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City taking a stand in China

By Matt Liebowitz, Special to the Daily Planet
Thursday July 11, 2002

The City Council plans to send a letter to China asking its government to stop arresting people for practicing an ancient spiritual movement called Falun Gong. 

The Chinese government has jailed and tortured people, Falun Gong supports say, because the government believes the growing group who practice Falun Gong threatens stability and state control.  

At a meeting Tuesday City Council agreed to sign a letter written by a local peace group and Berkeley resident and Falun Gong observer Steve Ispas. 

Councilmember Kriss Worthington said that many people around the world are doing the same. 

“Some people think it’s just Berkeley against the world, but we are supporting a social movement,” Worthington said. “We are working towards peace and justice, we’re supporting what Amnesty International has been saying for years.” 

Ispas visited China last year to protest the government’s repression of Falun Gong and its abuse of people practicing it. He said the focus of the spiritual group is to keep the mind and body fit, not politics.  

“It doesn’t go against communist theory,” Ispas said. “It’s just that there are so many people [who practice] and the communist government is worried about that.” 

Outside Tiananmen Square on Feb. 14, Ispas and five others were beaten by Chinese policemen, arrested, and taken to a detention center with 60 more Falun Gong supporters. Ispas was held for 24 hours but was not charged with any crime. 

Ispas left China with a sense of accomplishment despite being arrested. 

“Even if we didn’t make the Chinese government realize anything, we helped the Chinese people,” he said.  

Worthington pushed for the resolution, and is hopeful about its success.  

“When you’re dealing with big bureaucracies that are abusing human rights, you can never be sure which rally or which letter may turn the tide,” Worthington said. “But this is part of the cumulative impact of people around the world.” 

Falun Gong is an ancient Chinese practice that became popular in the early 1990s and was outlawed in 1999. 

Its members were denied legal protection and status in China. Ispas said more than 400 people were tortured and killed for being associated with Falun Gong. 

The City Council wants copies of its letter to go to Berkeley’s sister city in China, which is actually the Haidian District of Beijing, to the mayor of Beijing, its director of public safety and a governor.


Thanks for a successful Fourth

Dory Ehrlich
Thursday July 11, 2002

To the Editor: 

Thanks to University Avenue Andronico's, for once again hosting its annual July 4 parking lot barbecue. What a good community event it is - people of all ages and races talking, eating and dancing together. I especially appreciate it for the seniors, and for those who don't have their own backyards or grills. How nice to be able to sit out in the sun with your neighbors, listen to live music, and enjoy a July 4th barbecue. 

Thanks, also, to Andronico's for its participation in the escrip program - 5 percent of all my purchases now goes to my favorite arts organization.  

We are fortunate to have Andronico's in our midst, with its dedicated, friendly staff and sense of community. The old University Avenue Co-Op maybe gone, but its spirit continues.  

 

Dory Ehrlich 

Berkeley 

 


Nine years as hobo provided lots of material

By Brian Kluepfel, Special to the Daily Planet
Thursday July 11, 2002

Author is scheduled  

to play music tonight at Berkeley book store 

 

The Hobo, the Tramp, the Bum. He (or she) has been lionized and villanized by the American public; celebrated in the songs of Jimmie Rogers, Woody Guthrie and Bob Dylan; iconified in the literature and art of the 19th and 20th century. In his decade-plus on the road, Eddy Joe Cotton (born Zebu Recchia) has lived the life, and shared the campfires, wine jugs and mulligan stews with these people who populate the margin of society, "a whisper beneath the wind."  

Cotton is scheduled to perform at Black Oak Books 7:30 tonight with his jug sideshow “The Yard Dogs Road Show.” 

Cotton’s first book, "Hobo: A Young Man’s Thoughts on Trains and Tramping in America," is an account of his life riding the rails, and otherwise making his way around the country. While it offers a coming-of-age story in its pages, the real art of the book is the rich language and homespun philosophies that explain the hobo life without ever descending into stereotype or cliché. While other literature exists on the hobos (Cotton provides an bibliography), this is hoboing for the 21st century.  

Most of the book details the first month Cotton spends on the road when he was 19. He gets angry with his father for firing him from their two-man construction business, and takes to foot down the highway outside of Denver, armed only with a "down Ford jacket, a couple of dollar bills, and a good pair of workboots."  

The time he spends traveling between Colorado, Wyoming, Idaho and Nevada is populated with unforgettable characters: Half Step ("lost four of my toes falling off a train"), Alabama, Billy the Kid, Carny Chris, Bear and Yukon Sam. Cotton is adopted at first by the Vietnam veteran Alabama, who shows him some of the tricks of the wayfaring trade, and Cotton in turn takes a younger teen-ager under his wing for a spell.  

There is the menace of violence, the feeling of dispossession and despondence, the longing for home, the twin pangs of sex and love, and the screw-it attitude of a free spirit with nothing left to lose.  

One gets the feeling of what it's like on the road: the brutal clickety-clack of a train speeding through the Wyoming winter night; the painful wrench of the empty stomach with only enough change to buy a cup of coffee, and the disapproving stares of the straights in the roadside cafes.  

Cotton brings the beauty and ugliness of the landscape to life with his prose. A Rocky Mountain morning is described: "The evergreens were draped with the gowns of winter... birds were chanting as they untied the gifts that fell from the tree." Dodging the railroad police, he hops a car and "all my dark thoughts just passed overhead--like lonely black crows." Although he relies on his own description, some of the songs Cotton quotes are by Iggy Pop and J.J. Cale, two American music icons.  

In one of the "Journal Entries" that pepper the book without interrupting its narrative flow, Cotton distills his philosophy: "If you really want to have a good time, you’ve got to spill a little wine, sleep in the dirt, get pissed off and sad, and run across the great tundra like a castrated bull." He talks of living "not a dime past survival." His summary of the lifestyle is poignant and straight-talking: "The jungle tramp lives every moment as his last breath and looks for nothing more... than a hotshot to haul his sorry ass out of town." 

And if you don’t know what a "hotshot" is, there’s a rich glossary in the back of the book. Cotton explains the terms and their historical significance. He also imparts a good deal of practical survival wisdom throughout "Hobo." You might want to get yourself a "California Blanket" for sleeping – newspapers stuffed inside your clothes for warmth or to be used as bedding. If you need a fire, food and drink, let ‘em know at the nearest jungle fire that you’re "C, H and D" (cold, hungry and dry). This glossary shows the reader how greatly the American lexicon has been enriched by these itinerant gadflies.  

The only problem bump in the book was the section on Cotton’s brief dalliance with Misty, the go-go dancer/crystal methamphetamine freak who treats him to a few days of carnal bliss and then dumps him on the side of the road. Their sideshow in Reno is comical but this bit goes on too long and cuts the flow of the book.  

Cotton meets the challenge of a shattered heart by taking to the open road once again, and it is out there, among the carnies, speed freaks, broken angels, tricksters and outright criminals that he finds some measure of solace and truth. If his book makes you want to walk out of your cubicle and down the road, he offers only this advice: "I’ll give you enough information to have yourself a new trade. Your own personal truth will come later, when your summer of hoboing and sleeping in the dirt is over."  


Out & About Calendar

Staff
Thursday July 11, 2002


Thursday, July 11

 

Great Sierra Backpacking  

Destinations 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo  

Karen Najarian of Sierra Wilderness Seminars presents slides from her more that 20 years exploring the Sierra Backcountry. 

For information: 527-4140 

Free 

 

What Do You Believe? Spiritual Lives of American Teenagers 

6:30 to 8:00 p.m. 

Ellen Driscoll Playhouse 

325 Highland Avenue, Piedmont  

Film presented by Piedmont diversity groups; discussion with filmmaker, Sarah Feinbloom.  

655-5552, or maudep@aol.com 

Free 

 


Friday, July 12

 

Celebration of Emma Goldman's Birthday  

8 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. 

Fellowship of Humanity Hall  

390 27th St  

An all-ages, alcohol-free party with live music, DJ, and dance lessons 

http://www.ebcaw.org  

$5 to $10 sliding scale  

 


Saturday, July 13

 

Peach / Stone Fruit Tasting 

Tasting & cooking demonstrations 

10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

Center Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way 

Free 

 

15th Anniversary Derby  

Street Farmers Market 

Live music and & stone-fruit and peach tasting 

Tasting & cooking demonstrations. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

Derby Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way  

Free 

 

Festival of New Versions  

of Classic Asian Games 

Noon to 5 p.m 

Dr. Comics and Mr. Games,  

4014 Piedmont Ave., Oakland  

Dr Comics and Mr Games Hosts Game a festival featuring two new versions of classic Asian board games 

601-7800 

 


Sunday, July 14

 

Hands-on Bicycle Repair  

11 a.m.to noon 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Learn from an REI bike technician basic bike repairs such as brake adjustments and fixing a flat. 

For information: 527-4140 

Free 

 

Family Health Day 

11 a.m. to 5 p.m. 

Fourth Street and University Avenue 

Explore health concerns in a family oriented environment 

Free 

 


Tuesday, July 16

 

Berkeley Camera  

Club Weekly Meeting 

7:30 p.m. 

Northbrae Community Church 

941 The Alameda 

Share slides, prints with other photographers 

525-3565 

Free 

 

Introduction to Accessible  

Software and Hardware  

10:30 a.m. to noon 

Berkeley Public Library Electronic Classroom, 2090 Kittredge Street 

RSVP to 981-6121. Alan Bern, Special Services Coordinator 

 


Wedneday, July 17

 

Doctors Without Borders 

Until July 18 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. 

UC Berkeley, Springer Gateway, West Entrance Crescent 

Interactive exhibit expalining medicines for people in developing countries; Film screenings 

www.doctorswithoutborders.org 

Free 

 


Thursday, July 18

 

Mystique of the Widerness 

7 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Phil Arnot presents slides from over 50 years of exploring such places as Alaska, New Zealand, the Sierra and the Rockies. 

For information: 527-4140 

 

Introduction to Accessible  

Software and Hardware  

3 to 4:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Public Library Electronic Classroom, 2090 Kittredge Street 

RSVP to 981-6121. Alan Bern, Special Services Coordinator 

 


Saturday, July 20

 

Emergency Preparedness  

Classes in Berkeley 

Earthquake Retrofitting: Learn how to strengthen your wood frame home. 

10 a.m. to 5 p.m. 

812 Page St. 

981-5605 

Free 

 


Thursday, July 25

 

California Landscapes:  

A Geologist's Perspective 

7 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

John Karachewski presents an educational slideshw on such amazing places as the Sierra Nevada, Coast Ranges the Great Valley and Cascades 

For information: 527- 4140. 

Free 

 


Saturday, July 27

 

Test Ride Kestrel Bicycles 

11 a.m. to 1 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Preston Sandusky of Kestrel, a premier manufacturer of high-end, carbon-fiber road and mountain bikes, intrduces their latest design. 

For information: 527-4140 

Free 

 

"Neon: The Living Flame" 

7:00 p.m.  

Alameda Museum  

2324 Alameda Ave.  

The Alameda Museum presents Michael Crowe, author, and neon artist Karl Hauser 

lecture by Michael Crowe 

748-0796 or 841-8489.  

Members free, nonmembers $5  

 


Sunday, July 28

 

Hands-on Bicycle Repair  

11 a.m. to noon 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Learn from an REI bike techician basic repairs such as brake adjustments and fixing a flat. 

For information: 527-4140 

Free 

 


Wednesday, July 31

 

Mountain Adventure Seminars:  

Introduction to Rock Climbing 

7 to 9 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

An introduction to rockclimbing including knot tieing, belaying and movement. 

For information: (209) 753-6556 

$115 REI members; $125 non-members 

 


Saturday, August 3

 

Mountain Adventure Seminars:  

Introduction to Rock Climbing 

8 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

An introduction to rockclimbing including knot tieing, belaying and movement. 

For more information: (209) 753-6556 

$115 REI members; $125 non-members 

 


Saturday, August 10

 

Tomato Tastings 

10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

Center Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way 

Tastings and cooking demonstrations  

Free 

 


Sunday, August 11

 

Hands-on Bicycle Repair 

11 a.m. to noon 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Learn from an REI bike technician basic repairs such as brake adjustments and fixing a flat. 

For information: 527-4140 

Free 

 

 


West Berkeley Arts

Festival 

11 a.m. to 5 p.m. 

Fourth Street and University Avenue 

Explore the many resident artists located in Berkeley 

Free. 

 


Tuesday, August 13

 

Tomato Tasting 

Tasting & cooking demonstrations 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

Derby Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way  

Free 

 

Berkeley Camera Club  

Weekly Meeting 

7:30 p.m. 

Northbrae Community Church  

941 The Alameda 

Share slides, prints with other photographers 

525-3565 

Free


Deja vu all over again: Barons game cut short

By Jared Green, Daily Planet Staff
Thursday July 11, 2002

Yow’s odd sixth-inning ejection prompts Pinguelo to forfeit game; Berkeley/Albany may be headed for state tournament 

 

In a disturbing re-enactment of Tuesday’s Major League Baseball All-Star Game fiasco, the Berkeley/Albany-Fremont Babe Ruth District Playoffs baseball game was ended prematurely on Wednesday evening, with Fremont claiming a 10-4 win just two outs into the sixth inning. 

Like Bud Selig’s fiasco in Milwaukee, Wednesday’s cancellation came down to pitching. Berkeley/Albany manager Joe Pinguelo was down to his last healthy pitcher in Derek Yow by the fifth, and when Yow was tossed from the game by the home plate umpire, Pinguelo decided his team couldn’t go on. 

“It’s an unfortunate thing, but I just ran out of pitching,” Pinguelo said. “Why waste pitchers?” 

Yow’s ejection was, at best, a questionable call. After a called third strike, he dropped his head and dragged his bat behind him toward the dugout. Without warning, the umpire told Yow he was out of the game, drawing disbelief and more than a few comments from the Barons’ bench. 

“I didn’t say a word to him,” Yow said of his first ejection ever. “I just dropped my bat and dragged it. It’s the same thing I always do when I strike out.” 

According to Pinguelo, the umpire objected to Yow’s dragging of the bat, considering it an insult. 

“(The umpire) said, ‘He can’t stick his bat in my dirt,’” Pinguelo said in disbelief. “There’s no way the ejection was warranted.” 

Yow’s ejection was the second of the game. In the fourth inning, Fremont’s Troy Howard earned an automatic thumbing when he tried to run over Barons catcher Jeremy LeBeau. Both high school and Babe Ruth rules mandate a runner must slide into home if contact is imminent. 

Pinguelo said after the game that he had been assured by the league office that, thanks to the section’s best record, the Barons would advance to the state tournament regardless of Wednesday’s result. With that in mind, Pinguelo’s decision to forfeit the game is a bit more understandable. But Fremont manager Anthony Rojo’s take was a little different. 

“We just earned ourselves a bid to the state tournament, but I think Joe’s in for a surprise,” Rojo said. “I’m positive he’ll have to win another game to make the state tournament.” 

The Black Sox earned their bid by knocking around starting pitcher Jeremiah Pinguelo for nine runs in the first three innings. Fremont ran themselves out of the first two innings with three runners cut down on the basepaths, and Chase Moore’s three-run homer to leftfield gave the Barons a 4-1 lead after two and a half innings. But the Sox tied the game with three runs in the bottom of the third, then teed off for five more in the fourth, with the big blow a two-run triple by Nick Rutchena, the first batter faced by reliever Randy Renn after Pinguelo was lifted. 

The Babe Ruth state tournament starts on Saturday at San Leandro Ballpark.


Neighbors sue to stop development

By David Scharfenberg, Daily Planet staff
Thursday July 11, 2002

A group of 250 neighbors and business owners in central Berkeley filed a lawsuit against the city Tuesday seeking to block construction of a four-story building at 2517 Sacramento St. that would include a mix of commercial space and affordable housing for seniors. 

Neighbors for Sensible Development claim the city approved the project without a valid General Plan in place to guide the process, without adequate parking and without a report detailing the environmental impact of the proposed development. 

The City Attorney and other officials said they had not yet received copies of the suit and could not comment on pending litigation. But, in discussing the approval process that unfolded earlier this year, some officials cast doubt on the plaintiffs’ claims, arguing for instance that an environmental impact report was not necessary. 

The neighbors say they are not opposed to affordable housing or commercial development in their neighborhood. They say they simply do not want a building as tall and bulky and as the project proposed by the developer, the non-profit Affordable Housing Associates of Berkeley. 

“It’s out of character,” said Marie Bowman, one of the residents involved in the suit, raising concerns about parking, traffic and the shadows the building would cast on neighboring homes and apartments. 

But Kevin Zwick, project manager for Affordable Housing Associates, said the neighbors worked to block another low-income housing project at the corner of Dwight and Sacramento and are simply at it again. 

“We think it’s unfortunate the levels that some neighbors will go to oppose an affordable housing project in their neighborhood,” said Zwick. “The intent is to delay or kill the project and we will continue to fight, as we have for the past three years, to see the project through.” 

Bowman replied that the neighbors had legitimate concerns about the public process surrounding the Dwight and Sacramento development. 

The Zoning Adjustments Board approved the Sacramento St. project, which includes 40 residential units, Feb. 14. After an appeal by the neighbors, the City Council upheld the ZAB ruling May 28 by a 5-2 vote. 

The neighborhood and the developer were in the midst of mediation when the City Council voted to approve the project. Neighbors, who did not attend the May 28 meeting because mediation was scheduled to continue into June, say the city should have waited for the mediation process to end before voting on the project. Mayor Shirley Dean and councilmember Betty Olds, who voted against the project, say the neighbors have a point. 

“I thought, ‘why do this when we were moving towards some kind of resolution?,’” said Mayor Shirley Dean. 

But Councilmember Kriss Worthington said approval was necessary so the developer could apply for state tax credits by a July 16 deadline. 

“Creating senior housing and affordable housing is a very high priority,” he said. 

Arthur Friedman of Steefel, Levitt & Weiss, a San Francisco law firm representing the neighbors, said the city approved the project based on adjustments to its General Plan in December that were not in compliance with state law. 

“It was built on a strawman,” he said. “They don’t have a valid General Plan.” 

Friedman also argued that the city improperly allowed a reduced number of parking spaces, and said the Zoning Adjustments Board should have called for an environmental impact report, or EIR, given the traffic and congestion the development will create. 

“I don’t think an EIR was necessary for this project,” said Andy Katz, a City Council candidate and member of the Zoning Adjustments Board, arguing that the project is not large enough to warrant a report. 

Katz also said ZAB approved a relatively small number of parking spots, 13, because the tenants will be low-income seniors who are less likely to own vehicles.  

Bowman countered that discount car insurance plans for the elderly make heavy car ownership a real possibility. 

David Blake, another ZAB member, said that 13 spaces may not be adequate given that the development does not have a shopping center nearby and tenants may therefore be more likely to own cars than they otherwise would. Still, he voted for the project Feb. 14.


His view is just ‘different’

Michael Bauce
Thursday July 11, 2002

To the Editor: 

Thank you for printing comments on my letter regarding the dangers of cumulative radiation; too bad no one responded to the gyst of it. There is no doubt that my views are not mainstream, but shouldn't be confused with local environmentalists now branded as hysterical by those who claim to have more scientific 'knowledge" than you or I. You don't need to be a rocket scientist to understand human health, you may chose to study nature. 

While scientists may be able to explain the composition of tritium or any other substance, they cannot explain the effects that these substances have on the human organism, especially with numbers and statistics. Fortunately, the human body does not operate according to the laws of science (if it did we'd be robots). The human body operates according to the laws of nature.  

Until we fully understand this, we will continue to be baffled as to why cancer, AIDS, diabetes, heart disease, etc...have reached such epidemic proportions, despite all the continued medical research being conducted at LBNL and elsewhere. $30,000,000 later, disease runs rampant and researchers cite the viciousness of cancer, rather than to re-evaluate their approach in light of such failure. The money continues to flow to find a 'cure."  

Cancer statistics, cited by David M. Smith, tell us very little; we all have different tolerance levels based on various factors, one of them being immune function. Since we have not determined the pre-existing health of the residents near LBNL, it makes no sense to come to any conclusion based on cancer rates alone. Certainly public policy should not be determined by such faulty, incomplete data. We should not be made guinea pigs nor our community turned into a scientific experiment based on numbers. 

Because my viewpoint differs from David A. Smith does not mean I am hysterical about tritium, have "no knowledge," that I need "education," have exhibited "no concern," and that I "provide(s) ammunition to...conservatives and corporations." It means that I reject the commonly held belief that life itself can explained from this overly-scientific approach that dominates our world today. It is not tritium, per se, or any other substance that is so dangerous; it's our own arrogance.  

 

Michael Bauce 

Berkeley


Briefs

Staff
Thursday July 11, 2002

Anna Nicole Smith to star
in reality TV show
 

 

PASADENA — Anna Nicole Smith is taking on Ozzy Osbourne and his foul-mouthed family in her own reality TV show. 

“I’m doing it because I’ve been stuck in my house so long because of the litigation,” she said. “It was time to get out.” 

The former Playmate and Guess? jeans model is best known for her court battles over the fortune of her late husband, J. Howard Marshall. She won $88 million from Marshall’s estate, but the case is tied up in appeals. 

Bathed in a pink spotlight — her favorite color — Smith sat stroking her black poodle, Sugar Pie, as she told the Television Critics Association on Tuesday how cameras film her from the time she gets up to the time she goes to bed. 

“At first it was kind of crazy,” she said. “You forget to turn your speakers off when you go to the bathroom. It’s kind of embarrassing.” 

Viewers will see Smith bowling with her son, taking driving lessons and attending Hollywood parties. 

Although E! officials promise the series will highlight Smith’s uninhibited personality, she was demure while discussing the show. 

“I’m pretty nervous,” said Smith, who often asked reporters to repeat questions because she didn’t understand them. 

Smith’s husband died at 90 in August 1995, just 14 months after their wedding. He left behind a fortune estimated at as much as $1.6 billion. 

 

Drummer knocked out in a pool 

 

LONDON — The Scottish band Travis said Wednesday it canceled four European concerts after drummer Neil Primrose was seriously injured in a swimming pool accident. 

Primrose was knocked unconscher tests,” Travis said in a statement. 

“We wish to apologize to all our fans for any inconvenience caused but hope you will join us in wishing Neil a full and speedy recovery.” 

Primrose was quoted Wednesday as telling the Scottish Sun newspaper from his hospital bed that he was fortunate to be alive. 

“If I’d hit my head a different way, it could have been a lot worse,” he said. 

“We went back to the hotel for a couple of beers and I dived into the pool. It was too shallow and I bumped my head and knocked myself out.


MLS teams to start reserve squads to aid development

The Associated Press
Thursday July 11, 2002

League shows commitment to younger players, will try to mirror European style 

 

SANTA MONICA – Spurred by the United States’ success in the World Cup, Major League Soccer plans to increase its commitment to developing young players. 

Commissioner Don Garber said Wednesday the league plans to have all 10 teams field reserve squads of players in their teens and 20s, with the eventual goal of the reserve squad players earning spots with MLS teams. 

“This will require a fairly significant investment on our part over the next number of years,” Garber said. “The World Cup proved to us that we’ve got a pretty good model in place, the concept of developing these players from within the league is working, so now we’re going to expand on that process.” 

The MLS eventually will modify its draft to allow players on the reserve teams to join the parent MLS teams. Reserve teams will enable some young players to have professional careers that perhaps otherwise would not, Garber said. 

Garber believes having homegrown players also will help boost attendance for the teams. 

“By having these development teams, we’ll be able to find those kids who are not necessarily playing with some organized club team under the auspices of U.S. Soccer and assist them in playing in our league and for the national team,” Garber said. 

The Chicago Fire, D.C. United, Los Angeles Galaxy and New York/New Jersey MetroStars currently field reserve squads, playing in either the Premier Development League or in amateur leagues. The use of reserve teams is a standard practice elsewhere in the world. 

Another stated MLS goal is to expand to 20 teams, in part to help increase television ratings. But the league contracted two teams this year, and no timetable has been set for adding new teams. 

“Our challenge is that we have to have a better business plan to attract investors to come in and believe this is something that will be financially beneficial — and also something they can hold their head high by going into their country club or cocktail party and say I own a soccer team,” Garber said on Wednesday. 

The U.S. World Cup success will help attract investors, Garber claimed. 

“After last month, there’s a lot more people who feel good about this game than before last month,” Garber said. 

MLS operates under a single-entity concept, with team operators owning a financial stake in the league, not just their individual teams. Investment in MLS is dominated by the Anschutz Entertainment Group, which operates five MLS teams and shares operation of a sixth.


Builder looks to state law for approval

By Kurtis Alexander, Daily Planet Staff
Thursday July 11, 2002

Interprets law to mean the city
cannot deny the proposal 

 

Expecting a residential project on Hearst Street to be shot down by the city’s zoning adjustments board tonight, the project applicant is questioning the city’s right to deny housing at a time when the city needs it more than ever. 

Because the proposed housing complex includes four affordable-housing units, the applicant claims that the city must approve the 14-unit complex even though it is larger than the current zoning regulations allow. 

California housing law forbids a city's zoning laws from blocking the building of affordable housing, and that’s what’s happening on Hearst Street, said Rena Rickles, the attorney for project applicant Lynda Hart. 

No one has ever used the state housing statute to defend a development in Berkeley, zoning board officials said.  

Many fear the law, if enacted, could undermine the zoning board’s ability to exercise control over all new housing projects in the city. 

Rickles said the city by law must approve the project. If it doesn't, her client, the daughter of the property owner at 1155 Hearst Ave., could take the city to court. 

The zoning board, though, says the state statute does not apply to Berkeley and is not afraid to be challenged. 

“The law is designed for cities that are not supportive of affordable housing,” said boardmember Andy Katz. Berkeley is aggressive enough in affordable housing, he said. 

