The Week

Daniel Rudman has compiled a manuscript consisting of the thoughts and opinions of fellow users of the warm pool. Photograph by Riya Bhattacharjee.
Daniel Rudman has compiled a manuscript consisting of the thoughts and opinions of fellow users of the warm pool. Photograph by Riya Bhattacharjee.
 

News

Flash: BUSD Wins Lawsuit

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Tuesday April 10, 2007

The Berkeley Unified School District (BUSD) emerged victorious when an Alameda County Superior Court judge ruled in favor of the school district Monday in a suit, American Civil Rights Foundation vs. Berkeley Unified School District, brought by Sacramento based Pacific Legal Foundation (PCL). PCL had sued BUSD in October, charging the district with violating California’s Proposition 209 by racially discriminating among students during placements at elementary schools and at programs at Berkeley High. -more-


Manuscript Documents Voices Of the Berkeley Warm Pool

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Tuesday April 10, 2007

Often when we’re in the locker room at the pool, my mother will say to me, ‘Do you hear the singing?’ And I’ll ask, “What singing?” “Don’t you hear the music?” she’ll say. And I’ll listen, and I’ll hear sounds bouncing off the walls and different voices, and as I focus in on them they get increasingly melodic... -more-


Former Berkeley Councilmember John Denton Dies

By Judith Scherr
Tuesday April 10, 2007

Former City Councilmember, attorney, neighborhood preservationist and humanitarian John Denton died peacefully in his sleep Sunday night at the age of 93. -more-


Divided Commission Landmarks Iceland

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday April 10, 2007

Iceland became an official Berkeley historical structure Thursday when a divided Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC) voted its highest level of recognition to the threatened building. -more-


Controversial Richmond Casino Proposals Move Fitfully Forward

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday April 10, 2007

A major goof has temporarily stalled the approval process for one Richmond-area casino, while signs of movement have been detected for the second. -more-


City May Moderate West Berkeley Zoning Restrictions

By Judith Scherr
Tuesday April 10, 2007

Developers can buy property in West Berkeley, jack up the rents and force out long-time tenants and nobody can stop them. -more-


Emeryville Puts Discrimination on City Council Agenda

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Tuesday April 10, 2007

The Emeryville City Council is scheduled to discuss explosive charges of racial discrimination and retaliation against city employees in its May 1 council meeting, but the councilmember who put the item on the agenda does not hold out much hope that the discussion will lead to changes in Emeryville city government. -more-


Academic Senate Takes Up UC-BP Pact

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday April 10, 2007

The controversy over what may be the largest corporate/academic research pact in the history of American universities is headed back to UC Berkeley’s Academic Senate. -more-


Panel Honors Cesar Chavez, Addresses Immigration

By Judith Scherr
Tuesday April 10, 2007

“To this day, I believe, we are here on this planet earth to live, grow up and do what we can to make this world a better place for all people to enjoy freedom.” -more-


Running Wolf Tree-Sit Interrupted by Arrest

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday April 10, 2007

Tree-sitter and one-time Berkeley mayoral candidate Zachary Running Wolf headed back to jail Friday, busted yet again by UC Berkeley police. -more-


Zoning Adjustments Board Weighs Use Permit Appeals

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Tuesday April 10, 2007

Suzanne Wilson will replace former Zoning Adjustments Board (ZAB) commissioner Dave Blake at the ZAB meeting Thursday. Wilson was appointed to the position by District 1 Councilmember Linda Maio. -more-


Board Discusses Washington School Solar Project

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Tuesday April 10, 2007

The Berkeley Board of Education will discuss sending an application to the Office of Public School Construction (OPSC) for funding and approval of the Berkeley Unified School District’s (BUSD) funds to complete a solar project at Washington Elementary School. -more-


Down the Garden Path

By Shirley Barker, Special to the Planet
Tuesday April 10, 2007

How I long to grow bananas. If I moved a few blocks away I could, for sheltered by fencing from our reliable afternoon wind grows a magnificent specimen bearing several hands of green fruits. Bananas are usually harvested green, so ripening will not be a problem for this lucky owner. -more-


