concerned, any development at 2526 Durant Ave. would have to include the Blood House. -more-


College Towns Meet To Plan Tax Strategies

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Tuesday March 16, 2004

OAKLAND—The leaders of California’s university and college towns took a step towards easing the financial burden caused by those educational institutions, meeting last Friday in Oakland to begin drawing up a long-range mitigation plan. -more-


County’s Civil Grand Jury Asked To Investigate BUSD Food Services

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Tuesday March 16, 2004

A collection of 26 Berkeley residents, including Berkeley High PTA President Lee Berry, requested Friday that the Alameda County Civil Grand Jury investigate financial mismanagement at Berkeley Unified School District’s Food Services Department. -more-


Council To Debate Campaign Finance

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Tuesday March 16, 2004

With 2002 election figures showing that Berkeley candidates laid out roughly $720,000 on city campaigns—roughly one-third more than in 1998—the City Council Tuesday will debate a plan to make Berkeley the first city in the nation to fully finance municipal elections. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Tuesday March 16, 2004

TUESDAY, MARCH 16 -more-


Berkeley Briefs

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Tuesday March 16, 2004

BUSD Extends Superintendent’s Contract -more-


Correction

Tuesday March 16, 2004

In the story “Gaia Building Criticized For Lack Of Arts Tenants” (Daily Planet, March 5-8), we reported that “12 of the 91 apartments [in the Gaia Building]... are reserved for tenants who earn 80 percent and less of the median area income.” The information was obtained from a website operated by the Berkeley city manager’s office. Panoramic Interests head Patrick Kennedy has informed us by letter that the Gaia Building currently has “19 units set aside for low-income residents at 50 percent” of the area median income. The 19 unit set-aside figure is confirmed in a newly-released document by the city manager’s office.› -more-


India’s Economy Hides Continuing Intolerance

By MIKE McPHATE Pacific News Service
Tuesday March 16, 2004

NEW DELHI, India—India’s pro-Hindu ruling party is feeling good. -more-


Council Appeal Filed In Library Gardens Approval

Matthew Artz
Tuesday March 16, 2004

A Berkeley public transportation advocacy group has appealed to the City Council a use permit granted last month for the planned 176-unit Library Gardens project, slated to rise just west of the public library. -more-


A Frightening Day, Both Inside and Out

From Susan Parker
Tuesday March 16, 2004

A while back the Berkeley police chased someone over the Oakland border and into my neighborhood. I heard the sirens and screeching tires long before they arrived. When I looked out my front window, I could see cop cars on every corner and others cruising up and down Dover and its side streets. I left my 17-month-old nephew and my 13-year-old friend Jernae safely inside and went out to investigate. There was a police car parked in front of my house. -more-


Police Blotter

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Tuesday March 16, 2004

Armed Robbery -more-


Letters to the Editor

Tuesday March 16, 2004

ON THE HOMEFRONT -more-


An Open Letter From John Curl to Mayor Bates

Tuesday March 16, 2004

Dear Tom, -more-


Berkeley Rep’s ‘Ghosts’ is Less Than Sacred

By BESTY HUNTON Special to the Planet
Tuesday March 16, 2004

It’s always awkward to find yourself challenging a sacred cow. So when a revered Bay Area theatre company produces a play by a genius of modern drama and loads it with justifiably respected actors, it’s rather uncomfortable if you think the whole thing is a bust. -more-


Khalil Bendib: Pledging Allegiance to No One

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Tuesday March 16, 2004

Standing on the deck off the third-story studio at his Berkeley home, Khalil Bendib tries to match his pose to that of the Statue of Liberty. Oversized pen in one hand and a fez on his head, he checks an old newspaper photo of the statue to make sure he is holding his head in the right place and stretching his arm up high enough. Like everything Bendib does, he is in the process of creating a spoof by re-imagining a well-known scene and making it his own. -more-


Arts Calendar

Tuesday March 16, 2004

TUESDAY, MARCH 16 -more-


The Bewick’s Wren: A Pack Rat with Wings

By JOE EATON Special to the Planet
Tuesday March 16, 2004

For the last few months a Bewick’s wren has been hanging out in my yard. We hear it much more often than we see it. Its song is one of those I can never seem to associate with the singer (not that my ear for birdsong is all that great; every spring I have to re-learn robin versus grosbeak versus tanager all over again). David Sibley transcribes it as “t-t zree drr-dree tututututututu,” which is supposed to represent a mix of trills and buzzes with a descending pitch. Peterson says it sounds like a song sparrow’s, but thinner. It doesn’t help that the song varies from region to region, and between individuals. Mostly I just wait for the wren—a small brown bird with grayish underparts and a white eyestripe—to show itself. -more-


Opinion

Editorials

Editorial: First Year Thoughts

Becky O'Malley
Friday March 19, 2004

It’s been just about a year since we started gearing up in earnest for the first issue of the new Berkeley Daily Planet. Anniversaries inevitably prompt deep thoughts about the meaning of life. Who are we, why are we here, now, doing this? And increasing ly, in the age of hot media, we think, why a newspaper? My friend the journalism professor, who told me this was going to be a lot of fun, has been here for the week. She taught a class last semester that entailed supervising students putting out one issue of a tabloid, and she is now much more realistic about the amount of work involved. We had dinner with another younger friend who hopes to launch a quarterly magazine, and he’s full of (probably warranted) optimism, typical of the pre-publication mood. -more-


Private Middle Schoolers Help Quarter Meal Program

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Tuesday March 16, 2004

Berkeley’s beleaguered Quarter Meal program got an unexpected boost last week from an unexpected source: $2,500 from the student council at a private middle school in the Berkeley Hills. Quarter Meal supporters, which announced it might close this summer due to funding problems, are expressing optimism that the program can be saved for the balance of the year through help from local community organizations. -more-