City planners said they’re on their way to meeting the state requirement of 1,269 housing units be built in Berkeley by 2007. Furthermore, city zoning law requires that all residential complexes with five or more units be built with at least 20 percent of the units as affordable. 

The city’s housing element, which provides a blueprint of future housing, is currently being reviewed by the state’s Department of Housing and Community Development. 

Rickels says the city’s numbers are all wrong. The city counts projects that are in various planning stages as meeting the state's requirement, instead of the “number of new housing units approved for construction,” she said. 

“Something in the pipeline is highly speculative to rely on as a housing unit that can be built,” Rickels said. 

She said that California law is on her side. Until the city can prove that it meets state requirements, the Hearst Avenue project by law cannot be denied, she said. 

Another point of contention, Rickels said, is that the city changed zoning laws at the Hearst Avenue site after her client submitted her project proposal. 

A March decision by the zoning board reclassified the Hearst Avenue property and nine others as R-2A from R-3, meaning the number of living units allowed at site is eight instead of 14. 

While Rickels says the action undermines the necessary push for housing. City planners contend that housing is not needed in that neighborhood.  

“The board concluded that the 74 affordable units approved by the board so far this year, in addition to the approximately 75 affordable units pending board action, were more than enough to meet the regional fair share housing target,” a recent staff report read. 

With the city convinced that it has met state guidelines, the zoning board tonight will not discuss the state housing statute – California Government Code Section 65589.5 d. Instead, the board will consider the Hearst Street project based on its compliance with zoning law.


Neighbor sticks up for Papermaster

John Sloan
Thursday July 11, 2002

To the Editor: 

I am writing in response to the article naming my neighbor, Cynthia Papermaster, who I support for the Berkeley School Board. 

Most reasonable people will agree that running an anonymous quote from a clearly angry person on the front page of your paper does Cynthia harm. 

Advocating parents' involvement and power sharing with all levels of the school district is Cynthia Papermaster's clear platform. This clear position inevitably creates fiction and opposition. 

I have known Cynthia since our daughters were born a year apart over 14 years ago. Our daughters are very close friends. 

I have been able to observe Cynthia's unwavering commitment to her daughter's schools and to our public school system for that amount of time. Time after time, I have witnessed Cynthia pour herself into a projec, selflessly and without concern for her own benefit. She is willing to exhaust herself, and risk being short and curt in public. Have no doubt, Cynthia can be single-minded and blunt. Those are two good reasons to put her on the education board. 

I have also known that Cynthia will not speak out on a subject or ask others for support until she has worked in some very direct way with that matter. Cynthia can be direct and aggressive, but I know in her heart she has great passion for what she believes. 

Direct. Honest. Forthright. Hard working. 

If you are among the hundreds of people who know Cynthia through her work with the schools, and if you are so inclined, please help her now. 

 

John Sloan 

Berkeley


Masur conducts last concerts as NY orchestra director

By Martin Steinberg, The Associated Press
Thursday July 11, 2002

Music 

 

NEW YORK— Conductor Kurt Masur displays a framed copy of the first and last pages of the score of Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony on the wall of his office at Avery Fisher Hall. 

The last page has musical notes handwritten in red, editing changes by one of Masur’s predecessors at the New York Philharmonic — Gustav Mahler. 

The first page has writing by another predecessor — Arturo Toscanini. 

“Changes by Gustav Mahler — unworthy of such a musician,” Toscanini scrawled. 

Laughing at Toscanini’s pique at anyone with the audacity to edit Beethoven, Masur said: “He edited the violoncello because it wasn’t loud enough for him.” 

This summer, Masur joins Toscanini and Mahler in the ranks of former music directors of the nation’s oldest orchestra. After an 11-year tenure — second-longest in the 160-year-old orchestra’s history — he is leaving. 

On Thursday night (July 18), his 75th birthday, he makes his final New York performance as director. The concert, nationally broadcast on PBS’ “Live From Lincoln Center,” starts with Leonard Bernstein’s “Candide” Overture and crescendos to conclusion with Ravel’s “Bolero.” The “Candide” will be performed without a conductor in a special gesture to Bernstein’s legacy to the philharmonic. 

The final bow comes Sunday (July 21) at Tanglewood in Lenox, Mass., with Beethoven’s “Eroica” Symphony and “Emperor” Concerto, featuring pianist Yefim Bronfman. The 3 p.m. EDT concert will be broadcast on National Public Radio. 

Next season, Masur becomes music director of the Orchestre National de France. He also returns to New York in guest conducting appearances as the philharmonic’s music director emeritus, an honorary title previously held only by Bernstein. 

The philharmonic baton goes to Lorin Maazel, who Masur says will inherit a finely tuned ensemble. 

“They bring me into heaven each night,” he said. “This is incredible. How sensitive this orchestra can play. How sure they can do. How committed they are. How great they are in sometimes being flexible for singers or for soloists. This is a dream. They can fulfill dreams of a conductor. And they do.” 

The birthday concert includes the world premiere of Lukas Foss’ “Baroque Meditations” and an assortment of solo performances by orchestra members. Among them: movements from Brahms’ Double Concerto, Bach’s Concerto for Two Violins and Dittersdorf’s Sinfonia Concertante for Viola and Double Bass. 

“I wanted really to show the result of our collaboration, that in this orchestra are high-level soloists sitting every day and playing together,” Masur said. 

It was this philosophy that enabled Masur — who led the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra in eastern Germany for 26 years — to restore the philharmonic. He inherited an orchestra that had foundered by the end of Zubin Mehta’s record 13 years at the helm and had been seen as an unmanageable collection of egos unwilling to sacrifice self for the common good. 

“Certainly, we’re not the bad boy of music anymore,” concertmaster Glenn Dicterow said. “He’s managed to get everybody to focus on the product of what we are doing. ... No matter playing the Brahms’ Third Symphony for the 20th time, he will come back to it a year later and find something new. ... So it’s always fresh.” 

Masur said one way he was able to gain the musicians’ respect was to break their anonymity. “We started immediately to give the audience a knowledge — who’s sitting on the second violin? Who’s sitting on the second flute? What are they doing? What is the background? ... They felt more and more proud to be in that orchestra.” 

Another way was his knowledge of the repertoire and the composer. 

“He’s a very, very serious musician and he never comes to an opening rehearsal without talking to us about what he wants from this piece,” principal violist Cynthia Phelps said. “This is what he thinks, this is why it was written this way. And then he translates that into technical terms during the rehearsal process. ‘You know, this man was very tortured, therefore the tension in this phrase can’t be let up, because this is what he was thinking.’ It’s very, very intelligent music-making without ever sacrificing a huge emotional commitment.” 

He also is a stickler for perfection, expressing his opinions frankly. 

“I think as I started here, the orchestra felt immediately that I am absolutely honest, that I never lie,” Masur said in his German-accented English. “And I tell them honest if it sounded ugly. I tell them honest if it sounded wonderful. And this was the kind of connection that they felt. I never am too shy to say what I feel and what I think. And this brought us together, to trust each other.” 

Masur’s valedictory season began after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. Instead of opening with Beethoven’s Violin Concerto, he had the orchestra perform Brahms’ “A German Requiem” in memory of terror victims. 

“I was convinced that it was the right music for the people who wanted to come to the hall because ... they all came to be helped by music, and maybe to come again into a feeling of life can be beautiful again. And this is the only piece (that) can do that.” 

The final concerts will be bittersweet, too. 

Masur, who got a kidney transplant last year in Germany, didn’t want to leave New York. He was forced out, losing a power struggle with then-Executive Director Deborah Borda. The board wanted someone younger and preferably American. After Borda’s abrupt departure in 1999 and the embarrassing rejection of Italian conductor Riccardo Muti, the philharmonic selected Maazel, who is American and 72. 

“It’s somehow hurting a little bit because you say farewell to somebody you love and that you admire, where you had a wonderful time together,” Masur said. 

The sweet part, though, is that he and his family have a home and feel at home in New York — and he thinks he leaves behind what is now one of the top five orchestras in the world. 

“I feel much more grateful that it worked that way. It could have gone wrong, it could have gone bad. As I came to New York everybody told me you are very adventurous to go there. And I must say, this was maybe the nicest adventure of my life.” 


Cybercamp at UC Berkeley a summer with high technology

By David Scharfenberg, Daily Planet staff
Thursday July 11, 2002

It is a summer camp for 2002. Sure, there’s capture the flag and frisbee, but the kids at Cybercamps on the UC Berkeley campus also spend five hours a day in a computer lab, studying 3-D Animation, web design and robotics. 

“I’m aspiring to build a robot with my dad for BattleBots,” said one camper, referring to a Comedy Central television show that features robot combat. 

The UC Berkeley camp is one of 45 nationwide, operated by the Cybercamps company, founded in Seattle in 1997. 

“We see ourselves as a supplement to schools,” said founder Pete Findley. “With all their other essential priorities, many schools don’t have the time, money or training necessary to offer advanced technology learning opportunities during the school year.” 

Corporate sponsors like Microsoft, Sony and Electronic Arts provide the camp with digital cameras, games and software, including expensive programs that campers might not otherwise encounter. 

Robotics instructor Mario Roaf-Esparza, who will be a sophomore at Sarah Lawrence College in Bronxville, N.Y. in the fall, said campers are learning both tangible and intangible skills. 

“They’re learning some basic mechanical engineering,” he said, noting that campers are learning to build circuits on their robots.  

But in programming the robots, they’re also learning something about logic and troubleshooting. 

All the camps, including the UC Berkeley program, accept children ages 6-17, although Berkeley camp director Erica Allen said most tend to be on the older end of that scale. This week the program has 29 campers, about half of them commuting each day and half staying the night in campus dorms.  

“They learn about a lot of new technologies that give them a step above,” said Allen. “But our number one rule is to have fun.” 

Case in point: a relay race called “soak the counselor” involves dousing one of the camp’s five counselors with water. 

“They have a blast,” said Jeff Claybaugh, assistant camp director, who supervises the residential campers. Lights-out time is 10 p.m., he said, but he often hears kids talking past midnight. 

The camp is scheduled to run through Aug. 10. The weekly fee is $600 to $1,000, depending on whether a camper commutes or stays the night. Scholarships are available for children from low-income families. Call 888-904-2267 to register.  

 


Jerry Springer sued by son of guest who was killed after show

Staff
Thursday July 11, 2002

TAMPA, Fla. — Talk show host Jerry Springer was sued Wednesday by the son of a former guest, killed by her ex-husband hours after the airing of an episode the couple had appeared on involving love triangles. 

Jeffrey Campbell of Kalamazoo, Mich., alleged that The Jerry Springer Show episode on which Nancy Campbell-Panitz appeared created “a mood that led to murder.” 

A spokeswoman for the program said that neither the show nor its producers were responsible for the death. 

Ralf Panitz, 42, was convicted of second-degree murder and received a life sentence in May for the July 24, 2000, beating death of his ex-wife. The show had been taped in May 2000. 

The lawsuit said the show encouraged Ralf Panitz, who appeared on the episode with his new wife, to lie to Campbell-Panitz in order to get her to appear. 

The suit claims Campbell-Panitz thought she was on the show to reconcile with Ralf Panitz. Instead, she learned that her ex-husband had secretly married Eleanor Panitz in March 2000. 

Campbell-Panitz stormed off the stage as she was mocked by Eleanor Panitz and jeered by the audience. 

Panitz and Campbell-Panitz divorced in 1999 but still lived together off and on, even after he remarried. The trio spent months filing a flurry of domestic violence allegations against each other as Ralf Panitz bounced between the two women. 

Prosecutors say that Ralf Panitz, upset about having to move his belongings out of Campbell-Panitz’s home, choked and beat her to death after watching the episode on TV at a bar, where he was drinking heavily. 

Springer spokeswoman Linda Shafran on Wednesday noted the murder came three months after the show was taped.


News of the Weird

Staff
Thursday July 11, 2002

A party for you and 80 friends 

 

PORTLAND, Ore. — Portland Beavers fans: Beware of inflated scores and shredded programs. 

The Triple-A affiliate of the San Diego Padres is sponsoring “Arthur Andersen Appreciation Night” to poke fun at the beleaguered accounting firm. 

At the July 18 home game against Edmonton, anyone named “Arthur” or “Andersen” will receive free admission. And the first person named “Arthur Andersen” will get a gift package that includes a party inside a luxury suite for 80 friends. 

Fans are encouraged to bring old documents to be destroyed at several “shredding stations” throughout the park. The team also will tuck away certificates for a game of “massive debt hide-and-go-seek.” 

Arthur Andersen LLP, based in Chicago, was convicted of obstruction of justice last month related to an investigation into Enron Corp.’s complex accounting practices. 

“With all the negative stuff that’s come out of this, sooner or later you have to laugh about it,” Beavers general manager Mark Schuster said. 

Portland plays at PGE Park, named for Portland General Electric, a utility owned by Enron. 

 

Prohibition ends in Ohio town 69 years after it ended in US 

 

TALLMADGE, Ohio — Prohibition has finally ended for this Akron suburb. 

For the first time in more than 80 years, alcohol sales became legal Monday in Tallmadge, with Mayor Christopher Grimm getting things going by sipping on a microbrew beer at Delanie’s Neighborhood Grille. 

When Prohibition ended in 1933, Tallmadge refused to allow local sales, fearful of too many taverns. 

The change, approved by voters last year, was prompted by a desire to attract chain restaurants that depend on liquor sales. 

“It’s definitely not a coincidence that there are no big chain restaurants in Tallmadge,” said Delanie’s owner, Nicholas Dadich. “It’s because it has been dry.” 

 

‘Botox party’ theme too flip 

 

BALTIMORE — A “Botox Night” at a world-renowned medical center is furrowing the brows of some consumer advocates. 

A Johns Hopkins Hospital spokesman defended the event as an informational seminar, though people who attend the free event will be able to receive Botox treatments. 

“We think it’s insidious erosion of the culture of medicine being promoted by an institution that counts itself as one of the world’s leading medical centers,” Dr. Peter Lurie, deputy director of Public Citizen’s Health Research Group, said Tuesday. 

Gary Stephenson, a spokesman for Johns Hopkins, said the event was designed purely for Hopkins staff and employees who were interested in the purified strain of poisonous botulism used to smooth frown lines. 

He emphasized that procedures would be done by a trained physician and said Hopkins regularly holds similar events for other medical developments. 

Lurie said the reception, which includes refreshments, sounded much like Botox parties that have sprung up in spas or at upscale private homes, where alcohol and on-the-spot injections of Botox can be had. 

Stephenson said the letter about the event may have been “a bit lighthearted.” 

“We surely did not want to characterize this as a Botox party,” Stephenson said. 


Power warning could mean blackouts

By Mike Dinoffria, Special to the Daily Planet
Thursday July 11, 2002

California is inching closer to its first rolling blackouts in more than a year. 

A rolling blackout is when power supply is low and the power company intentionally turns off power grids, leaving people in the dark. 

On Wednesday afternoon, the state’s power grid operator declared a stage 2 out of 3 possible stages of emergency. If the level 3 is reached, it could be lights out for Bay Area residents.  

Total usage came within 5 percent of the state’s total reserves at 3 p.m. Wednesday. The alert followed the first preliminary emergency of the year on Tuesday.  

The extreme heat wave thinned energy supplies this week, according to the Independent System Operator, the agency that manages the state’s power grid. 

During the current alert, grid managers can call on a group of power users who agree to scale back electricity use during emergencies in return for lower energy rates, said ISO spokesperson Kristina Werst.  

By this time last year, the ISO declared 65 stage two alerts and 38 stage three alerts. An increase in public conservation awareness and keeping more power plants on line have helped avoid blackouts this year, Werst said. 

The ISO and Pacific Gas and Electric are still stressing that continued conservation will keep the lights on in California.  

The last rolling blackout in California happened on May 8, 2001. 

- The Associated Press contributed to this report


Senior centers take good care when temperatures are high

By Chris Nichols, Daily Planet Staff
Thursday July 11, 2002

With temperatures soaring around the Bay Area, local senior centers and extended care facilities have taken extra steps to stay safe and beat the heat. While there have been no emergencies involving heat stroke or dehydration at any of the Berkeley senior centers, supervisors are taking precautions. 

“We’re still operating under normal circumstances but I think the most important thing is to take good common sense measures,” said Larry Taylor, director of the west Berkeley Senior Center. 

Taylor says the staff keeps pitchers of water on every table. It has additional fans running and recommends its residents wear hats and sunscreen outdoors. Supervisors said they have closely watched weather reports and were not surprised by this week’s heat wave.  

“We knew this was coming,” said Diane Mitchell, director of admissions at Berkeley’s Chaparral, a skilled nursing facility.  

Most centers in Berkeley benefit from a cooler climate compared with facilities to the east that have experienced scorching temperatures.  

Sacramento reached 112. Reno hit 109. Carson City was 104. 

According to Mitchell, the Chaparral facility, though it does not have air conditioning, benefits from the shade of surrounding trees, fans and high ceilings.  

Throughout the year seniors attended health and safety workshops at the west Berkeley center that helped prepare them for unusually warm conditions, said Suzanne Ryan, director of the north Berkeley senior center. 

“It’s full steam ahead here,” Ryan said. “Other than a request to move one of our meetings down to the first floor instead of the second because of the heat, we haven’t had much of a change.”  

Ryan said that seniors at the north Berkeley facility attended a piano concert Wednesday and took a bus trip to Jack London Square.  

A heat advisory was issued Wednesday for inland portions of the San Francisco and Monterey Bay areas as high temperatures were expected to reach or exceed 105 degrees.  

Heat advisories are issued by the service after temperatures exceed 105 degrees in a general region. Temperatures in Berkeley are expected to be moderate, in the 70s and 80s today. 

According to Carolina Horn of the Bay Area’s National Weather service office in Monterey, warnings are disseminated through wire services, the internet and other media outlets.  


Refinery release forces Rodeo residents inside for 1 1/2 hours

Staff
Thursday July 11, 2002

RODEO — Residents near the Phillips Petroleum Co. refinery were ordered to stay in their homes for about an hour and a half Wednesday afternoon after black smoke began billowing from the facility. 

A loss of power caused part of the plant to shut itself down. As part of that process, it’s programmed to flare and burn off excess material, said Michael Marchiano, of the Contra Costa County Office of Emergency Services. It was unclear what caused the plant to lose power. 

The black smoke was the result of an overflare involving unburned hydrocarbon that spewed from the refinery about 4 p.m., he said. Phillips was working to put the plant back online Wednesday evening. 

Residents of nearby Crockett were asked not to leave their homes unless absolutely necessary, and were advised to stay inside with the windows and doors shut. They also were told to turn off air conditioners and fans, and to close fireplace dampers and vents and cover cracks around doors and windows with tape or damp towels. 

The shelter-in-place order was in effect from about 4:24 p.m. to 5:40 p.m. Officials then advised residents to open their windows and doors and let fresh air inside. 

The release comes during a record-breaking heat wave with a high pressure system that has reduced winds and sent temperatures soaring into the triple digits. Normally, the wind would blow the smoke out over the bay, said Paul Andrews, a county hazardous materials specialist.


Software flaw afflicts ability to send scrambled e-mails

By Ted Bridis, The Associated Press
Thursday July 11, 2002

WASHINGTON — The world’s most popular software for scrambling sensitive e-mails suffers from a programming flaw that could allow hackers to attack a user’s computer and, in some circumstances, unscramble messages. 

The software, called Pretty Good Privacy, or PGP, is the de facto standard for encrypting e-mails and is widely used by corporate and government offices, including some FBI agents and U.S. intelligence agencies. The scrambling technology is so powerful that until 1999 the federal government sought to restrict its sale out of fears that criminals, terrorists and foreign nations might use it. 

The new vulnerability, discovered weeks ago by researchers at eEye Digital Security Inc., does not exploit any weakness in the complex encrypting formulas used to scramble messages into gibberish. Instead, hackers are able to attack a programming flaw in an important piece of companion software, called a plug-in, that helps users of Microsoft Corp.’s Outlook e-mail program encrypt messages with a few mouse clicks. 

Outlook itself has emerged as the world’s standard for e-mail software, with tens of millions of users inside many of the world’s largest corporations and government offices. Smaller numbers use the Outlook plug-in to scramble their most sensitive messages so that only the recipient can read them. 

“It’s not the number of people using PGP but the fact that they’re using it because they’re trying to safeguard their data,” said Marc Maiffret, the eEye executive and researcher who discovered the problem. “Whatever the percentage is, it’s very important data.” 

Maiffret said there was no evidence anyone had successfully attacked users of the encryption software with this technique. He said the programming flaw was “not totally obvious,” even to trained researchers examining the software blueprints. 

Network Associates Inc. of Santa Clara, Calif., which until February distributed both commercial and free versions of PGP, made available on its Web site a free download to fix the software. The company announced earlier it was suspending new sales of the software, which hasn’t been profitable, but moved within weeks to repair the problem in existing versions. The company’s shares fell 50 cents to $17.70 in Tuesday trading on the New York Stock Exchange. 

Free versions of PGP are widely available on the World Wide Web. 

The flaw allows a hacker to send a specially coded e-mail — which would appear as a blank message followed by an error warning — and effectively seize control of the victim’s computer. The hacker could then install spy software to record keystrokes, steal financial records or copy a person’s secret unlocking keys to unscramble their sensitive e-mails. Other protective technology, such as corporate firewalls, could make this more difficult. 

“You can do whatever you want — execute code, read e-mails, install a backdoor, steal their keys. You could intercept all that stuff,” Maiffret said. 

Experts said the convenience of the plug-ins for popular e-mail programs broadened the risk from this latest threat, since encryption software is famously cumbersome to use without them.


Two more top officials leave nation’s largest public pension

Staff
Thursday July 11, 2002

SACRAMENTO — Two more top officials said Wednesday they are leaving the nation’s largest public pension fund, following a similar announcement in May by the fund’s chief executive officer. 

James Gomez, the deputy executive officer of the California Public Employees’ Retirement System, has been named president and chief executive officer of the California Association of Health Facilities in Sacramento. 

Kayla Gillan, the system’s general counsel, has been named vice president of Independent Fiduciary Services in Washington, D.C. 

James E. Burton, who has headed CalPERS for 7 1/2 years, said in May he plans to leave this fall. He said Wednesday he expects his replacement to be named within 60 days. 

The duties performed by Gomez and Gillan will be picked up by other managers, Burton said. 

Gomez ran the system’s day-to-day operations since 1996. He has spent 32 years in state service, including stints as director and chief deputy director of the Department of Corrections. 

Gillan has been with the system 16 years, and became general counsel in 1996. 

She led the legal team that prompted former Gov. Pete Wilson to turn over $2 billion to the system and establish the principle that CalPERS members have a vested right to a fiscally secure retirement system. She also led the CalPERS team in the Cedant lawsuit that brought the largest securities fraud class action recovery in history. 

CalPERS provides retirement and health benefits to more than 1.3 million state and local employees and their families. 


Senate committee defers vote on short-term PUC commissioner

Staff
Thursday July 11, 2002

SACRAMENTO — A Senate committee put off confirmation of the governor’s appointee to the Public Utilities Commission Wednesday because Michael Peevey’s term ends at the end of this year. 

Peevey, a former Edison International and Southern California Edison executive, was appointed in March to fill the position vacated by Richard Bilas, who had nine months left to serve. 

The state Senate has one year to confirm Gov. Gray Davis’ appointment, and since Peevey’s term runs out in December, Senate Leader John Burton said there was no need for a vote. He said he asked Peevey to testify in order to have his positions on energy issues on record in case he is reappointed to the commission for a full term. 

The Senate Rules Committee heard Wednesday from business groups that supported Peevey’s appointment and from consumer groups who said the former utility executive is too close to the industry the PUC oversees. 

Peevey said told the committee that he has had a “checkered” work history — from union official to utility president. 

“Some people accuse me of being too close to the utilities, some people accuse me of being too close to other groups,” he said. “I’m on the PUC to try and serve the public interest and I happen to agree that the first charge of the PUC is to serve ratepayers.” 

Peevey’s appointment was applauded by the California Manufacturers and Technology Association and the California Chamber of Commerce. 

But several consumer advocates said they were concerned that Peevey has conflicts of interest that could harm the state’s utility customers. 

Burton was most concerned with Peevey’s position on direct access — the ability of industrial and other large power users to sign up for electricity service from companies other than the utilities. The PUC halted direct access, but is allowing customers who signed up for the alternative service before Sept. 20, 2001, to complete their contracts. 

Those customers could face undetermined exit fees that would pay off some of the debt incurred by utilities who were under retail rate caps that were far less than the soaring wholesale prices last year. 

At Burton’s urging, Peevey said he would push to ensure that utility customers weren’t left paying the bills accrued on behalf of those direct access customers. 

Davis appointees hold four of the five commission seats, which could help Davis promote his energy policies as the state attempts to settle a $10 billion power-buying debt and resolve its flawed attempt at deregulating its electricity market. The remaining GOP-appointed commissioner is Henry Duque. 

Peevey has been chief executive of TruePricing Inc., a technology company focused on helping large companies and government institutions track their energy costs. From 1995 to 2000, he was president of NewEnergy Inc., the nation’s largest energy service provider. He led Edison between 1990 and 1993. 

A legal settlement negotiated in secret by the Davis administration last year helped Edison avoid bankruptcy by maintaining record high electric rate hikes for the next several years and forgoing shareholder dividends. Before the settlement, Davis spent months lobbying the Legislature to buy Edison’s transmission lines to help the utility stay financially stable. 

Peevey also advised Davis during the energy crisis last spring, working without pay to secure long-term energy contracts to stabilize California’s power supply. 

Peevey holds both bachelor’s and master’s degrees in economics from the University of California, Berkeley, and is married to Assemblywoman Carol Liu, D-La Canada Flintridge. 