Panoramic Sells Off 7 Apartment Buildings

By Richard Brenneman
Friday April 06, 2007

Patrick Kennedy and David Teece—Berkeley’s biggest private landlords—are selling their seven signature apartment buildings to a Chicago-based corporation. -more-


Southeast Berkeley Blanketed With Racist, Anti-Semitic Literature

By Judith Scherr
Friday April 06, 2007

Berkeley is not invulnerable to virulent racist, anti-immigrant and anti-Semitic hate campaigns. -more-


BUSD Weighs Options for Surplus Properties

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Friday April 06, 2007

After declaring Hillside School to be surplus property, the Berkeley Unified School District (BUSD) is getting ready to give the same designation to the Berkeley High School tennis courts and property at West Campus and on Sixth Street. -more-


Emeryville Hotel Sues City Over Measure C

By Judith Scherr
Friday April 06, 2007

While Woodfin Suite Hotel workers are beefing up union and local support to get the hotel to comply with Measure C, Emeryville’s Living Wage Ordinance for hotel workers, the hotel is flexing its muscle in its own way. Last week the Woodfin filed a lawsuit in U.S. District Court—for the second time—claiming the 2005 law passed by the city’s voters is unconstitu-tional. -more-


SWAT Team Trains at Berkeley High Campus

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Friday April 06, 2007

Berkeley High became the scene of a virtual battleground over spring break when the Berkeley Police Department SWAT team—known as the Barricaded Subject Hostage Negotiation Team (BSHNT)—descended on the campus Thursday. -more-


Oakland School Board Members Back Local Control Bill

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Friday April 06, 2007

California Assemblymember Sandré Swanson (D-Oakland) brought his Oakland Unified School District restoration of local control bill to the OUSD Board of Trustees Wednesday night, and, not surprisingly, trustees voted unanimously for a resolution in support. -more-


Legendary Lawyer to Represent Running Wolf

By Richard Brenneman
Friday April 06, 2007

The ongoing battle between tree-sitter Zachary Running Wolf and UC Berkeley police took a new turn Friday when legendary Bay Area attorney Tony Serra agreed to represent the protester. -more-


Cody’s Books Shuts Doors on San Francisco Store

By Judith Scherr
Friday April 06, 2007

Manager Scott Doddington and many of his fellow workers at the San Francisco Cody’s store will be out of their jobs effective April 20. -more-


DAPAC Rejects Point Tower Proposal

By Richard Brenneman
Friday April 06, 2007

That baker’s dozen plus one of 16-story “point towers” sprouting like mushrooms after a spring rain in downtown Berkeley? Forget about it. -more-


AC Transit to Trade 10 More Buses For Van Hools

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Friday April 06, 2007

The AC Transit District continued with its sudden premature replacement of its NABI bus fleet, with directors approving, on Wednesday afternoon, the request of General Manger Rick Fernandez to sell 10 more of the popular 40-foot buses five years before their scheduled retirement date and to replace them with buses from the Van Hool company. -more-


People’s Park Board Announces New Members

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Friday April 06, 2007

The People’s Park Advisory Committee will be announcing the names of Gianna Ranuzzi and Christine Dixon as its newest board members during a meeting Monday. -more-


Radio Frequency ID Controversy Continues

By Judith Scherr
Friday April 06, 2007

The use of radio frequency identification (RFID) technology at the Berkeley Public library has been a flashpoint since its inception more than two years ago, enraging some patrons, who say the identifiers allow “Big Brother” to track what people read and where they are if they’re carrying library books, and upsetting some library workers who say the system doesn’t work as it is supposed to and is devouring library funds better spent elsewhere. -more-


The Need to Know: A Glimpse Behind the Reference Desk

By Phila Rogers, Special to the Planet
Friday April 06, 2007

In many ways the Reference Department, as the disseminator of information about the world, is the heart of a library. At the downtown Central Library, reference librarians, sitting behind the green-topped counters, field questions both on the phone, on the computer and from the patrons who come into the library. -more-


Reference Librarian: My Story

By Evelyn Gahyan, Special to the Planet
Friday April 06, 2007

After graduating from UCLA, I went to Library School at UC Berkeley known then as “Danton’s Inferno,” for J. Perian Danton who was the head of the Library School at that time. -more-