Feds argue against law allowing slave labor lawsuits

By Chelsea J. Carter, The Associated Press
Thursday July 11, 2002

SANTA ANA — The U.S. government urged a California appeals court Wednesday to throw out slave labor lawsuits brought by World War II prisoners of war against Japanese companies, arguing a state law that allows such action is unconstitutional. 

The government argued the 1999 law allowing wartime forced-labor victims to seek redress against multinational firms that operate in the state interfered with the country’s foreign affairs powers. 

“This is a power California has assumed but is allocated to the federal government,” federal attorney Douglas Hallward-Driemeier told a three-judge panel, which was expected to issue a ruling sometime before November. 

But state Deputy Attorney General Angela Sierra argued the state law did not interfere with the country’s ability to make decisions about foreign affairs. 

She said the law only extended the statute of limitations for past crimes and had “nothing to do with the present Japanese government.” She said it created a forum for personal injury claims. 

“We believe California does have the constitutional authority to enact this statute,” Sierra said. 

At stake in the judges’ decision is the fate of lawsuits brought by former American soldiers who say they were forced to work for Japanese companies, including Mitsubishi Corp. and Mitsui & Co., in mines and factories without pay, adequate food or medical care. 

The U.S. departments of State and Justice have contended the lawsuits violated a 1951 peace treaty that expressly waived any rights to reparations from Japan. 

“There is no question about the extent of which they suffered. ... This case is not about the extent of sympathy or gratitude owed them,” Hallward-Driemeier said. ”...This case can be resolved by looking at the treaty and the treaty alone.” 

The former POWs, however, contend the treaty did not cover their slave labor, which allegedly occurred at the hands of Japanese companies. 

Although a federal judge dismissed similar lawsuits, a state court cleared the way for the POWs to sue. The government appealed the ruling. 

Attorney Ronald W. Kleinman, who represented the POWs, argued clauses in the treaty, which was signed by more than three dozen countries, allows for reparations to be paid. 

But Hallward-Driemeier told the judges that POWs were allowed to collect damages from a reparations fund established after the treaty was signed. 

Judge Kathleen E. O’Leary asked how prisoners of war were notified then of the possibility of collecting reparations. 

“They come home in 1946 and in 1951 they have right to the claims. ... Were they notified they had this right?” O’Leary said. 

Hallward-Driemeier said he was unaware of the efforts made by the government. 

Seven POWs watched the proceedings. Outside the courtroom, 87-year-old Carlos Montoya call the government’s argument “terrible,” saying he had never heard from anyone in the government or the military of receiving reparations from Japan after he returned. 

“We came back in 1945 and here it is 2002, and I’ve never heard that. Not once,” said Montoya, who was among those who survived fighting on Bataan and the notorious death march on the Philippine island. 

Montoya, of San Diego, said he was later sent to work in mines and factories. 

Joseph Della Malva, 84, of Seal Beach, was taken prisoner in May 1942 when soldiers on the island of Corregidor surrendered. 

“This really isn’t about money. It’s about holding them accountable,” he said. “We paid a penalty greater than anybody understands ... and then our own government tells us we don’t deserve that. Can you believe it?” 

Congressional support for the veterans has been strong. Currently, three bills — one House and two Senate bills — support the efforts of World War II POWs. 

Of the 36,000 American servicemen captured by Japan during the war, only about 5,300 are still living. 


Environmental group tests beauty products for chemicals

Colleen Valles, The Assocaited Press
Thursday July 11, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Chemicals that are feared to cause birth defects have been found in toiletry products ranging from hairspray to deodorant, the same substances that also have been discovered in high concentrations among women of childbearing age, an environmental group reports. 

The chemicals, called phthalates and pronounced THAH-lates, were found in 52 of the 72 products tested. Phthalates have been shown to cause birth defects in laboratory tests on animals — especially in males — although the effect on humans has not been determined. 

The report, released Wednesday by Washington and Oakland-based Environmental Working Group, shows that 70 percent of the products tested contain phthalates, but not all of them list the chemicals on the packaging. 

Jane Houlihan, vice president for research at the group, said the chemicals should be listed so cosmetics users can decide whether they want to avoid products with phthalates. 

“Almost across the board, phthalates did not appear on the label because there are so many loopholes in the labeling law,” she said. “Women are left in this bind — how do they choose products that are phthalate free?” 

The Cosmetic, Toiletry and Fragrance Association posted a statement on its Web site Wednesday defending the use of the chemicals. 

“The use of phthalates in cosmetics and personal care products is supported by an extensive body of scientific research and data that confirms safety,” the statement said. 

A study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in 2000 found that women of childbearing age absorbed more phthalates than other groups. The chemicals are excreted from the body within days. 

While nail polish has been targeted as the product most likely to explain the higher absorption of the chemical in young women, the substances are found in a number of other products, from plastic toys and food packaging to adhesives. 

The Food and Drug Administration requires that phthalates be listed on consumer products marked for retail sale.  

But individual ingredients in fragrances do not have to be identified. 

If the FDA determines that phthalates pose a health hazard, it can take steps to get the product removed or force a labeling change. 


Yosemite killer goes on trial; only issue is the death penalty

Staff
Thursday July 11, 2002

SAN JOSE — It was one of the most infamous crimes in California history: Three women disappeared while visiting Yosemite National Park and were savagely killed by the handyman at their motel. Caught months later after beheading a nature guide, Cary Stayner gave the FBI a detailed confession to all four murders. 

Three years later, Stayner, 40, is finally going on trial for killing the tourists, with opening statements expected Monday. 

Despite the notoriety, there is an anti-climactic aspect to Stayner’s trial. He already is serving life without parole in federal prison after pleading guilty to killing the park guide, Joie Armstrong. 

But state prosecutors want to execute him. 

Stayner, who once said he would prefer the death penalty to life in prison, has pleaded innocent by reason of insanity. Executing him will require slogging through a trial that is expected to last almost three months and cost taxpayers $3 million. Then there are the appeals. 

“You have to imagine there are better ways of spending the money, even though I support the death penalty,” said Ken Hawkins, the auditor for Mariposa County (population 16,000), where the killings occurred. 

The county, which has an annual budget of $31 million, has spent $940,000 on the case and expects to shell out at least $2 million more for the prosecution’s costs and Stayner’s defense. Most of the costs are being reimbursed by the state. 

“Even if you are successful in getting the death penalty, that’s still setting up 15 years of appeals,” Hawkins said. “If you’re just looking at dollars and cents, you think about what could be spent on children in schools, roads. You think about what you’re trading just to drive home a point that the guy should be executed.” 

Mariposa County District Attorney Christine Johnson did not return calls seeking comment. Prosecutors handling the case refused comment.


Group wants proof of public safety from lab

By Mike Dinoffria, Special to the Daily Planet
Wednesday July 10, 2002

Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory is moving radioactive
material from research site to landfill in Nevada
 

 

Officials from the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory and a Berkeley citizens group but heads Tuesday over the removal of an enormous, obsolete machine called the Bevatron.  

The particle accelerator that contains radioactive material is being removed from the laboratory in the Berkeley hills. 

The group, the Committee to Minimize Toxic Waste, is concerned that the lab is not doing enough to ensure that no health risk is involved with the moving of radioactive material.  

At a City Council meeting Tuesday, they came to support Councilmember Donna Springs’ calling for a temporary cessation of the project until an environmental impact report is done. 

The lab contends that the project meets state and federal environmental standards and can proceed without an impact report. 

"[We] comply with the laws," said Robin Wendt of the laboratory’s Environmental, Health and Safety Division.  

Representatives from Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory have said no health risks are associated with the shipments of metal and concrete – some of which is radioactive – beyond normal risks associated with moving traffic.  

"The level of radiation contained in the concrete and metal pieces will not rise to a level where the Department of Transportation is concerned," Wendt said.  

The Bevatron was first used in 1954. It was instrumental in many important discoveries in the field of particle physics, primarily the discovery of nuclear antimatter. The building that houses the Bevatron takes up 10 percent of the land area of the lab, and is larger than Zellerbach Hall on the UC Berkeley campus. In 1993 the Bevatron was decommissioned. Trucks started hauling away material this year. The process to transport all of the concrete and metal that once made up the machine will take roughly 10 years. 

The City Council is expected to continue discussions at its next meeting.


Start stopping hate crimes

Adam Sapp
Wednesday July 10, 2002

The problem with the Berkeley City Council's newest hate crime proposition (as reported in the Daily Planet) is that it only adds to the glut of laws that currently protect people from such crimes. Simply enforce the laws you have concerning breaking windows, destorying property and threatening others instead of trumpeting new plans that simply add paper to the current legal code and make politicians look good. If Berkeley law officials want to curb the violence, make an example out of some offenders and throw them in jail. Perhaps then people will realize this town is serious about stopping hate crimes. Instead it looks like Berkeley politicians are more interested in using this issue as an election soapbox rather than enforcing a real, worthwhile solution that already exists in the form of current law. Stop talking. Stop legislating. Start acting. 

 

Adam Sapp 

Danville, Ohio 

Formerly of Berkeley 

 

 


Aussie animal enthusiast a parody of himself

By Christy Lemire, The Associated Press
Wednesday July 10, 2002

‘The Crocodile Hunter: Collision Course’



 

You may be wondering, as I did: Does the world really need a feature-length movie about crocodile hunter Steve Irwin? Especially after three installments of Paul Hogan’s “Crocodile Dundee” series, each of which was lamer than the last? 

And the answer, surprisingly, is: yes. 

Because “The Crocodile Hunter: Collision Course” is the laugh-out-loud comedy of the summer — mainly when it doesn’t mean to be. 

The movie expands on Irwin’s TV series on cable’s Animal Planet, in which he wrestles crocs and other Australian creatures and explains their behavior in manic, animated detail. In between, he injects his message of wildlife conservation. 

Irwin is good-looking and likable, but it’s his broad Australian accent and infectious enthusiasm that make him so much fun to watch. His protracted soliloquies are often so over the top, he’s like a “Saturday Night Live” parody of himself. 

“What an honor to share territory — share space — with such a BEAU-tiful creature!” he exclaims after tangling with a deadly king brown snake — and every venomous snake is “BEAU-tiful!” 

His other favorite word is “Crikey!” which he shouts when he’s excited or in danger, and he uses it so many times, it could be a drinking game. This is a family movie, though, and kids will enjoy gross-out thrills from the many slithering and crawling creatures. 

Irwin’s American wife, Terri, gamely goes along for the ride, but she’s so calm by comparison, she’s practically comatose. With her lifeless, B-movie line delivery, she’s also the source of most of the unintentional laughs. 

Terri explains in a deadpan monotone that breeding season is “a real bummer” for the male bird-eating spider ... because the female eats him soon after they mate! 

“It seems pretty harsh,” Irwin adds, his eyes bulging, “but THIS is nature’s way.” 

But the downtimes are so flat, it makes me wonder whether director John Stainton and writer Holly Goldberg Sloan made them intentionally bad, just so we’d look forward to seeing Irwin again. 

The mind-boggling, paper-thin story line has something to do with the data recorder from a fallen satellite landing in Far North Queensland, where a 12-foot crocodile promptly chomps on it. The CIA sends undercover agents Wheeler (Lachy Hulme) and Archer (Kenneth Ransom), who’ve barely strayed from their desk jobs, to retrieve it. But cantankerous rancher Brozzie Drewett (Magda Szubanski, Mrs. Hoggett from the “Babe” movies) also is after the crocodile for nabbing her cattle, and has a shotgun constantly cradled in her arms to blast the creature. 

So Steve and Terri are sent to rescue the crocodile — one of the movie’s more thrilling segments — and place it in a safer environment. But the clueless G-men think Steve and Terri are after the data recorder, too, and suspect they’re spies. 

None of that really matters, though. 

“The Crocodile Hunter: Collision Course” is all about Irwin and his goofy shtick, and the filmmakers wisely devote most of the screen time to him.


Out & About Calendar

Staff
Wednesday July 10, 2002


Tuesday, July 9

 

Mother’s Morning Out 

10:30 a.m. to noon 

Upaya Center for Wellbeing 

478 Santa Clara Ave. 

Craniosacral Therapy for Infants and Children 

www.upayacenter.org 

Free 

 


Thursday, July 11

 

Great Sierra Backpacking  

Destinations 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo  

Karen Najarian of Sierra Wilderness Seminars presents slides from her more that 20 years exploring the Sierra Backcountry. 

For information: 527-4140 

Free 

 

What Do You Believe? Spiritual Lives of American Teenagers 

6:30 to 8:00 p.m. 

Ellen Driscoll Playhouse 

325 Highland Avenue, Piedmont  

Film presented by Piedmont diversity groups; discussion with filmmaker, Sarah Feinbloom.  

655-5552, or maudep@aol.com 

Free 

 


Friday, July 12

 

Celebration of Emma Goldman's Birthday  

8 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. 

Fellowship of Humanity Hall  

390 27th St  

An all-ages, alcohol-free party with live music, DJ, and dance lessons 

http://www.ebcaw.org  

$5 to $10 sliding scale  

 


Saturday, July 13

 

Peach / Stone Fruit Tasting 

Tasting & cooking demonstrations 

10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

Center Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way 

Free 

 

15th Anniversary Derby  

Street Farmers Market 

Live music and & stone-fruit and peach tasting 

Tasting & cooking demonstrations. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

Derby Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way  

Free 

Festival of New Versions  

of Classic Asian Games 

Noon to 5 p.m 

Dr. Comics and Mr. Games,  

4014 Piedmont Ave., Oakland  

Dr Comics and Mr Games Hosts Game a festival featuring two new versions of classic Asian board games 

601-7800 

 


Sunday, July 14

 

Hands-on Bicycle Repair  

11 a.m.to noon 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Learn from an REI bike technician basic bike repairs such as brake adjustments and fixing a flat. 

For information: 527-4140 

Free 

 

Family Health Day 

11 a.m. to 5 p.m. 

Fourth Street and University Avenue 

Explore health concerns in a family oriented environment 

Free 

 


Tuesday, July 16

 

Berkeley Camera  

Club Weekly Meeting 

7:30 p.m. 

Northbrae Community Church 

941 The Alameda 

Share slides, prints with other photographers 

525-3565 

Free 

Introduction to Accessible Software and Hardware  

10:30 a.m. to noon 

Berkeley Public Library Electronic Classroom, 2090 Kittredge Street 

RSVP to 981-6121. Alan Bern, Special Services Coordinator 

 


Wedneday, July 17

 

Doctors Without Borders 

Until July 18 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. 

UC Berkeley, Springer Gateway, West Entrance Crescent 

Interactive exhibit expalining medicines for people in developing countries; Film screenings 

www.doctorswithoutborders.org 

Free 

 



Thursday, July 18 

Mystique of the Widerness 

7 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Phil Arnot presents slides from over 50 years of exploring such places as Alaska, New Zealand, the Sierra and the Rockies. 

For information: 527-4140 

 

Introduction to Accessible  

Software and Hardware  

3 to 4:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Public Library Electronic Classroom, 2090 Kittredge Street 

RSVP to 981-6121. Alan Bern, Special Services Coordinator 

 


Saturday, July 20

 

Emergency Preparedness  

Classes in Berkeley 

Earthquake Retrofitting: Learn how to strengthen your wood frame home. 

10 a.m. to 5 p.m. 

812 Page St. 

981-5605 

Free 

 


Thursday, July 25

 

California Landscapes:  

A Geologist's Perspective 

7 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

John Karachewski presents an educational slideshw on such amazing places as the Sierra Nevada, Coast Ranges the Great Valley and Cascades 

For information: 527- 4140. 

Free 

 


Saturday, July 27

 

Test Ride Kestrel Bicycles 

11 a.m. to 1 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Preston Sandusky of Kestrel, a premier manufacturer of high-end, carbon-fiber road and mountain bikes, intrduces their latest design. 

For information: 527-4140 

Free 

 

"Neon: The Living Flame" 

7:00 p.m.  

Alameda Museum  

2324 Alameda Ave.  

The Alameda Museum presents Michael Crowe, author, and neon artist Karl Hauser 

lecture by Michael Crowe 

748-0796 or 841-8489.  

Members free, nonmembers $5  

 


Sunday, July 28

 

Hands-on Bicycle Repair  

11 a.m. to noon 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Learn from an REI bike techician basic repairs such as brake adjustments and fixing a flat. 

For information: 527-4140 

Free 

 


Wednesday, July 31

 

Mountain Adventure Seminars:  

Introduction to Rock Climbing 

7 to 9 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

An introduction to rockclimbing including knot tieing, belaying and movement. 

For information: (209) 753-6556 

$115 REI members; $125 non-members 

 


Moore’s hustle helps Barons escape with win

By Jared Green, Daily Planet Staff
Wednesday July 10, 2002

After seven innings of hard-fought baseball, a little hustle was the thing that made the difference for the Berkeley/Albany Barons. 

Jason Moore’s hard slide into second to break up a possible inning-ending double play allowed Chris Morocco to score the game-winning run in the bottom of the seventh inning against the San Leandro Braves, giving the Barons a 4-3 win in the opening game of the Babe Ruth District Tournament. 

The Barons loaded the bases on a leadoff infield single by Morocco and walks to Derek Yow and Moore. Up stepped Chase Moore, who hit a groundball to second base. But the relay throw from Braves shortstop Ray Stokes never even made it to first base as he was barrelled into by Jason Moore.  

Stokes and the Braves coaches protested that Moore’s slide was excessive, but the umpires quickly removed themselves from the field, cutting the argument short. 

“I just went straight at the bag, and he was right there,” Moore said. “I knew that since they were playing back I had to break it up. That was the game right there.” 

The Barons struggled against San Leandro starter Eric Willis, who blew the ball by several hitters and cruised through the first four innings. That was a big departure from the teams’ meeting on July 4, a 16-6 win for Berkeley/Albany. 

“They came in here with their best pitcher, a guy I haven’t seen before,” Barons manager Joe Pinguelo said. “He did a nice job, kept us down for most of the game.” 

Meanwhile, the Braves scratched out single runs in the third and fourth innings off of Barons starter James Assia. The righthander worked out of a jam in the fourth, as a Jason Moore error, a single and a walk loaded the bases. It looked as if Assia would escape unscathed when Stokes hit a line drive right at Tom Carman in leftfield, but Carman couldn’t handle it, allowing Tim Schultz to score from third. Assia retired the next two batters without further damage. 

The Barons finally turned on the offense in the fifth inning, scoring three runs, all with two outs. Five straight hits, including RBI doubles by Yow and Chase Moore, were enough to take a 3-2 lead. The lead could have been bigger, but Moore hesitated rounding third on Benny Goldenberg’s single and was gunned down at the plate despite a remarkably nimble attempted leap over the catcher. 

Pinguelo went to his bullpen with the lead, but Ricky Arias walked the first batter he faced, Josh Eisenhart, then wild-pitched him to second. San Leandro’s Steve Petros singled home the tying run two batters later, setting up the last-at-bat dramatics. 

The Barons now face Fremont, one of the two seeded teams, today at 5:30 p.m. Pinguelo thinks his team has the talent to win the district and head to the state tournament next week, noting that the Barons beat the defending state champions San Leandro Rangers earlier this summer. 

“I’m trying to figure out our lineup right now. We’ve got kids working, kids on vacation, kids who want to party,” he said. “If everyone shows up, I feel like we can win it all.”


Alta Bates nurses are ready for one-day strike

By David Scharfenberg, Daily Planet staff
Wednesday July 10, 2002

Nurses at four area hospitals, including Alta Bates Summit Medical Center in Berkeley and Oakland, are planning a one-day strike July 19 after contract negotiations hit a brick wall this weekend. 

Alta Bates spokesperson Jill Gruen said the hospital may have to reduce services on the day of the strike. 

“It’s a normal process, hospitals are used to it,” said Charles Idelson, spokesperson for the California Nurses Association, which represents the nurses. Picketers will be available to work if a medical emergency arises, he said. 

The Nurses Association is seeking wage increases, a better retirement package and improved nurse-to-patient ratios at all four hospitals.  

The union is negotiating separate contracts with each of the hospitals, all owned by Sutter Health. Alta Bates talks are set to resume today, with a federal mediator present. 

Union officials say that good wages and benefits are needed for Sutter Health to attract nurses while a nurse shortage is affecting the country. 

“There’s a turnstile at the front of these hospitals,” said Idelson. “Unless we can address the downward spiral, hospitals are going to turn into dangerous medical factories.” 

Gruen said Alta Bates, which has about 200 unfilled nursing positions, is taking the issue seriously. 

“This is the most generous wages and benefit offer in Alta Bates and Summit history,” she said. 

Alta Bates is offering a 16 percent pay raise over three years. The union is asking for a 27 percent hike. 

Connie Arburua, an Alta Bates nurse on the union’s negotiating team, said that the 27 percent figure is “above average,” but not high enough to retain nurses. 

“We’re interested in stopping the hemorrhaging at Alta Bates and Summit,” she said. “The nurses are leaving.”  

Arburua pointed to a recently-negotiated 26 percent increase over three years at the Sutter-owned Mills-Peninsula hospitals in Burlingame and San Mateo as a precedent. 

In the 26 percent figure the union includes a 7.5 percent raise retroactive at the beginning of the year. Gruen says the true number is 19 percent and the Alta Bates offer is comparable. 

Arburua said the retirement package offered by the hospital – which includes pension and health care provisions – may be acceptable if Alta Bates agrees to provide acceptable health benefits for early retirees. 

Currently, the hospital is offering early retirees a maximum of $12,000 to spend on health insurance until they reach 65, when Medicare kicks in. 

“That’s not going to pay for much,” she said. 

Gruen said the Alta Bates offer is generous, and akin to what the Nurses Association has accepted in negotiations elsewhere. 

In January, Gov. Gray Davis announced preliminary, statewide nurse-to-patient ratios and the figures are currently moving through the regulatory and public comment process. 

The union wants to include those preliminary ratios in the Alta Bates contract. The hospital wants to wait until the state-mandated ratios are approved and is offering to form a management-labor committee, in the meantime, to discuss the issue. 

Gruen pointed out that the Nurses Association accepted this arrangement in the recently-signed University of California nurse’s contract. But Idelson said the comparison is unfair since UC hospitals tend to have better nursing rations than Alta Bates.  

The other three hospitals scheduled to take part in the July 19 strike are Eden Medical Center in Castro Valley, Sutter Solano Medical Center in Vallejo and St. Luke’s Hospital in San Francisco.  


Its easy to know your trees

Charlie Smith
Wednesday July 10, 2002

To the Editor: 

Thanks for the fine article describing my concerns about dangerous trees. The writer was very diligent in contacting the other persons for a variety of comments. 

Jerry Koch, senior arborist for the city misrepresents my views when he says I want to tell Berkeley residents what kinds of trees they should plant, which I do not. 

What I have in mind is that the city should provide a description sheet of details about each specific tree for persons who are planning to plant a seedling. Citizens need to know the longterm details so they can make very reasoned decisions based on most of the facts. (Extreme height, shallow roots, shed badly, frequent limb drops, kill birds, highly flammable, etc. These problems all exist at Indian Rock Park.) 

Some forestry experts have pointed out that a high percentage of the trees on a city list published by Mr. Koch are exotic trees which are not suitable for Berkeley. I'll be glad to furnish the names of those experts if requested. Just because a state agency furnishes seedlings does not guarantee their suitability. 

The city of Albany has published a list that fulfills most of the descriptions of a few of their trees. 

The city of El Cerrito has a Tree Demonstration Project with trees alongside BART near the Del Norte Station. Trees there are supposedly suitable for parks, parking between sidewalks and curbs, and back yards. However, of those trees, three are obviously not suitable. They are a midwest Oak which needs summer rain; a Norwegian maple which has highly invasive surface roots which go out about thirty feet; and a Chinese tree which sheds badly and is dangerous at certain times of the year. 

The Berkeley City Parks Commission recently asked city staff to furnish them with monthly lists of limb drops and fallen trees.  

We all need this information. Following the 1967 city manager's request that all local reports be available in city libraries, any person who is interested should have ready access to the data needed without bothering city staff. 

Once the various lists are compiled, I am certain citizens will find them very helpful. Mr. John Wagers, author of tree articles for The Monclarion, suggests that the Grecian Laurel, Saratoga hybrid would be one of the excellent trees for this area. He has furnished me with a spec sheet on it which I will place in local libraries along with other data which I have assembled. 

 

Charlie Smith 

Berkeley


Michael Jackson says recording industry cheats minorities

By Verena Dobnik, The Associated Press
Wednesday July 10, 2002

Says black music artists  

are most often victims 

 

NEW YORK — Multiplatinum singer Michael Jackson, already feuding with his record company, charged Saturday that the recording industry was a racist conspiracy that turns profits at the expense of performers — particularly minority artists. 

“The recording companies really, really do conspire against the artists — they steal, they cheat, they do everything they can,” Jackson said in a rare public appearance. ”(Especially) against the black artists.” 

Jackson, 43, who began his recording career as a child, spoke at the Rev. Al Sharpton’s National Action Network in Harlem. Sharpton and attorney Johnnie Cochran Jr. recently formed a coalition to investigate whether artists are being financially exploited by record labels. 

He also singled out Sony Music chairman Tommy Mottola, saying he was “mean, he’s a racist, and he’s very, very, very devilish.” Jackson also accused Mottola of using “the n-word” when speaking about an unidentified black Sony artist. 

Sony Music issued a statement calling Jackson’s comments “ludicrous, spiteful and hurtful. It seems particularly bizarre that he has chosen to launch an unwarranted and ugly attack on an executive who has championed his career ... for many, many years.” 

Sony produced Jackson’s last album, “Invincible,” which has had disappointing sales despite an estimated $25 million in promotion. The singer’s fans say Sony didn’t do enough to launch the album. Others in the industry say sagging sales were indicative of Jackson’s declining appeal. 

Jackson mentioned several black artists as victims of the industry, including James Brown, Mariah Carey and Sammy Davis Jr. Jackson alleged that Davis died penniless, although Davis’ attorney said in 1990 that the “Rat Pack” member left an estate worth more than $6 million when he died. 

“If you fight for me, you’re fighting for all black people, dead and alive,” Jackson said, adding: “We have to put a stop to this incredible injustice.” 

Outside Sony’s Manhattan headquarters, about 150 fans gathered later Saturday, hoisting signs reading “Please Sony, stop killing the music,” “Terminate Tommy Mottola,” and “Invincible is Unbreakable.” 

Jackson arrived at the Midtown building on a double-decker city tour bus that twice circled the block. He stood in the open top deck and, raising his fists, joined the crowd in chanting “Down with Tommy Mottola!” 

Jackson held up a poster with three boxes marked “The Good, The Bad and The Ugly” — with an image of himself in the “The Good” box and Mottola’s face with devilish horns in “The Bad” box, while Mottola’s real image adorned “The Ugly” box. 


A’s Coliseum lease extended to 2007

The Associated Press
Wednesday July 10, 2002

OAKLAND – The Oakland Athletics extended their lease at the Coliseum through 2007 on Tuesday, securing the team’s short-term future and likely pushing it further down the list of candidates for contraction.  

Owner Steve Schott remains committed to building a baseball-only stadium in the East Bay for the A’s, but he reached another compromise in his team’s stormy relationship with its government landlords at the Coliseum, its home since 1968.  

“We’ve put the A’s in position to stay and play baseball at the Coliseum while we look at sites for a new stadium,” Schott said. “Now the real work begins.”  

With their relatively small fan base and outmoded stadium, the A’s were thought to be among the second tier of candidates for the contraction favored by baseball commissioner Bud Selig.  

But with a solid lease and a commitment to explore new stadium options, Schott said the A’s “are much more stable in major league baseball’s eyes.”  

The A’s will pay $500,000 annually in rent over the first three years of the agreement, with increases to $550,000 in 2006 and $600,000 in 2007.


At 91, oldest elected official in California tells how she made a difference in 1966

By Kurtis Alexander, Daily Planet Staff
Wednesday July 10, 2002

One late night on Virginia Street in 1966 may have been one of the most influential moments of Maudelle Shirek’s life. 

In a house full of young, nationally-minded activists debating how America could move out of a controversial war and away from 1950s social values, the fledgling politician convinced UC Berkeley graduate student Ron Dellums to run for U.S. Congress. 

Dellums proved successful in his congressional bid. After that, he spent 24 years in Washington, where he introduced a leftist agenda to the national legislature. He was a huge inspiration for black politicians, said Alameda County Supervisor Keith Carson. 

“Had it not been for Maudelle, we wouldn’t have had Dellums in Congress,” he said. 

Now 91, Shirek is in her fifth, four-year term as a Berkeley councilmember and is the oldest elected official in California. The granddaughter of an American slave, Shriek represents District 3, a working class district in south Berkeley, and is known as an advocate of the poor and the underrepresented. 

Having created a local legacy of her own, Shirek downplays her impact on state and federal politics. 

“Dellums says I convinced him to run for Congress, but I’m not so sure,” she said. “I do know he took the torch and ran with it.” 

Shirek is often referred to as the “mother of progressive politics” in the offices of Congresswoman Barbara Lee. 

Tuesday morning, friends and followers of Shirek gathered in Oakland to recognize the councilmember’s political career. Proclamations came from the County Board of Supervisors, Assemblywoman Dion Aaroner, Congresswoman Lee and President George Bush. 

“I’ll be anxious to see what Maudelle does with President Bush’s proclamation,” joked Berkeley Mayor Shirley Dean, referubg to Shirek’s well-known aversion to the Bush administration. 

Dean, herself representing a more moderate element of Berkeley, has encountered the fierce and sometimes fiery activism of her colleague. 

Shirek has put the welfare of organized labor, the homeless and AIDS’ victims at the forefront of her political agenda, sometimes isolating the issues of fellow councilmembers. 

With two years remaining in her council term, Shirek hasn’t thought much about re-election. 

“I don’t know how many more years I have. I could go at anytime,” she said. “I’m just continuing to work for the homeless and the hopeless.” 

Shirek spends much of her free time volunteering at local senior centers, having retired from a credit union where she had worked as a loan officer. Her husband was the late Brownlee Shirek, also a political activist. 

Longtime friends of the councilmember know Shirek not only as a progressive political figure, but as a friend and neighbor. 

“If you need something, you call Maudelle. That’s the way it is,” said Berkeley teacher Jesse W. Anthony, who has known Shirek for 34 years. “Whether it’s a place to stay or something to eat, she’ll help.”


I want an apology

Andy Katz
Wednesday July 10, 2002

To the Editor: 

I was dismayed by the conduct of an attorney claiming to represent Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory at the City Council meeting. I assume that personal attacks and name calling is not the official protocol for community relations at LBNL. I request an apology for those who were personally attacked at the meeting. I hope that the city, community and lab can settle issues of environmental responsibility at LBNL with reasonable discourse and not insults. 

 

Andy Katz 

Berkeley


Record company to put chunk of library online

Staff
Wednesday July 10, 2002

LOS ANGELES — Responding to the rampant spread of unauthorized music swapping on the Internet, Universal Music Group plans to put a large chunk of its vast music library online through a subscription service beginning Tuesday. 

UMG, the largest of the five major record companies, will make about 1,000 of its 11,000 albums available to subscribers who pay between $10 and $15 a month. 

Unlike most other initiatives announced during the last six months, UMG’s partnership with Emusic.com, a downloadable music subscription service, gives customers the same ownership rights as if they had bought the music on a CD. 

That means users will be able to store tracks and transfer them to CDs or portable players using the popular MP3 file format. 

But UMG is selecting the content it makes available selectively. Rather than offering the work of best-selling artists like Eminem and U2, UMG has chosen older, less popular content that doesn’t sell quickly in stores. 

UMG executives want to see if the music service can actually boost sales inside stores, or whether it ends up cannibalizing physical sales. 

“Our feeling is people signing up are not going to say, ’Boy, I don’t have to go out and buy the CD now,”’ said Larry Kenswil, president of Universal Music Group eLabs. “We’ll see what happens.”


Nipped by the Bud: Baseball’s All-Star game ends up in a tie

The Associated Press
Wednesday July 10, 2002

MILWAUKEE – In Bud’s backyard, even the All-Star Game ended with fans booing baseball.  

Despite Barry Bonds hitting a home run and Torii Hunter making a spectacular catch, the All-Star Game finished in a 7-7 tie after 11 innings Tuesday night when both teams ran out of pitchers.  

Commissioner Bud Selig, who lives in Milwaukee and formerly ran the Brewers, made the ultimate decision to call the game. It was the first tie in All-Star play since a game in 1961 was stopped by rain.  

“I want to take this opportunity to apologize to the fans,” Selig said. “Given the health of the players, I had no choice.  

“The decision was made because there were no players left, no pitchers left,” he said. ‘This is not the ending I had hoped for. I was in a no-win situation.”  

Amid worries about a players’ strike and steroids looming over the sport, baseball had hoped put the focus back on the field – at least for a day.  

No luck.  

“With everything going on in baseball, I’m sure the fans were very upset,” Hunter said.  

They sure were.  

There were loud chants of “Let them play!” and “Refund!” from the sellout crowd of 41,871 at Miller Park as Freddy Garcia struck out Benito Santiago with a runner on second base to end it.  

Once it finished, some fans in right field threw bottles.  

“They treated it like it was a meaningless game,” said David Cuscuna of Fort Lauderdale, Fla. “They’re telling the fans this game doesn’t matter. Not to mention the $175 face value for tickets. It sends a lot of bad messages.”  

An entertaining evening that began with Hank Aaron, Willie Mays and Cal Ripken taking part in festivities to honor the past wound up with fans even more angry and upset.  

“This is a very regrettable situation,” Selig said.  

There was no MVP picked. Bad timing, too, since the trophy was renamed this week to honor Ted Williams, the Hall of Famer who died Friday.  

It became apparent that a tie was possible after the top of the 11th when AL manager Joe Torre, NL manager Bob Brenly and umpire crew chief Gerry Davis went over to talk with Selig in the front row next to the first-base dugout.  

At one point during the five-minute discussion, Selig threw up his arms.  

After Luis Castillo flied out to start the bottom of the 11th, the stadium public-address announcer informed the crowd of the bad news, saying a tie would be declared if the NL didn’t score in the bottom half.  

Garcia and Vicente Padilla, who finished for the NL, each pitched two innings. All 60 players on the two rosters were used.  

The result left intact the AL’s five-game winning streak. The NL leads the overall series 40-31 – and now with two ties.  

“I feel bad for Bud,” Torre said. “Bob and I had talked. You can’t have it both ways. You can’t have all the people see all the players.”  

“If I was a fan, too, I would be disappointed,” said Arizona catcher Damian Miller, who doubled twice. “Obviously, you want to see someone win. You have to look out for the players and their health.”


Height initiative makes November ballot

By Kurtis Alexander, Daily Planet Staff
Wednesday July 10, 2002

Berkeley leaders appeared uncomfortable about a law that would impose strict height limits on apartment buildings, offices, and shopping centers within city limits. But at last night’s City Council meeting, state election rules outweighed city sentiments and forced councilmembers to approve a height limit ordinance for the November ballot. 

Proponents of the ordinance, hoping to keep buildings small and neighborhoods intact, had gathered 44 more than the 2,000 signatures required to take the proposal to voters this fall. 

Voter approval would mean a reduction in current height limits for new buildings by at least one story in most of the city and up to three stories in high-density residential neighborhoods and commercial strips. Current height limits vary drastically according to zoning districts. 

Shoring up nearly a month of study, city planners concluded that the ordinance goes against the grain of the city’s general plan and reduces incentive to create more open space, parking and housing in Berkeley. 

“It would reduce by 40 to 60 percent the zoning capacity for producing housing,” said senior planner Tim Stroshane. 

The height limits, instead of allowing developers to build up, would prompt developers to build out in order to attain building sizes that are financially viable, Stroshane explained. In such a process, opportunities for open space and parking would be lost, he said. 

But authors of the ordinance Howie Muir and Martha Nicoloff, and their more than 2,000 supporters, have embraced the argument that more building in Berkeley is simply unnecessary. 

The number of people living in Berkeley has dropped in the last 30 years and the population density is already greater than in many other cities, including Los Angeles, proponents say. 

The proponents’ written statement, in addition to citing problems associated with population growth, notes that taller buildings block sunlight, create wind tunnels and eliminate views of the hills. 

The desire to retain a neighborhood-feel in Berkeley has fallen in direct opposition to the demand for affordable housing. 

City planners said that if the ordinance is adopted, the city will have a difficult time meeting state quotas for affordable housing. Developers of affordable housing typically use upward development to make their project profitable, they said. 

“We are mandated to give some concessions. Height is the easiest concession to make,” said City Attorney Manuela Albuquerque. 

City planners concluded that if the initiative is passed, to meet state requirements, the city may be forced to make greater financial subsidies for affordable housing. 

 


How about this...

Gerta Farber
Wednesday July 10, 2002

To the Editor: 

May I suggest a Rational New Pledge: 

I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America, and to the republic for which it stands, one nation, indivisible, with liberty and justice for Americans of all colors, creeds and cultures. 

 

Gerta Farber 

Berkeley


News of the Weird

Staff
Wednesday July 10, 2002

Annoying parrot on the loose 

 

TACOMA, Wash. — Gail and Bill Brooks hope whoever stole their parrot is annoyed enough with his noise to be having second thoughts. 

The owners of the Pet Pavilion have collected nearly $3,000 to offer as a reward for the return of Bonzo, a 10-year-old African gray parrot they raised from birth and brought with them when they moved from Florida. 

Bonzo, less than a foot tall and worth about $2,000, vanished from the Brooks’ emergency animal care and boarding operation June 23 while they were on vacation in Hawaii. 

African grays are not rare and have a typical lifespan of 50 years in captivity and 75 years in the wild. Bonzo is uncommonly noisy, Gail Brooks said. 

“Whoever stole him is probably getting tired of him asking, ‘Where’s Bill?”’ she said. “It really is like having a child in the house when he’s here.” 

Bonzo readily sings a version of the song “Bingo” using his own name and squawks “Bonzo pretty, Bonzo smart” and “Night, night” at bedtime. 

Other routines include “I’ll get you, my pretty, and your little dog, too” from the “Wizard of Oz” and “A parrot’s life for me” from the Pirates of the Caribbean ride at Disneyland. 

 

No fans allowed at this game  

 

CHARLESTON, S.C. — The starting pitcher said it felt like playing in a cemetery. It was so quiet he could hear the beer and peanut vendors in the stands. 

The Charleston Riverdogs lost 4-2 to the Columbus RedStixx on Monday night as the Class A Tampa Bay Devil Rays affiliate padlocked the gates and kept hundreds of fans outside Joe Riley Stadium. 

This was “Nobody Night” — a promotion designed to set the record for professional baseball’s lowest attendance. 

“I understood what was going on, but you know, a couple of guys said, ’We’re professional athletes, it kind of stinks not to have fans there the whole time cheering you on,”’ Riverdogs pitcher John Vigue said. 

Only reporters, scouts and employees were allowed into the game. Fans were turned away and sent just outside the ballpark to a party where discounted food and beer were offered. 

Hundreds gathered outside the main gate, waiting to come in once the game was declared official after the fifth inning and the attendance was recorded as zero. 

 

Dogs, lamps not
the same as kids
 

 

HARRISBURG, Pa. — No matter how much some people treat their pets like children, the law doesn’t allow a divorced couple to have joint custody of a dog, a state appeals court ruled. 

Anthony DeSanctis worked out an agreement with Lynda Hurley Pritchard when they divorced in 2000 that dealt mostly with the future of Barney, a dog Pritchard had gotten from an animal shelter two months before the couple separated in 1996. 

The agreement said the dog was Pritchard’s, but set up an arrangement that allowed DeSanctis to visit him, according to court records. 

In March of 2000, however, Pritchard moved from Chester County to Bucks County and no longer made Barney available for DeSanctis to visit. 

In a decision released Friday, the Pennsylvania Superior Court agreed with the Chester County Court of Common Pleas that the law cannot treat the dog like a child. 

“Despite the status owners bestow on their pets, Pennsylvania law considers dogs to be personal property,” Justice Frank J. Montemuro wrote. 

He said he agreed with the trial courts that DeSanctis was seeking a court order that is “analogous, in law, to a visitation schedule for a table or a lamp.” 

The court noted that DeSanctis still had a legal recourse: He could sue for breach of contract, but all he could get would be the dog’s monetary value. 


Boosters provide summer fun, life lessons for area children

By Chris Nichols Daily Planet Staff By Chris Nichols, Daily Planet Staff
Wednesday July 10, 2002

For Shawne Jones, growing up in Berkeley wasn't always easy. The 19-year-old says she certainly could have chosen the wrong path in life.  

However, 10 summers with the Berkeley Boosters Association’s summer activity programs had a positive impact on her, and may have kept her out of trouble, Jones said. 

As a kayak instructor for the booster's summer program and a former camper, Jones is hoping to provide other kids with the same opportunities.  

“I could have gone down another road but I'm still here because I want to be able to give back to the kids and to be a positive role model,” she said. 

In its third year, the kayaking program is one example of the many activities the boosters organize to help low-income, at-risk kids in the area.  

The association models itself on the Outward Bound philosophy, using outdoor education as a tool to teach life skills, said David Manson, executive director of the Berkeley Boosters Association.  

“We provide so many activities that, due to financial or cultural reasons, a lot of these kids would not have access to,” Manson said, naming rock climbing, camping, windsurfing, kayaking. “They're just things they wouldn't otherwise have the chance to appreciate.” 

Part of the boosters’ mission is to provide low-cost activities. 

The two-week kayaking program costs $85 for members and $110 for non-members. Eighty percent of the kayaking class participants were given scholarships, another means of making the program accessible to children. 

Once the kids are in the programs, the outdoor settings provide new challenges. Participants develop new skills and grow as individuals through these challenges, Manson said.  

“Enjoying and appreciating the outdoors is one thing, but the behavior change is so much quicker because the kids have to respond differently than they normally would,” he said. “They can't use the same attitudes they do on the street. Outdoors, if you want to survive, you have to take a different approach.” 

On her second day kayaking at the Berkeley Marina, eighth- grader Canon Jones and his cousin, Julian Johnson, had high hopes to improve both their balance and speed in the water.  

“I want to improve my racing and be able to go faster in the water without tipping over,” Johnson said. 

For Gesita Melkamu, a fifth-grader at Washington Elementary School, the boosters’ summer camp has already provided the chance to tackle a number of new activities. In the past few weeks, Melkamu has done everything from camping to kayaking to white water rafting, all for the first time. Enjoying the surroundings is a big part of the thrill says Melkamu. 

“My favorite part is getting out in the middle of the water and looking at the view. I love the noise of the water,” Melkamu says. 

Esteban Yanez, a kayaking instructor who has been with the boosters for almost 10 years, said the outdoor programs are positive alternatives to other activities. “It gives them a place to go besides watching TV,” Yanez said. “It gives them outdoor fun.” 

A participant in the bike riding and backpacking programs, eighth-grader Gerald Archos says the Boosters program has mad a difference. “If I wasn't here I'd have nothing to do over the summer. I'd probably be outside in the streets doing something I shouldn't be doing,” Archos said. 

Though the Boosters do not currently have a strong teen oriented program, Manson says that he hopes many of the younger campers will return as counselors-in-training and as instructors. Older campers are often given leadership roles and by the age of 15 are considered for employment opportunities. 


When the heat goes up turn down the power

By Mike Dinoffria, Special to the Daily Planet
Wednesday July 10, 2002

Utility supply, air quality are at risk 

 

High temperatures are driving people to crank up air conditioners, collectively tapping deep into the state’s power supply. 

Officials are asking the public to curtail electricity consumption because California power companies are in danger of having to buy energy from out of state. People should limit use of air conditioners and appliances – anything electrical other than lights and computers. This warning is effective until Thursday, when temperatures are expected to drop in Berkeley from the low 90s to the mid 80s, Pacific Gas and Electric spokesman Jason Alderman said. 

“Continued conservation is the key to success,” Alderman said. “Make sure the thermostat is set to 78 degrees or higher. And we are asking [energy consumers] to hold off on using appliances until after 7 p.m.”  

In addition to conserving energy, residents can help with air quality. The Bay Area Air Quality Management District warned of high levels of smog Tuesday and today.  

Although coastal winds helped keep air quality good in Berkeley this week, the surrounding areas were not as lucky. 

The air quality management district is asking residents to protect themselves on days like today, when readings of ground level ozone, or smog, are high. It can be harmful to people who inhale it. 

“Ozone is hard on the elderly, young people who exercise and asthmatics are very susceptible (to it),” said Will Taylor, public information officer for Bay Area Air.  

Smog levels were particularly high in Santa Clara County and the city of Livermore on Tuesday.  

Alderman said that now is a good time for people to participate in PG&E’s 20/20 rebate program. Users who reduced their usage by 20 percent compared to a year ago will get 20 percent off their current monthly bill. The program began July 1 and runs until the end of October.  

A high-pressure system covering the Western United States is responsible for the heat that has energy and air officials sweating. In Livermore, the thermometer touched 107.  

 

 

 


Man given two years in federal prison for claiming to be son of LA Lakers owner

The Associated Press
Wednesday July 10, 2002

LOS ANGELES — A man who attempted to cash a $161,000 tax refund check payable to Los Angeles Lakers owner Jerry Buss was sentenced to two years in federal prison. 

On Monday, U.S. District Judge Christina Snyder ordered Kenneth Reeves, 42, who is free on $25,000 bond, to surrender July 29. His co-defendant, Dwayne Kellum, 38, is scheduled to be sentenced Aug. 12. 

Authorities are still trying to determine who stole the state-tax refund check.  

Kellum claimed to be “Jerry Buss Jr.” when he tried to open an account at Morgan Stanley Dean Witter. Reeves opened another account with the brokerage firm and tried to convince employees the refund check was being used to invest in a purported energy company, prosecutors said. 

Employees at the brokerage firm alerted the FBI after determining that Buss did not have a son named Jerry. 

Kellum was convicted in February in another case involving the cashing of stolen checks, including some belonging to a trust set up by the late “My Three Sons” star Fred MacMurray and his wife, actress June Haver MacMurray.


Officials mop up brush fire that torched one home

Staff
Wednesday July 10, 2002

SANTA CLARITA — Firefighters patrolled for hot spots Tuesday after a wildfire burned 250 acres of brush, burned down one home, damaged two and blistered others before firefighters contained it. 

About 155 firefighters tightened firelines and extinguished spot fires in a blaze that had raged in temperatures approaching 100 degrees and 20 mph winds Monday, Los Angeles County Fire Inspector Roland Sprewell said. 

Embers from the fire torched one fire, blistered the siding on other homes and torched brittle dry shrubs in yards of homes throughout the neighborhood. 

“It just so happened that one of the embers flew over the front of the fire and just happened to land on the one roof that happened to have a wood shake roof,” said Inspector Edward Osorio. 

About 200 residents were evacuated.


NAACP opposes initiative to bar racial classifying

By Deborah Kong, The Associated Press
Wednesday July 10, 2002

HOUSTON — The nation’s oldest black civil rights organization voted Tuesday to oppose a ballot initiative that would bar the state of California from classifying residents by race. 

The resolution to oppose University of California regent Ward Connerly’s “Racial Privacy Initiative” and similar ballot measures was approved by delegates at the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People’s annual convention. 

“We intend to stop it before it spreads across the country to other states,” said Alice Huffman, president of the NAACP’s California state conference, which oversees local branches. 

The initiative failed to qualify for this November’s ballot but could go to voters in spring 2004. State officials will know by week’s end whether Connerly’s American Civil Rights Coalition collected the necessary 671,000 signatures to qualify for 2004. 

The initiative would bar state and local governments from recording race in everything from educational achievement to whether a city’s police force is as diverse as its population. 

The NAACP resolution denounced Connerly’s proposal as “bad public policy for California and a bad precedent for the nation,” and it opposed the initiative and all similar acts. 

A lack of racial data would make it impossible for many agencies and the public “to understand the positive or negative impacts of their policies or programs on ethnic communities including in the area of education, delivery of public services and public assistance,” the resolution said. 

Connerly champions the initiative as the next step toward a “colorblind society.” 

He has said that gathering race data does not help people, and certainly cannot prove discrimination. 

Connerly was not available for comment Tuesday, but a spokesman downplayed the vote. 

“The NAACP needs to re-examine its position back in the mid-20th century when it was against racial classifications and officially sanctioned racial distinctions,” said Kevin Nguyen, executive director of Connerly’s Sacramento-based coalition. “For them to reverse course 50 years later betrays their current goal of pure political power accumulation instead of freeing people from these restrictive and arbitrary boxes.” 

At a keynote speech at the NAACP convention Sunday, board chairman Julian Bond had harsh words for Connerly. 

“Ward Connerly, affirmative action’s poster child, is at it again,” Bond said. “You remember he was the fraud behind California’s anti-affirmative action initiative, Proposition 209,” Bond said. 

“Now con-man Connerly is behind the deceptively titled ’racial privacy initiative’,” which would “eviscerate civil rights enforcement. 

“As long as race counts, we have to count race,” Bond said. “What Ward Connerly will do — unless the voters of California stop him — is to institute the denial of different outcomes dictated by race. We have to work to defeat this dangerous initiative.” 

If ratified by the NAACP’s national board of directors in October, the vote will become the association’s official policy. 

Connerly’s efforts also came under fire Tuesday in California, where he was accused of breaking state law by not disclosing donors who contributed $1,570,400 to the initiative through his coalition.


Health care group hires Hollywood agent to repair tarnished image

By Gary Gentile, The Associated Press
Wednesday July 10, 2002

LOS ANGELES — The health care industry, tired of playing the bad guy in movies such as “John Q” and television shows, has hired an agent to help get better roles. 

The American Association of Health Plans, which represents more than 1,000 health maintenance organizations, has hired the William Morris Agency to help “build bridges” with writers, producers and directors and to offer technical advice for shows. 

“A huge segment of America is impacted by drama, which you could also call ’soft news,”’ Mark Merritt, senior vice president of the AAHP, said Tuesday. “What we’re trying to do is get a level playing field. We’re not saying it’s verboten to attack some part of the health care system. We’re saying there is another side to what we do.” 

Films and TV programs have often portrayed dedicated doctors fighting heartless hospital administrators or insurance companies. In recent years, that theme seems to have escalated with movies such as “As Good as it Gets” and television shows such as “ER” and “Chicago Hope.” 

Two hospital shows set for ABC and CBS this fall feature doctors providing care for patients in defiance of HMOs. 

The AAHC said it is hoping to have some influence on plot lines and scripts, but is not expecting to have veto power over stories. 

“We’re not here as censors,” Johnny Levin, senior vice president of William Morris Consulting, said. “No one wins by telling people what to write, what to produce and what to direct.” 

Earlier this year, “John Q,” starring Denzel Washington, told the story of father who can’t afford a heart transplant for his son and holds a hospital’s emergency room hostage. 

Instead of attacking the film, the AAHC bought ads deflecting the focus of anger from insurance plans to “a runaway litigation system and expensive government regulations.” 

Financial terms of the AAHC’s hiring of the agency were not disclosed. 


Crooked executives must do hard time, convict says

By Simon Avery, The Associated Press
Wednesday July 10, 2002

President has called for
longer prison terms for
executives guilty of fraud 

 

LOS ANGELES — More than seven years behind bars with murderers, rapists and other violent criminals taught Barry Minkow a few things about the failures of corporate America. 