U.S. Born Kids Face Deportation As Well

By Julie Johnson, New America Media
Friday April 06, 2007

With a crowd of TV cameras and adults with microphones towering over them, Adrian, Yadira and Adriana Ramirez—6, 10 and 12 years old—sat on a bench outside of First United Methodist Church in Palo Alto yesterday, and shyly told the news crews that though they wanted to stay at their home in Palo Alto, they would go to Mexico to be with their father, who was deported an hour after his arrest by Immigration Customs and Enforcement officers. -more-


Pressure Leads to Teen’s Release from Texas Prison

By Talise D. Moorer, New America Media
Friday April 06, 2007

In the backyard of President George Bush’s home state of Texas, a racist legacy continues. But Shaquanda Cotton, the 14-year-old black student who was convicted of shoving a hall monitor at a Paris high school in a dispute over entering the building before the school day had officially begun, was released by the Texas Youth Commission (TYC) on Saturday, March 31. She was detained at the Brownwood facility, where she was mandated to serve a seven-year prison term. -more-


Opinion

Editorials

Editorial: Shaping the Fate of the Public’s Art

By Becky O’Malley
Tuesday April 10, 2007

It’s tax time again. The cover of the New Yorker depicts IRS forms folded into the shapes of missiles, warplanes and tanks, in case anyone has any doubts about where most of their taxes are being wasted. On the inside, another cartoon: Robin Hood sitting in the office of his accountant, who says “You have to declare what you rob from the rich, but you can deduct what you give to the poor.” -more-


Editorial: WWJD About Degradation and Depravity?

By Becky O’Malley
Friday April 06, 2007

The law, in its majestic equality, forbids the rich as well as the poor to sleep under bridges, to beg in the streets, and to steal bread. -more-


Public Comment

Letters to the Editor

Tuesday April 10, 2007

KPFA -more-


Commentary: Oak-to-Ninth: A New Oakland or Oakland of the Old?

By Akio Tanaka
Tuesday April 10, 2007

There has been much discussion recently on the merits of the proposed development of the Oak-to-Ninth waterfront. -more-


Commentary: KPFA Demonstration Announcements

By Sasha Lilley
Tuesday April 10, 2007

Marc Sapir’s April 6 commentary is an amalgam of factual inaccuracies, crisis-mongering, and unprincipled attacks on my character. That Sapir has launched an ad hominem attack on me is no surprise, given his track record of lashing out at KPFA staff for the past several years. But I was surprised that he chose to both agent-bait and red-bait me (and, bizarrely, my parents), in an attempt to discredit my work as KPFA’s interim program director. -more-


Commentary: The Benefits of UC’s Athletic Center Project

By Colin Hawley-Snow
Tuesday April 10, 2007

As a University of California Berkeley student and an avid supporter of the Cal Football team, I support the plan to construct a new training center for our student-athletes and to seismically upgrade Memorial Stadium. I believe that the successful completion of this project will benefit the school and the city. A highly successful athletic program brings in more money to the university, and the subsequent development of the area can help the city by potentially increasing the tax base. -more-


Commentary: Recreation Over Desecration

By Gabriela Urena
Tuesday April 10, 2007

Do we need fewer oaks and more jocks? UC Berkeley seems to believe that we do. There is a plan to tear down a woodland grove of coast live oaks and several redwoods only to build a new sports training facility. Although these oaks are protected under the City of Berkeley’s Live Oak Protection Ordinance, the university claims that because it is a state institution they are “not obliged to obey local environmental laws.” A grassroots citizens’ campaign has sprung made up of various leaders, students, and community members to pressure the university to reconsider, look for other sites to build the facility, and save the oaks! -more-


Commentary: Camping Memories A Mixed Blessing

By Alan R. Meisel
Tuesday April 10, 2007

“You’re Never Too Old to Camp.” Ha! In response to Marta Yamamoto’s article in the March 13 edition, I have to say that I was already too old in my 20s to go camping. No one I grew up with in Atlanta in the 1930s and 1940s had gone camping or intended to go camping ever. In the early 1950s, when I was a college student, I had a brief experience as a counselor at a summer camp for children, and one night I camped on the ground with a group of children. -more-