The former entrepreneur and executive insists political and regulatory efforts under way to rein in business corruption won’t have any meaningful effect unless wrongdoers face tough prison sentences. 

“The criminal justice system isn’t sending a message to white collar criminals. It never has — with the exception of my case,” said Minkow, who was 22 when he received a 25-year sentence in 1989 for defrauding investors in his ZZZZ Best carpet cleaning company. 

He started the company as a teenager in the garage of his family’s San Fernando Valley home. 

A judge convicted Minkow of 57 counts of securities, credit card and mail fraud after prosecutors said his schemes cost victims more than $100 million. Others involved in the scandal received shorter sentences. 

His sentence remains one of the stiffest ever given a white collar criminal. Although he served only 7 1/2 years, he spent most of that time in maximum and medium security prisons, at one time sharing a cell with a convicted murder. 

Two of the most notorious white collar convictions of recent years involved bond trader Michael Milken and financier Ivan Boesky in the late 1980s. Milken served nearly two years after pleading guilty to six felony security violations. Boesky also served nearly two years after pleading guilty to one criminal count involving insider trading. 

On Tuesday, after a wave of scandals that has cost investors in Enron, Global Crossing, WorldCom and other companies billions of dollars, President Bush called for longer prison terms for corporate executives guilty of fraud. He also announced a new task force for the pursuit and prosecution of corporate criminals. 

Minkow, 36, remains on probation and likely will spend the rest of his life paying back $26 million in court-ordered restitution. Now a fraud-detection consultant in San Diego, he criticized the light punishment given to other corporate wrongdoers. 

Senior executives today have too much to gain and not enough to lose by misleading or even lying to investors and regulators, Minkow said. 

In most fraud cases, executives succumb to the temptation of reporting fictitious financial data or hiding information because they think the act is just a temporary plan while they improve their operations. They don’t think they are committing fraud and they don’t think they will get caught, Minkow said. 

At ZZZZ Best, which grew into a ponzi scheme, Minkow said his plan was to survive long enough to publicly trade his stake in the company to repay investors. 

ZZZZ Best claimed to be making a fortune restoring water and fire-damaged buildings. Investors were given badges and hard hats and taken on tours of alleged restoration projects in abandoned buildings with which ZZZZ Best had no connection. 

The temptation to break the rules won’t disappear unless punishment is severe, Minkow said. Executives who break the rules should be “hammered” and get a minimum seven years of hard time, he said. 

Minkow said he spent 11 months in solitary confinement at Terminal Island Federal Prison in Los Angeles, locked in a cell 23 hours a day for most of his first year behind bars. 

“They thought I was an escape risk,” said Minkow, now a pastor at Community Bible Church in San Diego. 

Young, athletic and pumped up on steroids when he was sentenced, Minkow said he was bench-pressing 380 pounds in the prison gym. 

“Not a lot of people were picking on me,” he said. 

But the situation would be very different for any of the senior executives in the middle of high-profile corporate scandals today. 

“They’d be preyed upon,” Minkow said. “They’d be paying for protection.” 

It’s a severe scenario, but essential if the new audit and corporate governance rules authorities and lawmakers are considering are to have any teeth, he said. 

“Right now, there’s no perception of prosecution,” he said. 

Minkow’s sentence remains an anomaly, in part because he drew a particularly tough judge, said David Nesbitt, an FBI agent at the time of Minkow’s conviction and now a director of forensic accounting in Los Angeles with the consulting firm KPMG. 

“We almost fell over when they pronounced his sentence,” Nesbitt said. 

As much as law enforcement applauded Minkow’s sentence at the time, Nesbitt said it probably has had no effect on other scandals in corporate America. 

In addition to wanting the courts to start setting new examples, Minkow said companies and investors need to become more vigilant about fraud. 

“The average consumer does more due diligence in the grocery store, differentiating between good bananas and bad bananas, than they do putting their life savings into an investment,” he said. 


Briefs

Staff
Wednesday July 10, 2002

Mattel wins licensing rights to Batman 

 

LOS ANGELES — Warner Bros. has awarded Mattel Inc. the right to produce toys and games based on its Batman, Superman and Looney Tunes characters, including Bugs Bunny, for the next five years. 

The deal gives Mattel the right to produce plush dolls, vehicles, games, action figures and other toys for upcoming movies and television shows featuring the Warner Bros. characters. 

The deal is estimated to be worth between $200 million and $500 million over the life of the agreement according to people familiar with the matter. Mattel, based in El Segundo, Calif., will have worldwide rights, except in Asia. 

The agreement gives Mattel the lucrative Batman rights now held by rival Hasbro Inc. Those rights will go to Mattel when Warner’s current deal with Hasbro runs out at the end of this year. 

 

eBay buying online payment provider PayPal 

 

SAN JOSE — Online auction giant eBay Inc. hopes to get even bigger by attracting more users through buying Internet payment provider PayPal Inc. in a $1.3 billion stock deal. 

EBay executives said Monday they hope acquiring PayPal would make the trading site faster, easier and safer and give eBay a significant chunk of e-commerce action it is missing out on. 

“It brings together two companies in a way that will benefit our users,” eBay’s chief executive, Meg Whitman, told financial analysts in a conference call before the stock market opened Monday. 

EBay shares then fell $4.31, or 7.1 percent, to close at $56.24 on the Nasdaq Stock Market. PayPal stock jumped $1.61, or more than 8 percent, to $21.61. 

Mountain View-based PayPal lets buyers and sellers exchange money via e-mail. Buyers make payments online through credit cards and bank accounts, and PayPal relays the funds to sellers’ accounts. Basic usage is free, but sellers who use added features must pay fees based on the amount transferred.


Agriculture programs face cuts due to budget crisis

By Kim Baca, The Associated Press
Wednesday July 10, 2002

FRESNO — Two of the state agriculture department’s most heralded programs stand to lose the most in cuts aimed at reducing the state’s $23.6 billion deficit. 

The California Department of Food and Agriculture plans to cut $3 million from Gov. Gray Davis’s highly touted program to promote the state’s farm products and $1.57 million from a program to eradicate the glassy-winged sharpshooter. 

Though lawmakers continue to haggle over the $99 billion state budget, agriculture officials are bracing for $7 million in cuts. 

The proposed cuts are only 2.5 percent of the agriculture department’s $280 million budget, but officials say they will make a dent in some programs. 

“It will have an impact; there is no question about that,” department spokesman Steve Lyle said. “On the other hand, we don’t think any of our core programs will suffer serious damage.” 

Other department cuts include: 

n $983,000, wildlife trapping program. 

n $800,000, public affairs. 

n $580,000, plant pest diagnostic lab. 

n $180,000, weights and measurements program. 

The sharpshooter eradication program has been a major focus of the department. The pest threatens the $2.7 billion grape industry by injecting an incurable bacterial disease that kills grape vines. 

Lyle said the department expects federal funding to restore cuts to the program, which has made gains against the pest. Northern California has very few infestations, according to a statewide survey. Discovered in Southern California in 1989, the disease has spread as far as Kern County. 

“We’ll tighten the belt a little, but we still have a very healthy, very viable program,” Lyle said. 

But a San Joaquin Valley legislator said any cuts are too many for the state’s $27 billion agriculture industry. 

Assemblyman Mike Briggs of Clovis is one of a handful of Republicans being courted to help pass the budget. The spending plan fell five votes short of passage in the Assembly the day before the new fiscal year began July 1. But Briggs said he refuses to accept a budget that increases taxes and may affect the agriculture industry. 

He’s also disappointed with cuts aimed at the sharpshooter and Buy California programs. 

“We could save a little bit of money in the short run, but in the long run, the cost to the ag economy could end up being billions of dollars in exchange for those cuts,” he said. 

Lyle said for most programs, such as the plant pest diagnostic lab and weights and measurements, other funding can be found from federal grants. Some divisions, such as the wildlife trapping program that captures animals on farms, may be eliminated. Lyle said he hopes counties can pick up the slack. 

The Buy California program will fare well because of $64 million in federal grants, Lyle said. The department will kick off the program later this summer. 

But George Gomes, who manages the California Farm Bureau’s government affairs division, said the agriculture department will have to be creative in managing with less. 

“If you have a reduction in dollars, you will have a reduction in personnel,” he said. “We’ve just got to make sure we don’t go backward.” 

Some related agriculture programs were spared the ax after public outcry. Last month, a budget committee recommended restoring $39 million to a program designed to preserve farmland. The Williamson Act gives farmers tax breaks if they promise to farm their land at least 10 years. 

Growers also were worried about $3.4 million in cuts to a San Joaquin Valley program designed to reduce cattle rustling, tractor thefts and other agriculture crime. Created in 1997, the Rural Crime Program began in Tulare County and spread to seven other counties. 

About $1.7 million has been restored to the program, said Assemblywoman Barbara Matthews, D-Tracy. 


Skateboarder dies while being towed by car

The Associated Press
Wednesday July 10, 2002

Driver charged with vehicular manslaughter while intoxicated 

 

POINT ARENA — A skateboarder was killed while being towed by a vehicle on the road, police said. 

Robert Powers, 20, of Monte Rio was found lying on the road unconscious suffering from head injuries. He died after being air lifted to Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital about 2:15 a.m. Sunday, police said. 

James Crowl, 22, of Monte Rio, was allegedly driving the car that was pulling Powers. Crowl was found at a nearby location after authorities arrived. He was arrested on suspicion of gross vehicular manslaughter while intoxicated and driving while intoxicated and causing injury, according to a police statement. 

Crowl was being held Monday at the Mendocino County Jail, police said. 


Riverside/San Bernardino immigrants want voting rights

The Associated Press
Wednesday July 10, 2002

RIVERSIDE — Mexican immigrants in Riverside and San Bernardino counties are working to get voting rights in their homeland. 

Mexico President Vicente Fox promised during his 2000 election campaign that millions of Mexicans living abroad would be allowed to vote by absentee ballot. But the proposal, backed by many immigrants and Hispanic activists in the United States, remains mired in debate here and Mexico. 

It is undecided who would be allowed to vote absentee or whether first-generation Americans who have never lived in Mexico should be able to vote. 

The process may require Mexican nationals living in the United States, along with their adult children born here, to claim Mexican nationality. It was not immediately determined what tax and military service consequences are involved in dual citizenship. 

“We need (political) representation over there and here,” said Riverside resident Roberto Tijerina, 36, a U.S.-born son of Coachella Valley migrant farmworkers. “It re-establishes our connection to Mexico. It re-establishes that umbilical cord.” 

Tijerina joined other members of the National Alliance for Human Rights in establishing his Mexican nationality. 

Alliance leader Armando Navarro, professor and chair of Ethnic Studies at University of California, Riverside, said the group is urging other first-generation Mexicans to apply. 

Mexican government officials estimate that 5 million to 10 million Mexican adults live abroad, making up 14 percent of the voting bloc. Nearly all of those who may be eligible to vote absentee live in the United States. 

In Riverside and San Bernardino counties, nearly 1 million of the counties’ residents claimed Mexican ancestry on the 2000 census, but it is not known how many are first-generation Americans. 

Until 1998, the Mexican government required emigrants to give up Mexican citizenship if they became U.S. citizens. Immigrants who became U.S. citizens before 1998 can now apply to the Mexican government to regain their Mexican nationality. The deadline is March 2003. 

Mexico’s president, during a visit to Tijuana in June, said it was unlikely an absentee voting system could be in place for the 2003 Mexican congressional elections, but he hoped a system would be in place by 2006. 

Mexico’s Congress is still debating the issue. 


Bill Simon criticizes Gov. Davis’ support of National Guard

By Louise Chu, The Associated Press
Wednesday July 10, 2002

SACRAMENTO — Opening another front against Gov. Gray Davis, Republican candidate for governor Bill Simon said Monday the California National Guard’s readiness to respond to a major terrorist attack has deteriorated under the Davis administration. 

Simon focused on the findings of a February report by the Joint Legislative Audit Committee that found a number of inoperable helicopters in the guard’s air fleet and an internal review that found that six out of 52 soldiers guarding Bay Area bridges flunked basic weapons tests. Simon also pointed to a 2000 Pentagon survey that ranked the California National Guard 52nd out of 54 programs in recruitment and retention. 

“The sad state that these stories communicate should not be altogether surprising, given the leadership — or the lack thereof — that Gray Davis has provided our soldiers,” Simon said. 

Simon proposed a plan that would create an integrated emergency response plan in coordination with the Air and Army National Guard, allow fee waivers for soldiers at state colleges and universities, and offer “Freedom Pay” so soldiers called to active duty do not suffer financially. 

Gen. Paul Monroe, the guard’s commanding officer, said Simon could send the wrong message to terrorists that California has weak spots. 

“It is not appropriate,” Monroe said. “That puts people at risk. We are ready.” 

But Monroe acknowledged the audit showed the need for improvements. 

“As we get more intelligence on the threat we’re facing, we have to change our procedure. We’re always looking for ways to improve our operations,” Monroe said. 

While Simon criticized Davis, the Democratic governor’s campaign responded with a new campaign advertisement that compared Davis’ military and public service record to Simon’s. 

Titled “Bronze,” the commercial points out that Davis was awarded a Bronze Star for his service during the Vietnam War, while noting Simon’s failure to vote regularly, his refusal to release personal income tax returns and his lawsuit to recover his losses when the federal government took over the Simon family owned Western Federal Savings and Loan. 

The spot will air along with other Davis ads, which began airing in June. 

State election records show Simon failed to vote in 13 out of 20 elections since moving to California in 1992. 


SF Chronicle reporter accused of sexual, physical abuse of teen-aged neighbor

The Associated Press
Wednesday July 10, 2002

Teen-ager now at a
drug rehab center 

 

SAN FRANCISCO — Police arrested a San Francisco Chronicle reporter on suspicion of sexual and physical abuse of a minor. 

Police arrested Craig Marine on Monday. According to information given to the sexual assault and child abuse team, the victim, now 18, was Marine’s neighbor. 

Authorities said Tuesday the teen-ager’s family sent her to a drug rehabilitation center in Utah. Authorities said she told people at that facility that Marine gave her cocaine and that they had consensual as well as forced sex involving a knife. 

Authorities also said the teen-ager, now at a drug rehab center in Oregon, had cigarette burns and scars consistent with the abuse she reported. But authorities also said the teen-ager has a history of self mutilation. 

Mark MacNamara, a spokesman for the San Francisco District Attorney’s office, said Marine admitted to some of the abuse and to taking nude pictures of the teen-ager in a phone call with the teen-ager that police helped set up. 

Marine is a general assignment reporter for the Chronicle Magazine, which appears on Sundays. He has worked for the Chronicle and, before that, the San Francisco Examiner, for 20 years. 

“It’s a police matter so the newspaper as a company doesn’t have any comment on it,” said Chronicle spokesman Joe Brown.


INS clerks admit scheme to sell work permits

Staff
Wednesday July 10, 2002

SAN DIEGO — Two clerks at a busy immigration office have admitted to issuing bogus work permits to at least 100 illegal immigrants. 

Ruben Marquez, a clerk with the Immigration and Naturalization Service, pleaded guilty Monday to issuing the work authorization cards to immigrants who paid between $3,000 and $4,000 each. 

The cards normally cost $100. 

Marquez, who began working for the INS last year, operated the machine that produced the cards but did not have authorization to decide who received them. 

Roberto Barajas, another INS clerk, admitted to using his badge to wave the illegal immigrants through security at the downtown federal building. 

Federal authorities arrested the men after Marquez issued a fraudulent card to an undercover agent. 

A third man, Jeovanny Pascano, also pleaded guilty in the case and admitted that he escorted illegal immigrants to the federal building. 

The three face up to five years in prison when they are sentenced Sept. 30. 


David Letterman: Too comfy at CBS to go to ABC

By David Bauder, The Associated Press
Wednesday July 10, 2002

NEW YORK — After weighing an offer to jump to ABC, David Letterman said he ultimately felt his comfort with working at CBS was more important than the challenge of someplace new. 

But the talk show host admitted ABC’s overture was tempting. 

“It’s like dating,” he said. “You show up at the prom with a girl and look across the floor and think, ‘Maybe I’ll have more fun with that girl over there.’ It’s human nature.” 

Letterman, who rarely gives interviews, talked to ABC’s Ted Koppel, whose “Nightline” would have been displaced if the comedian accepted ABC’s offer. It was broadcast early Tuesday on the premiere of “Up Close,” an interview program being aired after “Nightline” until a new entertainment show starring Jimmy Kimmel begins next winter. 

Koppel, who has missed few opportunities to tweak ABC’s parent Walt Disney Co. since it nearly supplanted his show, did it again by booking Letterman. 

“Since we always like to make our friends at Disney happy,” Koppel said, “we considered who to invite for our first guest. That’s when it struck us, the irony. They wanted Letterman, so here he is.” 

Although they talked about what Koppel called the “recent unpleasantness,” the newsman never asked why Letterman seriously considered an offer that would have cost Koppel “Nightline.” 

Letterman, 55, said he was quite comfortable at CBS. 

“It would have been an enormous challenge to go anywhere, not just ABC,” he said. “I think at a certain point in a person’s career ... the comfort and ease and the comfort of surroundings and environment are far more important than undertaking a new challenge.” 

His quintuple bypass surgery two years ago gave Letterman a new outlook on life, and he told viewers not to be afraid about getting themselves checked out.


Obituary

Staff
Wednesday July 10, 2002

Jan Marinissen, an active resident of Berkeley since 1962, died of natural causes Thursday. He was 74. 

As a longtime member of the American Friends Service Committee and chair of the Berkeley Mental Health Commission, Marinissen was an advocate for prison reform and mental health both in Berkeley as well as on the state level.  

Marinissen, a native of Holland, grew up during the Nazi occupation. He was active in the resistance. 

“It was a powerful influence on his life’s work,” said Naneen Karaker, a Berkeley resident who met Marinissen at UC Berkeley. “It gave him a strong sense of what can happen when power gets out of hand.”  

Karaker thought of Marinissen as a mentor as did many other students during the 1970s, both at UC Berkeley and the Pacific School of Religion, where Marinissen earned his bachelors degree of divinity in 1959 and taught a class titled “Ministry of the Marginalized.” 

“He was a person called to a genuine ministry in a difficult industry,” said Bill Trampleasure, a former American Friends Services Committee member. “It connected him with a lot of people - homeless people. He did a lot of good.” 

Marinissen’s daughter, Judith, recalls her father’s custom of talking with people at a Berkeley coffee shop, offering advice to those with a mentally ill family member.  

In the 1970s, Marinissen authored a book titled “The Struggle For Justice.” The book was known to help shape state and national prison reform policy.  

Along with a “wonderful sense of humor, he had a profound sense of truth and of justice,” Karaker said. 

Marinissen is survived by his sister, Janna, and his son, Jonathan, both of Berkeley. He is also remembered by his daughter Judith Fairchild with her husband Tom Fairchild and their one-year-old son Joshua, also Berkeley residents. 

A service will be held 2 p.m. Saturday in D’Autrement Hall at the Pacific School of Religion. 

- by Ethan Bliss


Calling on 537 breastfeeders

By David Scharfenberg, Daily Planet staff
Tuesday July 09, 2002

Bay Area mothers want to break  

a world record, generate awareness 

 

Got milk? 

There will be plenty of it flowing at the Berkeley High School Community Theater Aug. 3, when Bay Area mothers attempt to break a record for most women simultaneously breastfeeding in one location. 

“Here in the United States, not enough emphasis is being placed on breastfeeding,” said Ellen Sirbu, Berkeley’s health nutrition program coordinator, who is spearheading the effort. “In order to do something educational, we had to have an event like this.” 

The current record, set in Tuggerah, Australia, last year, is 536. Sirbu said organizers, who also include health officials from the surrounding counties, hope to draw more than 1,000 participants to Berkeley. Two hundred women have already signed up, including one from as far away as San Diego. 

The breastfeeding will begin at 1:30 p.m. in the auditorium.  

Volunteers from the Bay Area Lactation Association will do the counting and, in accordance with Guinness Book of World Record rules, two independent observers will be on hand to verify the record. One of the observers will be Mayor Shirley Dean. 

Organizers will host a fair, with booths, a band and T-shirts for preregistered moms, from noon to 4 p.m. in Civic Center Park, next to the theater on Martin Luther King Jr. Way. 

Sirbu said she hopes the event, which will take place during World Breastfeeding Month, will bring attention to the benefits of breastfeeding. 

“We know that breastfeeding is the best way to feed the baby,” Sirbu said. 

According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, breastfeeding can reduce the risk of infectious and noninfectious diseases for infants and may reduce the risk for obesity and diabetes. Breastfeeding also reduces the risk of premenopausal breast cancer and ovarian cancer for women. 

Sirbu said there are also intangible benefits. 

“It fosters bonding with the mom and baby,” she said. 

Still, in 1998, only 29 percent of U.S. mothers breastfed six months after giving birth, according to a federal statistic. 

“It all comes down to changing people’s attitudes on breastfeeding,” Sirbu said. 

Those attitudes may be difficult to change. One mother at Sirbu’s office, Richmond resident Irene Guzman, said she would have to consult with her husband before deciding whether to participate in the Aug. 3 event. Her husband, she said, does not like the idea of Guzman breastfeeding in public. 

Sirbu said she hopes the event raises awareness and contributes to concrete change. In a visit to Australia, where she heard about the existing world record, Sirbu saw decals in the windows of many businesses informing customers that breastfeeding mothers and their babies are welcome. She is hoping to get similar decals in place throughout Berkeley. 

For more information call Ellen Sirbu at 981-5131.


Read the studies

Elmer R. Grossman
Tuesday July 09, 2002

Perspective 

 

To the Editor: 

It has taken over a century for our university to develop into one of the greatest centers of learning and research in the world, and a significant part of that achievement is the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. At that extraordinary institution, scientists have discovered new chemical elements, found new subatomic particles, helped explain the basis of photosynthesis, invented better lamps and energy-efficient windows, and discovered a genetic cause of heart disease, to name a few of their accomplishments. 

For the past eight years a little cabal of fear-mongering extremists has worked full time to destroy the Berkeley Lab. Unhappily, they managed to enlist the city council in their campaign which led last year to the closing of the world-renowned tritium labeling facility. Now, they are continuing to search for other aspects of the lab to assault. As usual, they invent non-existent threats to our health and safety and impugn the honesty and competence of the scientists who work at the lab. And, as usual, they come time after time to the city council to demand that the city fund their depredations. In the last few years they have talked the council into paying for two studies of lab safety. The studies, which were done by scientists chosen by this little group, failed to support their contention that the lab was a hazard to our health. This was also the finding in 5 studies by other scientific groups including the National Institutes of Health, the California State Department of Health, the United States Public Heath Service and an independent risk analysis organization. 

At the June 25th council meeting a spokesperson for the anti-lab group made a personal attack on the honesty of a lab representative. This was quite in keeping with the traditional behavior of these people, insulting and demeaning everyone who disagrees with them. They call their opponents fascists, baby-killers, liars, snake-oil salesmen, and shills. Finally, the lab people who spoke next at the meeting responded with appropriate vigor, pointing out the nonsense, distortions and untruths with which the so-called CMTW and their allies have bombarded our community.  

The response from Councilmember Worthington was astounding. He angrily berated the lab representatives for pointing out the dishonesty of their attackers, and he complained that he did not have enough facts to judge the problem! For years he has heard the anti-lab group fulminate and slander without offering a single comment on their behavior. He has heard and seen the lab’s June report to the council and he must have read the seven health studies which demonstrated that the tritium lab has never been a risk to any of us. And he says he needs more information!  

The anti-lab cabal and their friends on the council have abused the democratic process, wasted our time and our tax dollars, destroyed a small but valuable research lab, and subjected us to poisonous paranoia for too long. They have made our city council meetings into an ordeal and a laughing stock. It is high time that Berkeleyans who respect the scientific process speak up to defend the Berkeley Lab and oppose the degradation of rational public discourse in our city. 

 

Elmer R. Grossman 

Berkeley 


Falling bricks reveal secret: 124-year-old billboard promoting “Buffalo Bill” Cody

The Associated Press
Tuesday July 09, 2002

Ad is among earliest  

graphic representations of the Wild West legend 

 

JAMESTOWN, N.Y. — The crumbling brick facade of a downtown building revealed a long-forgotten secret: a 124-year-old billboard promoting a dramatic appearance by “Buffalo Bill” Cody. 

Experts say the 26-by-10-foot billboard, uncovered when workers began removing the wall last month to prevent its collapse, is among the earliest graphic representation of the Wild West legend. 

Pasted to wood sheathing behind the bricks was the paper poster of Cody waving his hat to a crowd, announcing “Buffalo Bill in his new theatrical drama ... May Cody” on March 14, 1878. 

“We knew we had to act quickly,” said Keith Schmitt, acting director of the Chautauqua County Arts Council, which quickly began preservation work on the fragile paper. “Some of the pieces were already coming away from the wall and blowing away.” 

Schmitt and volunteers photographed the pieces and collected those that were removable as historians began researching the performance at the Allen Opera House in this city 60 miles south of Buffalo. 

Historian Karen Livsey found that the show was part of a sixth-anniversary tour of “The Buffalo Bill Combination,” an early theater troupe organized by and starring Cody. “May Cody” depicted the Mormons’ early settlement in Utah. 

Experts believe the wall was built over the poster the year of the performance, hiding it ever since. 

William F. Cody, who died in 1917, was a prospector-turned-Pony Express rider and Civil War veteran who later hunted buffalo to feed railroad construction crews. Legend has it he earned the name “Buffalo Bill” in a daylong shooting match with a hunter named William Comstock, presumably to determine who deserved the title. 