Commentary: Greening Greens

By Beebo Turman
Tuesday April 10, 2007

We hear news every day about the “greening” of our world. Architects are designing with green materials, contractors are installing recycled floors, and appliances are put into kitchen and laundry rooms that use less energy. People buy products (from light bulbs to clothing) that show that we care for our environment. Some days it seems overwhelming! “What can I do about it?” can seem daunting. -more-


Commentary: Green Patches

By Willi Paul
Tuesday April 10, 2007

Where is all of this green stuff taking us? Who is in charge? Is this a Green Revolution? I’m waist deep in this sustainability muck and I haven’t a clue. Many say that time is short. The problems are huge—that there are more problems to fix than Gore’s climate challenge. Some suggest that drastic measures to control the planet’s population are required stop the destruction of our natural resource base. The list of problems is endless. -more-


Letters to the Editor

Friday April 06, 2007

CITY RECEIVES ACCESS AWARD -more-


Commentary: Students Deserve Leaders Who Engage Real Issues

By Eric Marshall
Friday April 06, 2007

Looking upon his alma mater from his place in the heavens, Mario Savio would likely be filled with a mixture of confusion and disappointment. If he was lucky enough to peer onto the UC Berkeley campus on one of the few days each semester that students demonstrate, he would witness a small band of outspoken, ostracized activists struggling to be heard amid throngs of passing iPod enthusiasts, its message drowned out by cell phone conversations. -more-


Commentary: Still More on the Berkeley Ferry

by Paul Kamen
Friday April 06, 2007

I share Steve Geller’s vision of prioritized bus rapid transit that moves faster than the cars on our major arterials. But the extent to which this will replace personal vehicles is an open issue, and I believe Steve is applying more wishful thinking than science when he asserts that “people will flock to ride it instead of drive.” -more-


Commentary: KPFA’s Tradition of Advocacy is Threatened

By Marc Sapir
Friday April 06, 2007

Nancy Keiler writes (Letters, March 27) castigating KPFA for not covering Barbara Lee-Ron Dellums-Sean Penn at Grand Lake Theater on Mar. 24. I sympathize with Kieler. The current lethargy in coverage of events—government hearings and such—by KPFA results from the tenacious battle that has been going on inside KPFA and Pacifica since listeners and staff defeated the self-perpetuating Pacifica National Board attempted coup under the infamous Civil Rights Commissioner Mary Frances Berry. Berry had every intention of moving the network away from its radical populist roots. Ironically she might still get her way, as the following memo attacking advocacy journalism reveals: -more-


Message From Iraq: Me, the Light Brigade and John McCain

By Jane Stillwater
Friday April 06, 2007

Good grief! Iraq is just brimming with news. I don’t even know where to begin. At 4 am this morning, a huge armored vehicle moved us from the Baghdad airport to the Green Zone in a convoy composed of vehicles that looked like they had just came out of a Toys R Us catalog. -more-


Columns

Column: Dispatches From the Edge: Africa: The Right’s Stuff

By Conn Hallinan
Tuesday April 10, 2007

The full-page ads in the New York Times are wrenching: children in the last stages of starvation, terrified refugees, and burned out villages. They are the images that come to mind when most Americans think about the Sudan. -more-


Column: X Plus Y Equals NBA and PG&E

By Susan Parker
Tuesday April 10, 2007

“Sit down,” I said to the sixth-grader standing at his desk to my right. It was another day of substitute teaching. I needed to prove that I was in control. -more-


Green Neighbors: Pollen, Cloning and Why We Need Healthy Trees

By Ron Sullivan
Tuesday April 10, 2007

Why did I spend most of last week sneezing? Why do half the people on the street seem to be sneezing along with me? Is it a peculiarly Berkeley sort of performance art? -more-


Column: Undercurrents: ‘Great God, Where Is the Ship?’