Cody became a national folk hero in the pages of the “Buffalo Bill” dime novels of Ned Buntline, who in 1872 persuaded Cody to take to the stage to tell stories of the Wild West. The Buffalo Bill Combination toured the country for 10 years until 1883, when Cody began the Wild West Show. 


Out & About Calendar

Staff
Tuesday July 09, 2002


Tuesday, July 9

 

Mother’s Morning Out 

10:30 a.m. to noon 

Upaya Center for Wellbeing 

478 Santa Clara Ave. 

Craniosacral Therapy for Infants and Children 

www.upayacenter.org 

Free 

 


Thursday, July 11

 

Great Sierra Backpacking  

Destinations 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo  

Karen Najarian of Sierra Wilderness Seminars presents slides from her more that 20 years exploring the Sierra Backcountry. 

For information: 527-4140 

Free 

 

What Do You Believe? Spiritual Lives of American Teenagers 

6:30 to 8:00 p.m. 

Ellen Driscoll Playhouse 

325 Highland Avenue, Piedmont  

Film presented by Piedmont diversity groups; discussion with filmmaker, Sarah Feinbloom.  

655-5552, or maudep@aol.com 

Free 

 

 


Friday, July 12

 

Celebration of Emma Goldman's Birthday  

8 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. 

Fellowship of Humanity Hall  

390 27th St  

An all-ages, alcohol-free party with live music, DJ, and dance lessons 

http://www.ebcaw.org  

$5 to $10 sliding scale  

 


Saturday, July 13

 

Peach / Stone Fruit Tasting 

Tasting & cooking demonstrations 

10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

Center Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way 

Free 

 

15th Anniversary Derby  

Street Farmers Market 

Live music and & stone-fruit and peach tasting 

Tasting & cooking demonstrations. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

Derby Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way  

Free 

 

Festival of New Versions  

of Classic Asian Games 

Noon to 5 p.m 

Dr. Comics and Mr. Games,  

4014 Piedmont Ave., Oakland  

Dr Comics and Mr Games Hosts Game a festival featuring two new versions of classic Asian board games 

601-7800 

 


Sunday, July 14

 

Hands-on Bicycle Repair  

11 a.m.to noon 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Learn from an REI bike technician basic bike repairs such as brake adjustments and fixing a flat. 

For information: 527-4140 

Free 

 

Family Health Day 

11 a.m. to 5 p.m. 

Fourth Street and University Avenue 

Explore health concerns in a family oriented environment 

Free 

 


Tuesday, July 16

 

Berkeley Camera  

Club Weekly Meeting 

7:30 p.m. 

Northbrae Community Church 

941 The Alameda 

Share slides, prints with other photographers 

525-3565 

Free 

 

Introduction to Accessible Software and Hardware  

10:30 a.m. to noon 

Berkeley Public Library Electronic Classroom, 2090 Kittredge Street 

RSVP to 981-6121. Alan Bern, Special Services Coordinator 

 


Wedneday, July 17

 

Doctors Without Borders 

Until July 18 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. 

UC Berkeley, Springer Gateway, West Entrance Crescent 

Interactive exhibit expalining medicines for people in developing countries; Film screenings 

www.doctorswithoutborders.org 

Free 

 


Thursday, July 18

 

Mystique of the Widerness 

7 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Phil Arnot presents slides from over 50 years of exploring such places as Alaska, New Zealand, the Sierra and the Rockies. 

For information: 527-4140 

 

Introduction to Accessible  

Software and Hardware  

3 to 4:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Public Library Electronic Classroom, 2090 Kittredge Street 

RSVP to 981-6121. Alan Bern, Special Services Coordinator 

 


Saturday, July 20

 

Emergency Preparedness  

Classes in Berkeley 

Earthquake Retrofitting: Learn how to strengthen your wood frame home. 

10 a.m. to 5 p.m. 

812 Page St. 

981-5605 

Free 

 


Thursday, July 25

 

California Landscapes:  

A Geologist's Perspective 

7 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

John Karachewski presents an educational slideshw on such amazing places as the Sierra Nevada, Coast Ranges the Great Valley and Cascades 

For information: 527- 4140. 

Free 

 


Saturday, July 27

 

Test Ride Kestrel Bicycles 

11 a.m. to 1 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Preston Sandusky of Kestrel, a premier manufacturer of high-end, carbon-fiber road and mountain bikes, intrduces their latest design. 

For information: 527-4140 

Free 

 

"Neon: The Living Flame" 

7:00 p.m.  

Alameda Museum  

2324 Alameda Ave.  

The Alameda Museum presents Michael Crowe, author, and neon artist Karl Hauser 

lecture by Michael Crowe 

748-0796 or 841-8489.  

Members free, nonmembers $5  

 


Sunday, July 28

 

Hands-on Bicycle Repair  

11 a.m. to noon 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Learn from an REI bike techician basic repairs such as brake adjustments and fixing a flat. 

For information: 527-4140 

Free 

 


Wednesday, July 31

 

Mountain Adventure Seminars:  

Introduction to Rock Climbing 

7 to 9 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

An introduction to rockclimbing including knot tieing, belaying and movement. 

For information: (209) 753-6556 

$115 REI members; $125 non-members 

 


Saturday, August 3

 

Mountain Adventure Seminars:  

Introduction to Rock Climbing 

8 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

An introduction to rockclimbing including knot tieing, belaying and movement. 

For more information: (209) 753-6556 

$115 REI members; $125 non-members 

 


Saturday, August 10

 

Tomato Tastings 

10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

Center Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way 

Tastings and cooking demonstrations  

Free 

 


Sunday, August 11

 

Hands-on Bicycle Repair 

11 a.m. to noon 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Learn from an REI bike technician basic repairs such as brake adjustments and fixing a flat. 

For information: 527-4140 

Free 

 

 

West Berkeley Arts Festival 

11 a.m. to 5 p.m. 

Fourth Street and University Avenue 

Explore the many resident artists located in Berkeley 

Free. 

 


Tuesday, August 13

 

Tomato Tasting 

Tasting & cooking demonstrations 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

Derby Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way  

Free 

 

Berkeley Camera Club  

Weekly Meeting 

7:30 p.m. 

Northbrae Community Church  

941 The Alameda 

Share slides, prints with other photographers 

525-3565 

Free 


Can A’s give encore to second-half of 2001?

By Greg Beacham, The Associated Press
Tuesday July 09, 2002

OAKLAND — After closing the first half of the regular season with seven straight one-run games, the Oakland Athletics could use a few days off before they attempt to duplicate their second-half heroics of last season. 

“It’s been a tough week, but it’s been a tough season,” All-Star left-hander Barry Zito said. “It’s a good time for everybody to get some time off.” 

After a three-day break to relax and recharge while Zito and shortstop Miguel Tejada go to Milwaukee for the All-Star Game, the A’s seem destined for another exciting playoff chase. They got in shape for it last week by playing a series of games that went down to the last at-bat, capped by a 3-2 victory over Kansas City on Sunday. 

Despite their difficult final week, the A’s got back in the thick of the postseason race with a 30-12 record leading up to the break. Oakland is 50-38 overall, trailing first-place Seattle by five games and second-place Anaheim by two in the AL West. 

The A’s have their best record at the All-Star break since 1992. Last season, they were just 44-43 at the break, but they streaked to a second straight playoff berth in the second half with some of the best baseball in franchise history. 

Once again, the A’s are chasing the mighty Mariners in the division race; this season, however, it’s much more of a contest than in 2001, when Seattle streaked to the majors’ best record and won the division with 116 victories despite the A’s phenomenal second half. 

At 102-60, Oakland earned the majors’ second-best record in 2001 by going 58-17 after the break. The A’s had the majors’ best record in the months of July, August, September and October, posting the second-best winning percentage after the break in major league history. 

Nobody expects Oakland to repeat those numbers again — not with Jason Giambi and Johnny Damon playing in the AL East, and not with the A’s lineup struggling for consistent production. Only Tejada and Eric Chavez have stayed injury free and produced in the manner expected of them this season. 

“We’ve had some struggles to score runs, but we had some of the same problems last year in the early going,” said Chavez, who has 58 RBIs and a team-high 20 homers. “We’re not getting as many big homers as we did with Jason in the lineup, but we’re still winning and getting the job done.” 

Once again, the A’s are winning with dominant starting pitching. Each member of Oakland’s Big Three has returned to top form, though Tim Hudson and Mark Mulder both pitched through struggles. 

Hudson, who appeared to be laboring under heightened expectations in the season’s first weeks, has found his groove again and improved to 6-7 with a 3.44 ERA. Mulder, whose forearm injury still won’t allow him to throw at full strength, was spectacular in June, earning AL Pitcher of the Month honors while padding his 9-5 record in just 14 starts this season. 

Zito has been outstanding from the start, improving to 11-3 by beating Kansas City on Sunday. He may not pitch in Tuesday’s All-Star game, but there’s no doubt he belongs on the AL roster in Milwaukee. 

Manager Art Howe will soon decide the odd man out of the rotation among rookie Aaron Harang, inconsistent right-hander Cory Lidle and left-hander Ted Lilly, who was acquired from the Yankees last week. 

“It’s a good decision to have,” Howe said. “Whatever we do, we’ll need good pitching from all three of those guys this season.” 

Oakland gets back to the business of chasing Seattle on Thursday with a series in Baltimore. The A’s return home on July 17 for five division games against Anaheim and Texas. 

The A’s have won just five of 13 games over the Mariners this season. The teams will meet just six more times this season, with two three-game series in September — just about the time this division race seems likely to be at its hottest. 

“It’s a marathon, not a sprint,” Howe said. “If we keep improving, we’ll be right where we want to be.” 


Promoter blamed for party gone bad

By Kurtis Alexander, Daily Planet Staff
Tuesday July 09, 2002

Arts center says organizer broke contract 

 

Employees at south Berkeley’s Crucible arts center said the gunfire that injured two people during a weekend hip hop show happened when an overcrowded party got out of control. 

The shootings, some employees said, were fueled by fraud and misrepresentation by event organizer Eugene Cockerman. But police have not yet determined a motive. 

According to employees, Cockerman told them he was a member of nonprofit fraternity Kappa Alpha Psi when he asked the Crucible to host a “small” community dance at which 1,500 people showed up - five times the number that was agreed upon.  

Two people were injured by what police described as “random” bullet fire. San Francisco resident Duwane Fields, 23, was taken to Alameda County Hospital. The second victim, a juvenile whose name was not released, refused medical treatment. The victims’ conditions were not know Monday. 

Marketing director Kate Rutter said the Crucible routinely rents space to community groups. As is standard, the Saturday group hired security people while Crucible had staff on hand to monitor the event. 

The arts center staff said that by 10 p.m., an hour after the party started, people at the party were obviously violating several rules in the contract. Alcohol was illegally served. Minors were present. Many more than the limit of 300 people were there, and more were pouring in.  

“The organizers refused to comply and became physically threatening to Crucible staff,” Rutter said in a written statement. 

At about 10:30 p.m., police arrived to help shut down the event. When they heard gunfire, teams of officers swept through the crowds in pursuit of the shooters. 

Crucible staff said the victims were shot two blocks from the building. But police did not confirm that, and said details are still being investigated. 

The shots drew more than 100 police officers from eight law enforcement agencies who shut down several blocks along Ashby Avenue and the nearby Interstate 80 entrance. No one has been arrested. 

Crucible directors feel betrayed. 

“It’s tragic that anyone would hijack a community organization and hold an event for personal profit at the expense of a respected artist community,” Crucible Executive Director Michael Sturtz said in a written statement. 

Police have no suspects and are unaware of any motive, Lt. Cynthia Harris said. 

Event organizer Cockerman could not be reached for comment. But according to police, the local promoter has planned hip hop shows in other cities at which similar contract violations happened. 

To book Saturday’s show, Cockerman had provided proof of insurance and a security deposit, and had signed a contract binding him to the center’s regulations, Crucible staff said.


Consider this...

Wayne Huber
Tuesday July 09, 2002

To the Editor: 

Is there a fellow named Steve Geller out there who thinks local environmentalists are hysterical regarding tritium ? Well good for him.. 

The Michael Bauce response to Geller blaming tritium and X-rays for the continuing “rise of cancer “is statistically unsound.  

Yes certainly the amount of cancer deaths in the US has risen but so has the overall population. It is also true that the rate of cancer is higher on a per capita basis but this is primarily due to the increased lifespan in the US. Thanks to water treatment, sewage tretment ,antibiotics and the availability of good food the average lifespan in the US is the highest in history. So it is obvious that that rate of cancer would increase since many people who today get cancer would have long since died of infectious disease in the old days. 

Age adjusted figures put out by the American Cancer Society indicate that the rate of cancer has remained approximately constant since 1930 with the exception of lung cancer attributed to a large increase in the rate of smoking. Therefore tritium, x-rays, cell phones, TV's, electric lines are out as causes of cancer and, if fact, I believe the work of the Lab is part of the fight against cancer. 

 

Wayne Huber 

Berkeley 


Friendship from teen years to adulthood believable

By Christy Lemire, The Associated Press
Tuesday July 09, 2002

‘Me Without You’ 

Movie review 

 

The first half of “Me Without You” is so compelling, that it’s a real disappointment when the second half collapses. 

The movie stars Michelle Williams of “Dawson’s Creek” and Anna Friel as Holly and Marina, best friends who grew up next door to each other in suburban London in the 1970s and ’80s, and form a suffocating, co-dependent relationship. 

Writer-director Sandra Goldbacher follows them from girlhood through their teenage years, college and their early 20s, with a 2001 coda that wraps everything up too easily and feels tacked-on. 

The first part of the movie is evocative of the time — with its big hair and poofy skirts and songs from The Clash and Depeche Mode — without going over the top for laughs, like Adam Sandler’s “The Wedding Singer.” 

Early on, Williams and Friel are completely believable in their best-friends-for-life fervor — an aspect of the movie that may appeal more to women than men. When you’re 15, an all-encompassing female bond can seem crucial, impenetrable. Goldbacher, who based the story on a childhood friendship of her own, clearly understands that. 

She also accurately depicts the need for teenage girls to belong. Holly and Marina try too hard to look cool when they show up at a punk party wearing torn fishnets and dresses fashioned from black garbage bags, and they have no qualms about doing drugs and engaging in casual sex if it means they’ll be accepted. The scene works because it’s played matter-of-factly, and not for shock value; this is what teenagers do. 

But the movie’s second section is less vivid, and Goldbacher makes it hard to believe that Marina and Holly’s friendship could withstand such bitterness and jealousy as the young women become adults. 

Marina seems to have it all — she’s beautiful, stylish and vivacious. Her mother (Trudie Styler) chain smokes, drinks and pops pills, which gives her a glamorous edge in Holly’s eyes; her father, an airline pilot, is never there. 

Holly is the more serious one — she’s studious, introspective and conservative. Her parents are stable but overprotective. She believes she’s a good girl and dreams of becoming a writer, but her mother repeatedly puts her down. 

Each girl has insecurities, though, and each wants to live the other’s life. 

They make a pact as young girls to stay friends forever, which becomes increasingly difficult as they mature. Holly has a crush on college lecturer Daniel (a sleazy, duplicitous Kyle MacLachlan), which prompts Marina to go after him, too. Holly’s always carried a torch for Marina’s cute, romantic older brother, Nat (Oliver Milburn), which Marina repeatedly tries to snuff out. 

Friel, whose previous films include Barry Levinson’s “An Everlasting Piece” is impossible to stop watching.  

Williams — doing a flawless British accent — shows far more depth then her “Dawson’s Creek” role ever allowed her to display.  

Even when the script weakens toward the end, Friel and Williams work beautifully together, and their on-screen chemistry seems effortless. 


Goalie loses part of finger in San Diego soccer melee

Staff
Tuesday July 09, 2002

SAN DIEGO — A soccer goalie had a piece of his finger bitten off when a brawl erupted during a recreational match between two adult teams, police said. 

The dispute started when a referee whistled a foul in the penalty box toward the end of a closely contested tie game between the Jaliscos and the Haciendas on Sunday, said Sgt. Tracy Dishno. 

The foul could have produced a decisive penalty kick but the ensuing benches-clearing brawl ended the game. About 20-30 people started fighting on the field, Dishno said. 

The mother of one of the two players involved in the foul ran onto the field and was struck by a player on the opposing team, Dishno said. 

Goalie Alejandro Garcia Lara, 28, came to her aid. He grabbed the head of her attacker, who, in turn, bit off the tip of his pinkie, Dishno said. 

Police located the tip of Lara’s finger and brought it to a nearby hospital, but doctors were unable to reattach it. Doctors bandaged his wound and released him. 

No arrests have been made. Police are trying to narrow down the list of players to determine who bit the finger. 


Darling florist to fight for right to raze his store

By Jamie Casini, Special To The Daily Planet
Tuesday July 09, 2002

When Vic Touriel’s father bought the Darling Flower Shop 65 years ago, neither son nor father had an inkling the property would one day be deemed a historic landmark. Thirty four years ago Touriel took over the downtown business when his father retired. Today, he wants to sell the shop because its time for him to retire.  

But he has a problem.  

After receiving several offers for the property, Touriel decided to sell it to developer Patrick Kennedy.  

Marketing director Kate Rutter said the Crucible routinely rents space to community groups. As is standard, the Saturday group hired security people while Crucible had staff on hand to monitor the event. 

The arts center staff said that by 10 p.m., an hour after the party started, people at the party were obviously violating several rules in the contract. Alcohol was illegally served. Minors were present. Many more than the limit of 300 people were there, and more were pouring in.  

“The organizers refused to comply and became physically threatening to Crucible staff,” Rutter said in a written statement. 

At about 10:30 p.m., police arrived to help shut down the event. When they heard gunfire, teams of officers swept through the crowds in pursuit of the shooters. 

Crucible staff said the victims were shot two blocks from the building. But police did not confirm that, and said details are still being investigated. 

The shots drew more than 100 police officers from eight law enforcement agencies who shut down several blocks along Ashby Avenue and the nearby Interstate 80 entrance. No one has been arrested. 

Crucible directors feel betrayed. 

“It’s tragic that anyone would hijack a community organization and hold an event for personal profit at the expense of a respected artist community,” Crucible Executive Director Michael Sturtz said in a written statement. 

Police have no suspects and are unaware of any motive, Lt. Cynthia Harris said. 

Event organizer Cockerman could not be reached for comment. But according to police, the local promoter has planned hip hop shows in other cities at which similar contract violations happened. 

To book Saturday’s show, Cockerman had provided proof of insurance and a security deposit, and had signed a contract binding him to the center’s regulations, Crucible staff said.


Don’t forget about Berkeley’s pride

Kevin Strother
Tuesday July 09, 2002

To the Editor: 

Congratulations to the Daily Planet for a story on the gay parade. As one of the many people who go over from Berkeley every year it felt good to see a story.  

But why was there no mention of the Berkeley contingents? UC Berkeley students had a beautiful banner, as well as beautiful bodies. Kriss Worthington won an award for "absolutely fabulous individual contingent." The colorful artwork of the signs on his convertible was quintessentially Berkeley.  

The Unitarian Church of Berkeley, and the First Baptist Church of Berkeley also had contingents. Over a hundred Berkeley residents were in the parade and over a thousand Berkeley spectators. The best part of having the Daily Planet in town is more local flavor. It would be fabulous to see more coverage of Berkeleyans in the parade. 

 

Kevin Strother 

Berkeley


Sharks officially announce change of arena name after HP merger

Staff
Tuesday July 09, 2002

SAN JOSE — Due to the recent merger between high-tech firms Hewlett-Packard Co. and Compaq Computer Corp., the San Jose Sharks will have their home arena renamed for the second time in two years. 

The facility, which had been called the San Jose Arena until last year, was renamed the Compaq Center when that company bought the naming rights. But when Compaq was swallowed up by HP this May, HP chairwoman and CEO Carly Fiorina said the arena’s name would change to the HP Pavilion. 

Sharks President Greg Jamison said Monday the NHL team and HP have reached final agreement on that name switch, contingent upon approval from the San Jose City Council. The Sharks’ deal with HP runs through 2015. 


Public input sought by U.S. Energy Dept.

By Mike Dinoffria, Special to the Daily Planet
Tuesday July 09, 2002

The U.S. Department of Energy will listen to public feedback as it writes the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory’s environmental impact statement.  

The report, which is done about every 10 years, could influence the direction of the UC-operated laboratory and the allotment of its approximately $1.4 billion annual budget for roughly the next decade. 

The Laboratory will hold public hearings July 10 and July 11 as part of its research in drafting the report. The research started June 17 and will continue until Aug. 13.  

“We’re analyzing the full scope of operations of the lab,” said National Nuclear Securities Administration document manager Tom Grim. The report is scheduled to be complete in 2004. It will forecast the impact of activity at the laboratory. The last environmental impact report was published in 1992.  

The purpose of an environmental review is to provide the public with an analysis of the potential environmental impact from research and testing.  

The laboratory will analyze alternatives to its current operations including an increase or decrease in activity at the lab. 

One concern of many local watchdog groups like the Tri-Valley Communities Against a Radioactive Environment is the construction of a nuclear weapons facility. 

Leuren Moret worked at the Livermore Laboratory from 1989 to 1991. She is currently on the City of Berkeley’s Environmental Commission. She is concerned that this report will result in more weapons-grade plutonium at the laboratory, and that it will have a negative impact on the environment. 

Another issue to be discussed will be proposals to consolidate where necessary, Grim said. This could include the removal unnecessary facilities. Building 25, the heavy element facility, could be closed down. 

The Lawrence laboratory has an annual budget of approximately $1.4 million and employs about 8,000 people. The experimental test facility, also called site 300, is a high-explosives test site 12 miles southeast of Livermore, between Livermore and Tracy. 

The public hearings are scheduled 1 and 6 p.m. July 10 at Double Tree Club (formerly the Holiday Inn), 720 Las Flores Road., Livermore; and 1 and 6:30 p.m. July 11 at Holiday Inn Express, 3751 N. Tracy Blvd., Tracy.


News of the Weird

Staff
Tuesday July 09, 2002

Krauses are  

pit-spitting royalty 

 

EAU CLAIRE, Mich. — The Young Gun was a little better than the Pellet Gun. 

Rick “Pellet Gun” Krause — a 12-time winner of the annual Cherry Pit Spitting Championship — was defeated by his eldest son, Brian “Young Gun” Krause on Saturday. 

Brian Krause, 24, spit a cherry pit 61 feet, 2 inches to beat his 48-year-old father, who topped out at 55 feet, 10 inches. 

Rick Krause’s youngest son, 19-year-old Matt “BB Gun” Krause, was third with a distance of 45 feet, 2 1/2 inches. 

“This is the first time we ever did that,” Brian Krause said of the one-two-three finish. Brian’s son, Braden Krause, won the under-5 division with a spit of 14 feet, 4 inches. 

The Krauses have come to embrace their status as pit-spitting royalty. Rick Krause appeared for his turn to spit wearing bright red tights and riding a sparkling purple motorcycle as rock music played in the background. 

 

Everybody knows Sally 

 

STOLLINGS, W.Va. — Sally Wall is more than a waitress. She’s a fixture at Morrison’s Drive-In, so popular with customers that the establishment offers $1 gift certificates with her picture called “Sally Dollars.” 

“She’s been here so long, I thought she’d die right there on the curb,” said Bob Mayhorn, Morrison’s owner and the son-of-law of co-founder Leonard L. Reffeitt. 

But Morrison’s soon will lose its star waitress. Wall turns 75 on Aug. 13, and she has decided it will be her last day on the job. After 47 years, she is putting away her order pad for good. 

“She’s fantastic,” Mayhorn said. “She’s great for public relations. I’ll probably have to hire two people to replace her. Everybody in town knows Sally. When people pull up, she orders for them. She knows what everybody wants.” 

 

Donkey is a democrat 

 

ST. LOUIS — In case anyone in Tom Bauer’s ward wonders if the alderman is a Democrat, the politician’s donkey should be a giveaway. 

And if Bauer has his way, he’ll ride Dan the donkey all the way into another term in the city’s 24th Ward. 

Bauer walks or rides the 4-year-old pet donkey more than three miles a day through the neighborhood, often getting a double take or two. 

Dan has replaced Bauer’s beloved Scotty, a 10-year-old donkey that died unexpectedly last summer while Bauer was vacationing. Scotty had been a neighborhood fixture, carrying Bauer door-to-door as a campaign gimmick on behalf of Bauer or another Democrat the alderman backed. 

Bought in Paris, Tenn., Dan also is being groomed to one day hit the campaign trail for Bauer, running for re-election next spring, or for other Democrats running locally before then. 


Actor Delroy Lindo charged with assault in food store parking lot

By Devona Walker, Daily Planet Staff
Tuesday July 09, 2002

Police said fight was about a parking space 

 

Montclair resident and actor Delroy Lindo was charged by police on Independence Day because he allegedly put his hands around a man’s neck during a fight over a parking space at Whole Foods Grocery outlet at Telegraph and Ashby avenues. 

Lindo is best known for his work in several Spike Lee films. 

Last Thursday, because there was no officer to witness the fight a citizen asked that Lindo be arrested. The incident was called a citizen’s arrest, said Berkeley Police Lt. Cynthia Harris.  

Lindo was charged with misdemeanor assault and is scheduled for a hearing Aug. 1. Police cited Lindo at the scene but did not take him into custody. 

Police did not identify the victim.  

As an actor, Lindo has played lead roles in several films including “Crooklyn,” and has had strong supporting roles in “Clockers” and “Malcom X.” Lindo starred in the films “Romeo Must Die,” “Get Shorty,” and “The Cider House Rules.”  

Born in San Francisco, Lindo attended the most highly-esteemed acting academy in the Bay Area — The American Conservatory Theater (ACT). Actor Denzel Washington is also a graduate of the ACT. 

Lindo could not be reached for comment. 