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Friday April 06, 2007

And thus Captain Ahab shouted as he clung to the side of the great white whale in the midst of the sea, stabbing at it over and over with his harpoon: ‘I turn my body from the sun. … Towards thee I roll, thou all-destroying but unconquering whale; to the last I grapple with thee; from hell’s heart I stab at thee; for hate’s sake I spit my last breath at thee. Sink all coffins and all hearses to one common pool! and since neither can be mine, let me then tow to pieces, while still chasing thee, though tied to thee, thou damned whale! THUS, I give up the spear!’ -more-


Incorporating Modern Technology Into Arts and Crafts Interiors

By Jane Powell
Friday April 06, 2007

It’s one of those discussions that only Arts and Crafts people would have, because we’re weird. The basic question is, “What would Stickley do with a computer?” (Gustav Stickley, for those who don’t know, was a famous furniture designer and proponent of the Arts and Crafts movement during the first two decades of the 20th century.) There seem to be two points of view on the question: the “Oh, he’d just stick it out on a library table” camp and the “No, he would have designed a special piece of furniture for it” camp. -more-


Grab Your Cash and Make a Dash: It’s Spring Plant Sale Time!

By Ron Sullivan
Friday April 06, 2007

Everybody up and at ‘em! Shop till you drop! It’s time for spring plant sales! -more-


About the House: A Modern House From 1942!

By Matt Cantor
Friday April 06, 2007

The East Bay is a special place for so many reasons including architectural history. Now, I’m a technical guy (for a sensitive male) and the history that turns me on involves silly things like pipe threading and wire soldering. I love museums of mine shafts and light bulbs. I get no kick from champagne but a museum of science and industry makes my pulse race. In other words, I’m a geek. The one that all the girls moved away from at the junior high school dance and now, years later I can proudly come out of the closet, with my phaser held high and admit my affiliation with those who collect glass doorknobs and vacuum tube radios. -more-


Quake Tip of the Week

By Larry Guillot
Friday April 06, 2007

Run to a safe place? -more-


Arts & Events

Arts Calendar

Tuesday April 10, 2007

TUESDAY, APRIL 10 -more-


Arts and Entertainment Around the East Bay

Tuesday April 10, 2007

THE LIFE AND DEATH OF MARVIN GAYE -more-


Ian Carey Quintet Makes East Bay Debut

By Justin DeFreitas
Tuesday April 10, 2007

When Oakland-based jazz trumpeter Ian Carey was about 14 years old, he experienced something of a revelation. While he was growing up in upstate New York, his family attended church regularly, all singing in the choir. But when they moved back to Folsom, Calif., just east of Sacramento, Carey’s father searched the area in vain for a suitable church with a strong choir. Churches were plenty but choirs were not, and when he couldn’t find one he liked the family’s church-going days were over. -more-


The Theater: Masquers Keep Chain Unbroken With ‘She Loves Me’

By Ken Bullock, Special to the Planet
Tuesday April 10, 2007

A chain of successes transformed a Hungarian play, Parfumerie, into an Ernst Lubitsch film, 1940’s Shop Around the Corner (with James Stewart and Margaret Sullavan), then the 1949 Judy Garland vehicle, In the Good Old Summertime, before becoming a 1963 Harold Prince Broadway hit, She Loves Me, and finally You’ve Got Mail on the screen in 1998. -more-


Green Neighbors: Pollen, Cloning and Why We Need Healthy Trees

By Ron Sullivan
Tuesday April 10, 2007

Why did I spend most of last week sneezing? Why do half the people on the street seem to be sneezing along with me? Is it a peculiarly Berkeley sort of performance art? -more-


Berkeley This Week

Tuesday April 10, 2007

TUESDAY, APRIL 10 -more-


CORRECTION

Tuesday April 10, 2007

The Daily Planet misidentified the date of a march through Emeryville in support of the Woodfin Hotel Suite workers. The march will take place today (Tuesday), gathering at 5:30 p.m. at Emeryville City Hall, 1330 Park St. and marching to the hotel at 5800 Shellmound St. -more-


Arts Calendar

Friday April 06, 2007

FRIDAY, APRIL 6 -more-


Arts and Entertainment Around the East Bay

Friday April 06, 2007

FAIRY TALE PROJECT AT ALBANY LIBRARY -more-


Historic Painting Goes on the Auction Block

By Peter Selz, Special to the Planet
Friday April 06, 2007

A very important painting belonging to the university’s Berkeley Art Museum is about to be auctioned off at Christie’s April 18 sale. The large oil is by the renowned 19th-century painter Vasily Vereshchagin (1842-1904), whose paintings are honored in their display at Moscow’s Tretiakov Museum of Art. The picture, entitled Solomon’s Wall, depicts the West Wall of the Second Temple in Jerusalem. It is part of the artist’s Palestine series and was shown in the 1880s throughout Europe and also in New York. -more-


Remembering Dorothy Vance

By Roger Moss
Friday April 06, 2007

Dorothy Vance (called Dotty by her childhood friends in Colorado and Dart by her Berkeley friends), radical, anti-nuclear protester and jailbird, rebel girl and woman for peace, vegetarian, feminist, champion of the poor and foe of the powerful, resident of Berkeley for 50 years, and of the Elmwood for 35, friend extraordinaire, mother of three and grandmother of four, the best sister in the world, sociologist and college teacher, librarian, early receptionist for KPFA back in the days when it was upstairs over Edy’s on Shattuck, former drunk and smoker to the end, assertive yet modest and self-effacing, breadmaker, playwright and short story writer, graphic artist, potter and tile maker, creator of award-winning appliqué quilts of great good humor, some on historical, political or cultural themes, others simply whimsical, fundamentally dubious about labels and categories such as those above, died in her home on Russell Street in late February. She was 76. -more-


The Theater: Wilde Irish Presents ‘The Cripple of Inishmaan’

By Ken Bullock, Special to the Planet
Friday April 06, 2007

By KEN BULLOCK -more-


Moving Pictures: Brother Against Brother in ‘Wind That Shakes the Barley’

By Justin DeFreitas
Friday April 06, 2007

Ken Loach’s new film The Wind That Shakes the Barley, opening this weekend at Shattuck Cinemas in downtown Berkeley, is the story of the nascent Irish Republican Army and its struggle against British occupation in the early 1920s. -more-


Moving Pictures: Five Documentaries That Could Have Been Contenders

By Justin DeFreitas
Friday April 06, 2007

The documentary category is consistently one of the few categories in the Academy Awards in which every nominee genuinely seems to be worthy of the attention. This year’s nominees were all high-caliber films whose selection can hardly be questioned. The winner, however, was An Inconvenient Truth, its high visibility and great cultural impact perhaps earning greater recognition for the film than its inherent quality would merit. Jesus Camp, for example, was more compelling, and Iraq in Fragments was a unique artistic triumph. -more-


Incorporating Modern Technology Into Arts and Crafts Interiors

By Jane Powell
Friday April 06, 2007

It’s one of those discussions that only Arts and Crafts people would have, because we’re weird. The basic question is, “What would Stickley do with a computer?” (Gustav Stickley, for those who don’t know, was a famous furniture designer and proponent of the Arts and Crafts movement during the first two decades of the 20th century.) There seem to be two points of view on the question: the “Oh, he’d just stick it out on a library table” camp and the “No, he would have designed a special piece of furniture for it” camp. -more-


Grab Your Cash and Make a Dash: It’s Spring Plant Sale Time!

By Ron Sullivan
Friday April 06, 2007

Everybody up and at ‘em! Shop till you drop! It’s time for spring plant sales! -more-


About the House: A Modern House From 1942!

By Matt Cantor
Friday April 06, 2007

The East Bay is a special place for so many reasons including architectural history. Now, I’m a technical guy (for a sensitive male) and the history that turns me on involves silly things like pipe threading and wire soldering. I love museums of mine shafts and light bulbs. I get no kick from champagne but a museum of science and industry makes my pulse race. In other words, I’m a geek. The one that all the girls moved away from at the junior high school dance and now, years later I can proudly come out of the closet, with my phaser held high and admit my affiliation with those who collect glass doorknobs and vacuum tube radios. -more-


Quake Tip of the Week

By Larry Guillot
Friday April 06, 2007

Run to a safe place? -more-


Berkeley This Week

Friday April 06, 2007

FRIDAY, APRIL 6 -more-