Survey: UC Davis voted among most interesting colleges in US

By The Associated Press
Tuesday July 09, 2002

DAVIS — The University of California, Davis, has been rated one of the most interesting colleges in America. 

“The Unofficial, Unbiased, Insider’s Guide to the 320 Most Interesting Colleges” selects Davis because of its small town, rural environment, research projects and veterinary school, one of only a few in the nation, said Lori Duggan Gold, a Kaplan Publishing spokeswoman. 

The guide is based on a national survey of high school guidance counselors. 


Volunteers undergoing smallpox vaccine trials

By Paul Elias, The Associated Press
Tuesday July 09, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Doctors at an Oakland hospital jabbed decades-old smallpox vaccine into the arm of a volunteer Monday, the first of 50 people they hope to soon inoculate as part of government-sponsored human experiments nationwide. 

For three decades, 120 liters of the vaccine that’s now being tested sat nearly unnoticed in a walk-in freezer at a remote mountainside lab owned by Aventis Pasteur in Swiftwater, Pa. 

Officials with the Paris-based company thought the vaccine was so worthless, they were planning to destroy the stockpile of about 70 million doses until the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11. Aventis has since donated the vaccine to the federal government, which now must determine whether it’s still useable. 

About 330 volunteers will be inoculated with diluted doses over the next two weeks. Results are expected by mid-August, including those of the 50 volunteers at the Vaccine Research Center at Kaiser Permanente’s Oakland Medical Center. 

“In the past year, I think we’ve all become more aware of the possibility of a bio-terrorist attack in the United States,” said Steve Black, co-director of the center. “I hope we never need to use this vaccine again, but it’s important to make certain that if we do it will be available and it will work. 

“If we can show that this vaccine stock is still effective, it will go a long way toward making a dose of smallpox vaccine available for everyone in the U.S.,” Black said. 

The tests are part of a $12.6 million National Institutes of Health grant awarded last year to Vanderbilt University, which is overseeing the experiment and will enroll about 90 volunteers of its own. The University of Iowa and Baylor College of Medicine also are enrolling volunteers. 

Volunteers will receive a vaccine that either has been diluted to 20 percent or 10 percent of its current strength. It’s possible that the Aventis stockpile could provide up to 700 million doses if the most diluted treatment proves effective. That would add to the 15 million doses the federal government already has on hand. 

The United States stopped vaccinating the public in 1972 and smallpox was eradicated worldwide in 1977. But the disease can be used in germ warfare, renewing interest in mass vaccinations. 

Federal officials at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention now are considering vaccinating as many as 500,000 health care workers and emergency personnel who would be first to see any smallpox cases. Because the vaccine carries significant risks — including death — officials do not want to resume mass vaccinations. 

All volunteers taking the Aventis vaccine are required to be healthy and between the ages of 18 and 32. The vaccine, which is a small dose of live smallpox, is dangerous for people with weakened immune-response systems. Scientists believe that if everyone were vaccinated, approximately one in every million persons inoculated would die. Thousands more likely would suffer side effects ranging from rashes to encephalitis. 

Two studies were released in March by The New England Journal of Medicine. They found that out of the 700 previously unvaccinated young adults who received some of the 15 million doses of the government vaccine, one-third had pain bad enough to miss school, work or other activities after being inoculated. While no one in the study fell seriously ill, some experienced fever, headache, nausea, muscle aches, lesions and swelling.


FBI says biggest question still to be answered — Why?

By Chelsae J. Carter, The Associated Press
Tuesday July 09, 2002

IRVINE — Days after a shooting at the El Al Israel Airlines ticket counter at Los Angeles International Airport left three dead, the biggest question facing investigators was — Why? 

“Why would a man walk into an airport with two fully loaded weapons, extra (ammunition) and a hunting knife with a six-inch blade? It’s obvious he was going to kill people, the question is why?” FBI spokesman Matt McLaughlin said Monday. 

FBI agents have interviewed friends and family of Hesham Mohamed Hadayet and scoured the Egyptian immigrant’s Orange County home for clues to a motive in the July 4 shooting spree. 

But so far the investigation has come up with “nothing irrefutable that points to a motive,” McLaughlin said. 

Earlier Monday, Hadayet’s wife told The Associated Press in Cairo, Egypt, that she spoke with her husband hours before the shooting and he gave no hint he was planning any violent act. 

Hadayet, 41, was fourth in line at the ticket counter when he opened fire, killing two people, authorities said. He fired 10 or 11 bullets before he was killed by an El Al security guard. Two security guards and a Canadian woman were injured. 

Although federal authorities had not officially labeled the shooting an act of terrorism or a hate crime, Israeli officials said they consider it a terrorist act. 

“Based on what we know, it looks like terrorism,” said David Douek, a spokesman for the Israeli consulate in Los Angeles. “The FBI is also considering terrorism as a possible motive. I don’t think we’re as far apart as it appears.” 

He said the FBI had been in contact with Israel’s consul general. He nor the FBI would elaborate on the conversations. 

But Hadayet’s wife said her husband had never expressed anger at Israel or at the recent Israeli-Palestinian violence that has sparked anti-Israeli protest across the Arab world. 

“No, this wasn’t an issue,” Hala Mohammed Sadeq El-Awadly, 41, told the AP. She did not elaborate. 

Hadayet emigrated 10 years ago to California from Egypt, seeking asylum for himself and his family. The Immigration and Naturalization Service rejected his application and in 1996 started deportation proceedings against him. 

But the following year, Hadayet gained U.S. residency when his wife received a valid visa through an INS lottery. 

Russ Bergeron, an INS spokesman in Washington D.C., would not say why Hayadet’s initial application was rejected. 

El-Awadly and her two sons have reservations to fly back to California Aug. 20 and they have an appointment later that month to be interviewed by immigration authorities considering their citizenship request. 

“I don’t know now whether I am going back or not. Our lives are upside down,” El-Awadly said. 

Bergeron would not comment on El-Awadly’s case. But he said typically the death of an individual who was not the primary INS applicant has no impact on immigration status. 


Sliding dollar could give boost to U.S. economy

By Eileen Alt Powell, The Associated Press
Tuesday July 09, 2002

NEW YORK — After five years of high flying, the dollar has begun weakening. That’s not necessarily bad news for the U.S. economy. 

To be sure, American travelers will pay more for hotels and souvenirs when they travel overseas. And foreign investors — hit by the double whammy of depreciating dollars and corporate accounting scandals — have begun pulling their money out of U.S. markets. 

At home, however, a lot of people stand to benefit from a weaker greenback. 

“The biggest gains will be for U.S. industries and workers that compete internationally,” said C. Fred Bergsten, director of the Institute for International Economics in Washington, D.C. “So will exporters and the firms that make products that compete with imports.” 

That’s because the weaker dollar will make U.S. goods less expensive abroad, stimulating sales. And it will make imports more expensive, improving the competitiveness of American-made goods. 

A weaker dollar also will benefit companies that earn money overseas. Their profits in euros or yen will buy more dollars and translate to improved earnings statements back home. 

Why is this happening now? 

Experts point to the U.S. trade deficit, which grew to nearly $350 billion last year — a level that can be sustained only if the United States continues to draw investment capital from the rest of the world to finance it. But low interest rates and the slumping stock market have made American investments less attractive. 

Bergsten said the dollar has fallen 5 percent over the past five months on a trade-weighted basis, which factors in the value of the currencies of major U.S. trading partners. He believes it could drop 20 percent before it stabilizes. 

The National Association of Manufacturers has been complaining for months that the dollar was inordinately strong. The Washington-based industrial trade group estimates the strong dollar cost the U.S. economy $140 billion in lost exports and 500,000 in lost manufacturing jobs over the past year and a half. 

Frank Vargo, NAM’s vice president for international economic affairs, believes that one reason the dollar dominated other currencies for so long was the U.S. Treasury’s “strong dollar” policy. 

“People took this to mean that the administration was happy with the dollar as strong as it was and would intervene (in the currency markets) to keep the dollar where it was,” Vargo said. 

He noted that after Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neill told a Senate committee in early May that the market should set the value of the American currency, “traders picked up on that and the dollar moved downward.” 

Depreciation of the dollar in the past has resulted in inflation. That’s because imported goods become more expensive, and domestic producers have the incentive to raise their prices, too.


Cuba markets $100 million in biotech drugs overseas

By Paul Elias, The Associated Press
Tuesday July 09, 2002

HAVANA — Inside modern towers that are a pride of Fidel Castro, scientists peer through huge microscopes at tiny proteins they hope to tailor to treat such major killers as AIDS, heart disease and cancer. 

More than 1,000 people work at Cuba’s Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology Center to save lives, ease human suffering — and generate more cash for their socialist country’s battered economy. 

Cuba’s biotech products and technology currently reach markets in more than 40 countries, generating about $100 million annually. 

Havana thinks it can do a lot better. 

It has ambitious plans to increase its drug profits by greatly expanding its overseas markets through the development of novel pharmaceuticals and the sale of other drugs. 

For years as a Soviet bloc adherent, Cuba was among nations that refused to acknowledge Western intellectual property laws, manufacturing its own generic versions of popular drugs. 

Now, Cuba is aiming to sell abroad the genetically engineered protein erythropoetin, or EPO, which is by far the best-selling biotechnology drug. 

EPO is used by kidney dialysis and chemotherapy patients as well as illegally by athletes to boost oxygen-laden red cells in the body. 

It accounted for $6 billion in sales last year for three corporate giants that own commercial rights throughout the industrialized world. But in developing nations, an increasing number of biotech drugs are being produced without any attempts to obtain licenses. 

With 1.3 billion people, China is the largest of these markets — and its potential for EPO sales is huge. 

Amgen Inc., which invented the drug, shares patent rights with Johnson & Johnson and Kirin Brewery of Japan in the most lucrative markets — the United States, Europe and Japan. 

But they have little influence over Cuba, whose well-developed biotechnology program already offers EPO for sale in Argentina, Brazil, India and other countries that don’t acknowledge most U.S. and European drug patents. 

“We are very careful about intellectual property laws,” said Blanca Tormo, a Cuban biotechnology executive. She said Cuba sells EPO only in countries where no entity has exclusive patent rights. 

U.S. patent holders consider this boisterous trade in generic drugs a challenge to their intellectual property. But from Cuba’s perspective, it’s merely good business, and consumers in developing countries are grateful to pay the lower prices. 

In joining the World Trade Organization last year, China agreed to abide by its intellectual property agreements. But those pacts contain mechanisms that can allow developing nations to circumvent patents — especially in pharmaceuticals — where concerns such as public health are deemed to override them. 

But Cuba is not alone in trying to enter China’s seductive EPO market. Amgen, Kirin, the small Canadian biotech company Dragon Pharmaceuticals Inc. and at least four Chinese companies are already selling EPO there. 

While Amgen charges upward of $36 a dose in the United States, the generic EPO sells for as low as $5 in China. U.S. patients each pay upward of $10,000 annually for Amgen’s product, which it calls Epogen. 

Cuba has plenty more to offer, of course, than generic EPO, including its novel biotech products: hepatitis B and meningitis B vaccines, a skin growth factor, interferons, thrombosis and heart attack medicines as well as AIDS treatments. 

It is seeking more partnerships with foreign companies in research into vaccines for AIDS, eight different kinds of cancer and cholera. 

Cuban officials, some of whom attended last month’s annual BIO 2002 industry conference in Toronto, said negotiations for new biotech trade and production agreements were under way with Brazil and nine other countries: Malaysia, Netherlands, Spain, Mexico, Venezuela, Vietnam, Ukraine, Germany, and the United States. Cuba has or is negotiating technology transfer agreements with 14 countries — most of them developing nations including India, Algeria and South Africa. 

Meanwhile, this island nation has produced more than 78 million doses of the hepatitis B vaccine. 

It has also licensed its meningitis B vaccine to Britain’s Glaxo SmithKline, which hopes to eventually sell it in the United States under an exemption to the Cuban trade embargo granted by the Clinton administration. 

In another North American partnership, Cuba is working with the small Canadian company YM Biosciences on trials of a head and neck cancer treatment. 

But not everyone is bullish on Cuban biotech. 

“The U.S believes that Cuba has at least a limited offensive biological warfare research and development effort,” John Bolton, the U.S. undersecretary of state for arms control, said in a May speech. “Cuba has provided dual-use biotechnology to other rogue states.” 

Bolton’s accusation was widely dismissed as unfair by scientists, by Castro himself and by former President Jimmy Carter, whose visit to the island it directly preceded. 

In fact, Cuban biotechnology officials said Bolton unintentionally gave their program an international publicity boost. 

“That man did us a favor,” Tormo said. “Now, everybody is taking a good look at our biotechnology programs.” 

——— 

On the Net: 

http://www.cigb.edu.cu 


Safeway reports its first sales decline since 1992

Staff
Tuesday July 09, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Supermarket giant Safeway Inc. on Monday reported its first quarterly sales decline in more than nine years, prodding the grocer to lower its prices to lure back bargain-hunting shoppers and fend off increasingly popular discount merchants. 

Laying most of the blame on a listless economy, Pleasanton-based Safeway said its second-quarter “identical-store” sales — a key industry barometer — fell by 1.1 percent from the prior year. It marked Safeway’s first year-to-year drop in identical store sales in 37 quarters, dating back to the final three months of 1992. 

The identical-store yardstick measures sales at stores that had been open for at least a year and hadn’t been remodeled. Factoring in the sales from all 1,792 of its stores, Safeway’s revenue in the 12 weeks ended June 15 totaled $8.1 billion, a 1 percent increase from last year. 

Safeway earned $309.3 million in the second quarter, a slight increase from net income of $307.3 million at the same time last year. 

If not for a series of special accounting charges, Safeway said its second-quarter profit would have been $350.4 million, or 69 cents per share, a 2 percent decrease from the same time last year. 

Monday’s announcement wasn’t a surprise. Safeway warned its second quarter would be disappointing nearly a month ago, provoking the biggest one-day drop in the company’s stock since the 1980s.


Arrests made in nursing fraud ring

The Associated Press
Tuesday July 09, 2002

LOS ANGELES — State Justice Department officials arrested more than 70 people in the last three months in a probe of a fraud ring that allegedly infiltrated the state’s nursing assistant testing system and issued assistant certificates to unqualified people. 

As a result of the scheme nursing homes throughout the city unwittingly hired dozens of unqualified nurse assistants, officials said. State health officials have so far revoked 124 certificates for nursing assistants. 

“It’s a new crime of opportunity,” said Deputy Attorney General Mark Zahner. “There are people out there so motivated by greed that they take advantage of the job situation and the elderly and infirm. They don’t care that they’re putting lives at risk by sticking people in nursing homes under false pretenses and putting them into a position to really hurt somebody.” 

More cases are likely to surface. The California Department of Health Services and the Justice Department confirmed that other probes were under way but declined to reveal specifics, the Los Angeles Times reported Monday. 

The fraud was made possible in part by a shortage of certified nurse assistants, who perform 70 percent of all hands-on patient care while earning the least of all nursing staff — on average $9.17 per hour in 2000. 

Seventy-six people have been charged so far with paying for a nurse assistant certificate and then using the credential to find work at nursing homes.  

Officials expect another 20 or so arrests before the investigation is closed. 

Two of the key figures in the case, Juan Carlos Cano, 25, and Carole Ann Lopez, 40, pleaded no contest last month to felony charges that they orchestrated the scheme. Both were sentenced to 300 days in jail and five years’ probation, and together they owe nearly $100,000 in fines and restitution. 

Cano, a licensed vocational nurse, recruited non-English-speaking Latinos to take the state-mandated, English-only test, authorities said. For a fee of as much as $500, “applicants” took the exam at South Orange County Community College, where Lopez, a registered nurse, taught classes and proctored the certified nurse assistant test for a private company contracted by the state. 

Lopez doctored the scores before sending them to the Department of Health Services, which unwittingly issued certificates based on the bogus results. Over the course of a year, the “proctor and doctor” scheme netted the pair more than $32,000. 

The scheme was found out when a nursing home administrator called authorities at DHS questioning how an employee who didn’t read or speak English passed the test.


Kayaker seriously injured in collision with ski boat at Tahoe

Staff
Tuesday July 09, 2002

SOUTH LAKE TAHOE — A kayaker from the San Francisco Bay area was in serious condition Monday after a collision with a ski boat at Lake Tahoe, authorities said. 

El Dorado County sheriff’s deputies said the collision occurred shortly after noon at the entrance to Emerald Bay on Tahoe’s west shore. 

The kayaker, Steve Fletcher, 50, of Santa Cruz, was flown to Washoe Medical Center in Reno, Nev., where he underwent surgery for severe leg and foot injuries. 

Hospital spokeswoman Judy Davis said Fletcher was in serious condition on Monday. 

An investigation into the cause of the accident is under way and the sheriff’s office said no further information would be released until it was complete. 

The people aboard the ski boat pulled the kayaker into their boat after the collision and transported him to the nearby Vikingsholm pier, deputies said. 

Emergency personnel stabilized the kayaker’s injuries at the pier before he was picked up by helicopter and flown to the Reno hospital. 

Both the kayaker and ski boat operator, an unidentified man from Boise, Idaho, were vacationing at Tahoe. 


Party in south Berkeley ends in shooting

By Kurtis Alexander and Katie Flynn, Daily Planet Staff
Monday July 08, 2002

A Hip Hop dance party went awry late Saturday night when gunfire erupted at a South Berkeley arts center where more than 1,000 party-goers crammed performance space scheduled for 300 people, according to the Berkeley Police Department. 

Two people were wounded in the crossfire, which broke out at about 11:15 p.m. both inside and outside of the packed beyond-capicity Crucible, at 1036 Ashby Ave, authorities said. 

Berkeley officers had arrived at the Crucible about 45 minutes earlier to assist with the unexpected crowds exiting the DJ show, according to police. When gunshots were fired, Berkeley police were joined by officers from seven other law enforcement agencies to help locate the shooters amid the crowd. Gunfire continued as the backup teams arrived. 

Several blocks along Ashby Avenue and the nearby Interstate 80 freeway entrance were shut down by police during the search. The perpetrators were not found. 

SHOOTINGS/From Page 1 

 

“It was a massive fiasco of a party gone sour,” said Sgt. Garen Nielsen of the Berkeley Police Department, noting that more than 100 officers ultimately joined in the crowd control and search efforts. 

A nearby resident, who did not want his name mentioned, said he came home around 1 a.m. Sunday to find people swarming Murray Street, an ally between the industrial lots adjacent to the Crucible. 

“This whole ally was completely packed with thousands of people and surrounded by cops,” he said. “Police were staked out in the (Orchard Supply Hardware) parking lot.” 

Police say the south Berkeley neighborhood was cleared by 2 a.m., and no arrests were made. Police officers from Oakland, Albany, Emeryville, UC Berkeley, BART and the California Highway Patrol assisted in the incident. 

One of the victims of the shooting was transported to Alameda County Hospital and the other victim refused medical treatment. Details of the injuries could not be obtained Sunday. 

The dance show was sponsored by local promoter Eugene Cockerman. The promoter, nor employees at the Crucible could be reached before press time.


Resident questions public expenditures on old City Hall

Lillie Baugh
Monday July 08, 2002

To the Editor: 

 

I have prepared this letter to express my concern regarding unnecessary construction work scheduled for the old Civic Center Building. I feel the city should be more conscious of the shortfall that is projected over the next several years. It is unheard of that additional moneys will be used in such a wasteful manner. As you know the city of Berkeley spent millions of taxpayer’s money to retrofit City Hall and the Library. 

Recently while visiting the Housing Department on the second floor of the Civic Center Building I learned that office space (on the southside of the building) is slated to be altered to make special accommodations for one staff member to have a private office. I would like the mayor/council to investigate this situation; I feel it’s wasteful and unnecessary spending given the budget constraints that face the city and I feel that it is not in the best interest of the city as a whole.  

Government employees need to make themselves available to all parties that request services. This type of spending shows lack of regard for more important issues that are facing the city of Berkeley at this time. Money being used to remodel an office to accommodate one individual staff person is wasteful spending!  

Incidentally I learned that the staff person has stated that “if she doesn’t get a private office she will leave and seek employment elsewhere.” I do not want my taxpayer money spent towards remodeling office space on a building that costs the taxpayers millions of dollars already. (How much will this cost? What ever the amount, it is too much.) However, I do support the use of additional moneys (if any-I understand there is a shortfall) being used for our social programs that assist in more critical and pressing needs.  

If we start altering the building in this manner we might think of knocking the entire Civic Center down and building a 10-story skyscraper. Thank you for looking in to this misuse of city funds. 

 

Lillie Baugh 

Berkeley


Out & About Calendar

Staff
Monday July 08, 2002


Monday, July 8

 

Berkeley Gray Panthers Home Owners Meeting  

Monday, July 8th, 2002 at 3 p.m.  

Berkeley Gray Panthers Office,1403 Addison Street-behind University Avenue Andronico’s Super Market. 

Laurie Capitelli of Red Oak Realty runs down the options of selling homes 

All Welcome 

548-9696 or 486-8010 

Free 

 

Introduction to Accessible  

Software and Hardware  

6:30 to 8 p.m. 

Berkeley Public Library Electronic Classroom, 2090 Kittredge Street 

RSVP to 981-6121- Alan Bern, Special Services Coordinator 

 


Tuesday, July 9

 

Mother’s Morning Out 

10:30 a.m. to noon 

Upaya Center for Wellbeing 

478 Santa Clara Ave. 

Craniosacral Therapy for Infants and Children 

www.upayacenter.org 

Free 

 


Thursday, July 11

 

Great Sierra Backpacking  

Destinations 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo  

Karen Najarian of Sierra Wilderness Seminars presents slides from her more that 20 years exploring the Sierra Backcountry. 

For information: 527-4140 

Free 

 

What Do You Believe? Spiritual Lives of American Teenagers 

6:30 to 8:00 p.m. 

Ellen Driscoll Playhouse 

325 Highland Avenue, Piedmont  

Film presented by Piedmont diversity groups; discussion with filmmaker, Sarah Feinbloom.  

655-5552, or maudep@aol.com 

Free 

 


Friday, July 12

 

Celebration of Emma Goldman's Birthday  

8 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. 

Fellowship of Humanity Hall  

390 27th St  

An all-ages, alcohol-free party with live music, DJ, and dance lessons 

http://www.ebcaw.org  

$5 to $10 sliding scale  

 


Saturday, July 13

 

Peach / Stone Fruit Tasting 

Tasting & cooking demonstrations 

10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

Center Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way 

Free 

 

15th Anniversary Derby  

Street Farmers Market 

Live music and & stone-fruit and peach tasting 

Tasting & cooking demonstrations. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

Derby Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way  

Free 

 

Festival of New Versions  

of Classic Asian Games 

Noon to 5 p.m 

Dr. Comics and Mr. Games,  

4014 Piedmont Ave., Oakland  

Dr Comics and Mr Games Hosts Game a festival featuring two new versions of classic Asian board games 

601-7800 

 


Sunday, July 14

 

Hands-on Bicycle Repair  

11 a.m.to noon 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Learn from an REI bike technician basic bike repairs such as brake adjustments and fixing a flat. 

For information: 527-4140 

Free 

 

Family Health Day 

11 a.m. to 5 p.m. 

Fourth Street and University Avenue 

Explore health concerns in a family oriented environment 

Free 

 


Tuesday, July 16

 

Berkeley Camera  

Club Weekly Meeting 

7:30 p.m. 

Northbrae Community Church 

941 The Alameda 

Share slides, prints with other photographers 

525-3565 

Free 

 

Introduction to Accessible Software and Hardware  

10:30 a.m. to noon 

Berkeley Public Library Electronic Classroom, 2090 Kittredge Street 

RSVP to 981-6121. Alan Bern, Special Services Coordinator 

 


Wedneday, July 17

 

Doctors Without Borders 

Until July 18 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. 

UC Berkeley, Springer Gateway, West Entrance Crescent 

Interactive exhibit expalining medicines for people in developing countries; Film screenings 

www.doctorswithoutborders.org 

Free 

 


Thursday, July 18

 

Mystique of the Widerness 

7 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Phil Arnot presents slides from over 50 years of exploring such places as Alaska, New Zealand, the Sierra and the Rockies. 

For information: 527-4140 

 

Introduction to Accessible  

Software and Hardware  

3 to 4:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Public Library Electronic Classroom, 2090 Kittredge Street 

RSVP to 981-6121. Alan Bern, Special Services Coordinator 

 


Saturday, July 20

 

Emergency Preparedness  

Classes in Berkeley 

Earthquake Retrofitting: Learn how to strengthen your wood frame home. 

10 a.m. to 5 p.m. 

812 Page St. 

981-5605 

Free 

 


Thursday, July 25

 

California Landscapes:  

A Geologist's Perspective 

7 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

John Karachewski presents an educational slideshw on such amazing places as the Sierra Nevada, Coast Ranges the Great Valley and Cascades 

For information: 527- 4140. 

Free 

 


Saturday, July 27

 

Test Ride Kestrel Bicycles 

11 a.m. to 1 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Preston Sandusky of Kestrel, a premier manufacturer of high-end, carbon-fiber road and mountain bikes, intrduces their latest design. 

For information: 527-4140 

Free 

 

"Neon: The Living Flame" 

7:00 p.m.  

Alameda Museum  

2324 Alameda Ave.  

The Alameda Museum presents Michael Crowe, author, and neon artist Karl Hauser 

lecture by Michael Crowe 

748-0796 or 841-8489.  

Members free, nonmembers $5  

 


Sunday, July 28

 

Hands-on Bicycle Repair  

11 a.m. to noon 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Learn from an REI bike techician basic repairs such as brake adjustments and fixing a flat. 

For information: 527-4140 

Free 

 


Wednesday, July 31

 

Mountain Adventure Seminars:  

Introduction to Rock Climbing 

7 to 9 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

An introduction to rockclimbing including knot tieing, belaying and movement. 

For information: (209) 753-6556 

$115 REI members; $125 non-members


Ted Lilly ready to join the A’s Big Three

By Anne M. Peterson, The Associated Press
Monday July 08, 2002

OAKLAND – The Oakland Athletics hope Ted Lilly can turn their Big Three into a formidable quartet. 

The A’s acquired Lilly, a spot starter for the pitching-rich New York Yankees, in a three-team trade late Friday. The 26-year-old left-hander joins a rotation anchored by the talented trio of Mark Mulder, Barry Zito and Tim Hudson. 

While leaving the mighty Yankees was something of a shock, Lilly was grateful to be joining a team that has a legitimate postseason shot. 

“My first thought was I’m going to a team that wants to win, and win all the way,” he said. 

Lilly arrived in Oakland late Saturday and joined his new team on Sunday. The A’s say Lilly will be part of the starting rotation, throwing the futures of rookie Aaron Harang and Cory Lidle up in the air, probably until after the All-Star break. 

“I’ll let you know,” A’s manager Art Howe said, adding that Lilly would be in the bullpen for Sunday’s game against the Kansas City Royals. 

The A’s sent minor league first baseman Carlos Pena and right-handed pitcher Franklyn German to Detroit Friday night for right-hander Jeff Weaver and cash. 

The A’s then turned around and sent Weaver to the Yankees for Lilly and two promising minor leaguers, outfielder John-Ford Griffin and right-hander Jason Arnold. 

“Ted Lilly is someone we’ve tried to get for the last several years,” A’s general manager Billy Beane said. “It’s a success for us for a number of reasons. We get a major league pitcher and we get top picks from the Yankees.” 

Lilly is 3-6 with a 3.40 ERA in 11 starts and two relief appearances. On April 27 he pitched a one-hitter in a 1-0 loss at Seattle and on June 22 he pitched a three-hitter at San Diego for his first major league shutout. 

“I had heard that he (Beane) was trying to acquire me earlier in the year – but you don’t really pay attention to trade rumors,” Lilly said. 

Lilly will likely take over Lidle’s spot in the rotation. 

A roster move to make room for the new pitcher was not immediately announced. 

Lidle has struggled, going 2-7 with a 5.30 ERA in 15 starts, while Harang, the rookie of the lineup, has shown promise with a 3-2 record and a 2.43 ERA in his first seven starts. 

Harang, called up from Triple-A Sacramento on May 25, started Saturday against the Royals. 

“It’s nice to know we have some depth in that starting position, which we haven’t had all year,” Howe said. “We were a little thin there.” 

Already schooled by the likes of David Wells, Andy Pettite and Roger Clemens, Lilly said he was excited about the prospect of joining the A’s. 

“You see watching them from the dugout that these guys play hard,” Lilly said. 

Both Howe and Beane said it was tough to let go of Pena, who opened the season for the A’s at first – Jason Giambi’s spot before he bolted for the Yankees as a free agent in the offseason. In fact, Pena was touted as Giambi’s heir apparent at first. 

While Pena got off to a fast start, batting .264 with seven homers and 16 RBIs in April, he fell off in May, batting .108 in 14 games before he was sent down to Triple-A Sacramento. 

“Originally we intended to have Pena be here for a long time,” Howe said. “He just didn’t take advantage of the opportunity. That’s not to say he won’t be a great player, he just needs a little time.”


The world ‘accordion’ to Boaz

By Brian Kluepfel, Special to the Daily Planet
Monday July 08, 2002

Unbeknownst to many residents, Berkeley has a reputation among music lovers as a hub of accordion music. 

It all started when Boaz Rubin, a former commercial fisherman/truck driver/machinist, got together with UC Berkeley students at Berkeley’s Hilel House where they jammed to Klezmer, a type of Eastern European Jewish wedding music. Los Angeles refugee Rubin quickly realized the instruments in his repertoire didn’t fit the style he was looking for and decided to pick up the accordion. 

And he hasn’t put it down since. Rubin became so immersed in the subculture of the accordion that now, seven years later, he makes his living repairing, teaching and generally promoting the instrument. Rubin and wife Judy, with the help of apprentice Emily Esner, run Boaz Accordions out of a warehouse-like space at 1040 Folger Ave. 

As a former machinist and current musician, his appreciation of the accordion is both technical and artistic. 

"You move the bellows and air goes through,” Rubin said. “On another level, they’re very subtle. To make them work and respond well, that’s the art." 

While others in the industrial park import French foods or African carvings, the Rubins’ exotic imports draw fans of every nationality. Indeed, Rubin points out how central the accordion is to the music of many cultures. 

The variety of compact discs for sale in the front of the shop and the instructional books and tapes in a couple of different languages illustrate the variety of appeal. 

The Boaz workshop/salesfloor/performance space has drawn Slovenes, Mexicans, Bosnian Serbs, Irish and Americans, all interested in learning more about the instrument. 

"What’s interesting is that there are these enormous communities of accordion (players) that are completely under the radar. There are gatherings of people, hundreds if not thousands, up and down the Central Valley. It’s a huge subculture," Rubin said.  

Judy Rubin added, "someone joked we ought to have a ‘refugee of the month club.’ We get every refugee and we get to hear them play. There was a Bosnian guy in here who had lost everything and come over with his family. He had been a doctor and now he makes living playing accordion." 

The Rubins see themselves as ambassadors of the instrument, offering a wealth of information through $15 drop-in classes, a monthly newsletter, a variety of fliers and a website. 

Concerts at their shop showcase the many genres of the accordion. July’s event stars an Argentine Tango duo, September’s a Klezmer band and October has a "Cowboy" trio. Visiting artists also pop in, such as French provincial master Daniel Thonon, who will light up the performance area on August 18. 

Last week, local musician Mark Growden dropped in to pick up an accordion for one of his gigs. 

"They are incredibly supportive of the accordion and the music community. That’s what I love about this place,” said Growden. 

He and Boaz Rubin went on at length about how they borrow tricks and styles from each genre of music, be it French, Cajun, Conjunto, Norteno, polka, etc. 

“The accordion is absolutely fascinating. The possibilities are endless and it also has technical challenges that you can never get tired of trying to meet,” Rubin said. 

The shop is eye candy for a lover of musical instruments or someone who simply likes the way the well-crafted appliance looks. Though an accordion might just be a bunch of reeds and an aluminum sounding board inside a wood box, there are many variations of the design, and some people collect them just for the way they look. 

A beginner’s model may cost as little as $300, while a top-of-the-line model anywhere from $10,000 to $20,000. While Rubin says that Italians definitely make the best accordions, "it’s like sports cars– at a certain level it becomes a matter of taste.” 

“There are certain factories that produce things that are so fine, then it becomes a matter (of) do you want one that sounds brighter, stiffer action, (or) one that sounds darker," he said. Rubin is a fan of the Armando Bugari, for which he is an authorized dealer. 

Accordions can be classified by what tuning they are in, whether they have buttons or piano keys and how many rows of keys they have. 

They are often grouped into these basic categories: diatonics which are tuned to an eight note scale, chromatics which are tuned in half steps, concertinas and piano accordions. Within these classifications are many varieties, indicative of how far and wide the instrument has traveled. For example, the South American bandoneon is considered a direct descendent of the German Concertina.  

For as many variations on types of accordions exist, there are corresponding styles of music. In fact, there are particular pairings of instruments to genres, such as the Alfred Arnold bandoneon which is used to entice dancers of Argentine tango while Gabbanelli boxes are favored by practitioners of Tex-Mex. 

And for those who "hate accordion music," think again. "Accordions are like beans. People say they don’t like beans, but they like humus, tacos and other things made of beans. Just like people like music with accordions in it, they just don’t realize it," said Judy Rubin, who has a background in public relations and journalism, specializes in the "customer advocacy" aspect of the business. 

The biggest showcase for Boaz Accordions and their associates is the annual Cotati Accordion Festival in August, during which Sonoma County is overrun with accordion players. Boaz has been an official sponsor for the past three years, helping to coordinate talent for the shows, and naturally, supplying top-of-the-line instruments. 

And whether it be a Yugoslavian-made Slovenian polka box, a chromatic Irish button box, a 30-pound "full house" number or the more recent 14-pound "lite" innovation, you can bet that you’ll find it on the shelves at the shop on Folger Avenue.


In support of Lawrence Lab

David M. Smith
Monday July 08, 2002

To the Editor: 

 

Michael Bauce's letter (July 5), while dismissing the need for understanding the relative magnitudes of radiation risks in making public policy, perfectly illustrates why such education is necessary. 

Natural sources (e.g. naturally-occurring uranium, thorium, radon and cosmic rays) give all of us an unavoidable annual dose of ionizing radiation about 10-20 times higher than a medical x-ray and a thousand times higher than the dose received by the average worker at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory due to tritium released from the National Tritium Labeling Facility (a report on the amount of tritium released and the associated health risks is available at http://www.lbl.gov/ehs/epg/tritium/). The increase in the rate of cancer mortality for the 11,000 people closest to LBNL is estimated to be 5/1,000,000 for a full lifetime of exposure, compared to a total rate of 9,000/1,000,000 from other causes. That additional risk is very small but not zero, and it could be part of an informed debate comparing this risk to the benefits of the medical research that the facility performs. Speaking only for myself, as someone who works within a mile of LBNL, I find that risk acceptable and those benefits obvious. 

As an environmentalist and a scientist, I'm concerned when other environmentalists waste two precious commodities battling activities that carry low risks. The first commodity is our effort, which could be spent instead opposing tremendously harmful activities such as the excessive human production of greenhouse gases and the discharge of toxic chemicals into fragile river ecosystems. The second commodity is our credibility. When some vocal environmentalists have no knowledge (and worse, no concern) about relative levels of risk, it taints the entire environmentalist movement and provides ammunition to those conservatives and corporations who seek to block progress on crucial environmental issues. 

 

David M. Smith 

El Cerrito


Lad Lleyton wins Wimbledon in biggest rout since ’84

The Associated Press
Monday July 08, 2002

WIMBLEDON, England – Lleyton Hewitt made certain this Wimbledon of upsets wouldn’t end with one. The No. 1-ranked player kept his temper in check, his strokes on the lines, and wasn’t fazed by rain delays or a streaker’s show. 

Hewitt won his second Grand Slam title with a command performance, beating greener-than-grass David Nalbandian 6-1, 6-3, 6-2 Sunday in a baseliners’ duel that produced the most lopsided Wimbledon final since 1984. 

At 21, the Australian is the tournament’s youngest champion since Boris Becker won it a second time in 1986 at 18. 

“I kept looking at the scoreboard to see if it was real,” Hewitt said. “It’s an unbelievable feeling. I always dreamed that some day I would be playing for this trophy.” 

Nalbandian’s nerves showed on the match’s very first point – a double fault. He had every right to be a bit shaken: Before this fortnight, the 20-year-old Argentine had never played in a tour-level grass-court event, had never been past the third round in three majors, and owned exactly one career title. 

His first shot on Centre Court came the morning of the final, when he practiced with coach Gabriel Markus for 30 minutes. 

“I didn’t care about the conditions, the stadium, the situation,” the 28th-seeded Nalbandian said. “It was difficult because Lleyton is playing very good.” 

Despite dictating play and going for corners or lines repeatedly, Hewitt had more winners (30-12) and fewer unforced errors (25-41) than Nalbandian. 

Ripping returns off both wings, Hewitt broke Nalbandian’s serve eight times. 

Nalbandian was a big beneficiary of a topsy-turvy tournament in which Pete Sampras, Andre Agassi and Marat Safin all lost in the second round. Nalbandian would have had to face Sampras in the third round, Safin in the quarterfinals, and Agassi in the semis. 

Instead, he got to play George Bastl, Nicolas Lapentti and Xavier Malisse. 

Before Sunday, there had been four straight first-time major winners, and eight men had won the last eight Grand Slam events. 

In a wide-open era of men’s tennis, Hewitt is as close to dominant as anyone right now, and it’s been a quick trip to the top. 

In 1997, at 15 years and 11 months, he became the youngest qualifier for the Australian Open. He turned pro the next year and upset Agassi en route to a hard-court title in his hometown of Adelaide while ranked 550th – the lowest for a tournament winner in ATP Tour history. 

When Hewitt beat Sampras in September for his first major title, he was the U.S. Open’s youngest champ since Sampras in 1990. 

He finished 2001 as the youngest year-end No. 1. 

Hewitt, however, hasn’t always been adored by his sports-wild countrymen because of his brash style. 

While playing James Blake at the U.S. Open, he made a comment interpreted by some as racist during a tirade. 

He’s been fined for using foul language on court and for calling a chair umpire at the 2001 French Open “spastic.” He angered fans in Adelaide by calling them “stupid” for cheering for his opponent during a match in 2000. 

A more mature Hewitt was on display at Wimbledon. 

He did nothing to rile up the partisan crowd during a straight-set semifinal victory over Britain’s Tim Henman and was never rattled during Sunday’s match, which was suspended twice for a total of 49 minutes because of rain. 

Just as the players came out of the locker room after the first delay, a male streaker hopped out of the stands, dropped his clothes and shoes on court, and pranced around for two minutes. He danced, somersaulted over the net and bowed to a laughing crowd while being chased by guards brandishing red sheets like matadors. 

It might just have been the most excitement on court. 

Not only was Nalbandian never in the match (he trailed 4-0 after just 16 minutes), but both players were content to stay anchored to the baseline for double-digit-stroke rallies. 

Often, it had the feel of a clay-court encounter. 

Or two buddies in a public park, hitting a ball for exercise. 

Nalbandian provided the only real sparks – and not with his play. 

On break point at 2-2 in the third set, Hewitt hit a backhand return that Nalbandian thought was out. Replays appeared to show some line chalk flew. Nalbandian looked at the silent line judge, but continued the point, which ended on his backhand into the net. 

Nalbandian flipped his racket halfway to the net – a ball boy brought it to him – and then grabbed a ball and placed it a couple of inches behind the baseline, as if to say, “Couldn’t you tell that’s where the ball landed?” 

He questioned other calls, kicked a ball after one unforced error and smacked himself in the forehead following mistakes, 

Hewitt, meanwhile, was completely composed. Until, that is, he had his first match point, serving at 5-2, 40-0. 

He double faulted. 

When the next point ended with Nalbandian sending a forehand long, Hewitt fell on his back, got up and swatted a ball out of the stadium. After putting his racket down, he climbed through the stands to the players’ guest box, where he greeted his coach, parents and girlfriend, Kim Clijsters, with hugs and kisses.


Smart & Final makes way for Longs Drug

By Matthew Artz, Special to the Daily Planet
Monday July 08, 2002

A new Longs Drug Store and a handful of living units will soon appear on the lot at 1941 San Pablo Ave. between University and Hearst avenues, according to David Fogarty, a community development project coordinator with the city. 

The plan marks a victory for city planners, as they continue to promote the development of residential units above commercial space to help alleviate the region’s housing shortage. City planners had failed to convince former property owner Smart & Final to restore the abandoned apartments on the site. 

According to Fogarty, the city helped conduct a feasibility report which found that the site’s seven studios and a one-bedroom apartment presented a valuable market opportunity. Smart & Final, which closed its discount food store in April after it proved unappealing to Berkeley shoppers, decided to sell the property after learning of its housing value. 

Fogarty, who facilitated the sale, would not disclose the names of the new owners, but said that they planned to rent the apartments at market value. 

The building has a varied history. Opened in 1926 as an ornate single screen movie theater, it has been home to several supermarket chains since the theater’s closure in 1955. 

Fogarty said that Longs will keep the building’s original fresco ceiling, which was restored by Smart & Final in 1993. Longs and the new owners will both contribute money to refurbish the building and they have not determined when it will re-open. 

The Longs project is seen as one of the first steps in the city’s effort to increase foot traffic and population density along busy San Pablo Avenue. 

Because Smart & Final specialized in selling bulk items, most shoppers arrived by car and did not frequent other neighborhood shops, said Council member Kriss Worthington. He hopes that a pharmacy will generate pedestrian shoppers, which are typically more likely to patronize nearby stores. 

The city’s effort to remake San Pablo Avenue is also getting a boost from AC Transit. When the apartments were built in 1944, San Pablo Avenue was a transportation hub, equipped with Key System streetcars, the Bay Area’s original mass transit system that ran along major streets and connected residential neighborhoods to downtown Oakland and San Francisco. After the train service was shut down in 1958, the avenue was redeveloped for automobile traffic. 

Now local authorities are trying to restore San Pablo Avenue as a public transit center. According to Worthington, AC Transit will convert its bus routes along the avenue into an integrated bus rapid transit system. The plan calls for new environmentally friendly buses, attractive and comfortable stops for passengers to wait and board, high-tech traffic signals that will enable buses to face fewer red lights and transit-only lanes that will allow buses to get through high traffic areas.  

Worthington added that the city has identified eight sites along the avenue that it hopes can be developed into new housing units, depending on the health of the local economy. 

"It’s a destination location," Worthington said of the stretch of San Pablo bordering University Avenue. "It’s time to market it."


Problems with the Pledge?

Gerta Farber and Marion Syrek
Monday July 08, 2002

To the Editor: 

 

May I suggest a rational new pledge: 

 

I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America, and to the republic for which it stands, one nation, indivisible, with liberty and justice for Americans of all colors, creeds and cultures. 

 

Gerta Farber 

Berkeley 

 

 

To the Editor, 

 

I hear a great many people who are clamoring that we must retain the daily pledge say that this nation operates under god’s protection. I do not hear anyone explaining how they know god exists. 

Meanwhile, I have a dandy little bridge back in Brooklyn that I would like to sell for a reasonable price. 

 

Marion Syrek 

Oakland


Dancin’ in the streets

By Neil Greene, Special to the Daily Planet
Monday July 08, 2002

Kicks and punches spilled into the streets Saturday, as hundreds of onlookers circled around a pair of smiling capoeira dancers, known as capoeiristas. The crowd cheered as the two gracefully ducked their opponent’s offensive and countered with closed fists and elbows, never making contact and always moving to the rhythm of the live musical accompaniment called the roda. 

Saturday was the Capoeira Arts Cafe’s fifth annual Brazilian Festival, which celebrated the “batizado”– the baptism of new students into the world of capoeira. 

Capoeira is a Brazilian martial art which combines dancing and acrobatics with kicks, blocks and spins common to other marital arts forms. Capoeira, however, is more lighthearted and joyful than other martial arts– it’s considered a game, a ritual, a way of life. 

Berkeley happens to be the home of Mestre (Master) Acordeon, founder of the United Capoeira Association and the Capoeira Arts Cafe and the first person to teach capoeira in the United States. 

Since 1978, Acordeon has taught hundreds of students the native art form and is considered an icon in the capoeira community. Saturday's event not only demonstrated the community’s widespread admiration and respect for Acordeon, but also showed the increasing popularity of capoeira– now practiced by an estimated 5000 capoeiristas nationwide. 

"To my students outside of Brazil, capoeira is a complex and fascinating art, a physical challenge and a philosophical enigma that comes from a socio-cultural and historical context that is completely different from their own," Acordeon said. "However, capoeira has deep meaning for all true capoeiristas, responding to each one's many questions of existence, independent of his or her nationality, sex, age, economic situation or ethnicity," he added. 

Susan McCallister, who has two capoeirista children, had only praise for the cafe’s ability to create a sense of place and community for the students who train there. 

“The cafe has become a place that people count on, it’s like another family,” she said. In addition, said McCallister, capoeira is not a loner’s sport, because to practice capoeira one must have a partner. “You’re dependent on another person, so when you play it’s like a musical improvisation. People are riffing off one another,” she said.  

It’s the element of music and dance that attracted 13-year-old Jonah Katz, who said he first saw capoeira on his friend’s video game. "In Teken there's a guy in it who does capoeira, and I thought that was totally cool," said Katz. He added that capoeira’s constant flow of motion has helped improve his dance and increased his self-awareness. 

Mestre Rony flew in from Sarasota, Florida for Saturday's event. A capoeirista for more than 20 years, Rony first became interested in Capoeira for its aspect of combat, yet over time his performance style, like his reasons for continuing to practice, have evolved. 

"You learn it's something different, and you end up staying because of the friends and music. The martial arts are always there but you end up playing with friends who love what I love. We all fell in love with capoeira," he said. 

Rony trains every day so as to not be defeated by his opponent and stay on top of his peers who are as determined as he is. All the hours of dedication lead to a language of motion, said Rony, by which capoeiristas can decipher their opponents’ move seconds before it’s made, then execute a defensive move and counter attack. 

"It's ongoing, it never stops,” said Rony. “It's like chess– there's always somebody trying to do better and it's happening all over the world," he said. 

Also in attendance at Saturday’s event was 27-year-old Jeremy Bigalke, a self-proclaimed martial arts sympathizer. Bigalke watched intently as two capoeiristas stood on their hands, kicked, back-flipped and hopped in an attempt to better their opponent. Bigalke said that while he no longer practices capoeira, a brief stint as a capoeira student has fostered a respect for the art’s non-violent exertion of energy and an admiration for its ability to wed fighting with dance and music. 

In particular, he added, what continues to attract him to capoeira events is the physical appearance of the capoeiristas. 

"These are the healthiest, strongest people in a group. It's my elemental idea of a body mood," he said. "It's a combination of motion and strength and people standing around and talking. It's how the sidewalk feels. It's an inspirational crowd even if you don't talk to anyone. But I'll go home and do my 100 push-ups, and when I run I'll have a new purpose." 

First drawn to capoeira for its aggression and acrobatics, 23-year-old Kelly Johnson, of Sacramento, said she appreciates the way that capoeira has taught her to channel energy. Otherwise, she says, energy can become stagnant or frustrating if not given the proper outlet. She also enjoys learning Portuguese in the roda and knows that, if faced with a confrontational situation in the streets, she could defend herself. 

"I feel like if someone wanted to mess with me, I could take them on if I had to," she said. When asked about where she'll go with capoeira, she mirrored a sentiment held by many capoeiristas at Saturday’s event: "Wherever it takes me, if it took me to Brazil, that'd be nice."


One man’s trash is another’s treasure

Jacqueline Sokolinsky
Monday July 08, 2002

To the Editor: 

 

We are writing to appeal to residents of Berkeley to donate their reusable objects-toys, furniture, clothing, etc.-directly to charitable agencies which handle such things instead of putting them on the curbside for collection. 

We were horrified to see the garbage collection truck picking up and crunching good furniture and toys which had been passed over by the recycling truck. 

Agencies which accept reusables of many descriptions include Goodwill, St. Vincent de Paul, the Women’s Daytime Drop-in Center. Many others are listed in the flyer put out by the Berkeley Public library titled “How Can I help? Donations.” 

 

Jacqueline Sokolinsky 

Berkeley


The art of capoeira

Staff
Monday July 08, 2002

Capoeira originated in Brazil approximately 400 years ago as a way for slaves to practice self-defense without alerting their masters to the true intentions of the art. Capoeira training, disguised as ritualistic dance, helped unite the diverse slave populations stolen from Africa and shipped to Brazil. 

As capoeira became more popular among slaves, so did rebellion. Capoeira was subsequently outlawed and practiced underground until the 1930s when it was recognized as a sport and an intrinsic part of Brazilian history.


News of the Weird

Staff
Monday July 08, 2002

An easy target 

 

BREMEN, Ind. — The T-shirt said: “Fugitive, You never saw me.” The man wearing it wished police hadn’t. 

Christopher J. Antus was arrested Monday during a routine traffic stop while sporting the bright orange shirt. 

“Well, I guess you are going to have to come with me,” state police Trooper Jerrod Patty said. 

Antus asked why. 

Patty pointed to the T-shirt: “Well, your shirt says you’re a fugitive.” 

The trooper learned that the shirt Antus was wearing was no joke. 

Antus, 24, was wanted on an arrest warrant charging him with failure to appear in court, a felony in northern Indiana’s Marshall County. 

Antus was jailed without bond Tuesday. 

 

Dizzy, but famous 

 

BRISTOL, Conn. — After riding a Lake Compounce roller coaster for two weeks, Noel Aube and Michael Barillaro are record setters — and new friends. 

The two Meriden men rode the Wildcat 2,002 times, breaking Aube’s 1975 record of 2,001 continuous rides. 

Four contestants originally sought to break the record when the contest began June 17. It was down to Aube and Barillaro as of June 21.


Two die in bridge collision

Daily Planet Wire Services
Monday July 08, 2002

A 37-year-old Fremont man was arrested today for driving the wrong way down the Dumbarton Bridge with his headlights off and causing a head-on collision that killed two adults and critically injured two children out of Redwood City. 

The California Highway Patrol says Luis Armando Hidalgo has been arrested on suspicion of felony drunken driving, gross vehicular manslaughter and felony hit-and-run for allegedly causing the nasty accident that occurred near the Dumbarton Bridge toll plaza just before midnight Saturday. 

The CHP said Hidalgo, driving a 1999 Chrysler 300M, was traveling east on westbound state Route 84 and struck a 2002 Toyota Tacoma driven by Oakland resident Maria DelCarmen before hitting a Plymouth Voyager minivan carrying the Redwood City family. 

A CHP spokesman said DelCarmen, 26, was traveling west and didn't see Hidalgo approaching because his headlights were off. At the last minute, she saw his car coming at her and swerved to avoid it. Hidalgo sideswiped her vehicle anyway, and allegedly continued down the wrong way on the bridge. 

DelCarmen, having suffered minor abdominal injuries, stopped at the collision scene. 

The CHP said Hidalgo then collided head on with the Voyager. Both vehicles erupted in flames. 

CHP officers and other motorists pulled the injured parties from their vehicles and initiated medical aid, but for some it was too late. 

The male driver, 35, was pronounced dead at the scene. A 38-year-old woman, who was sitting in the front passenger seat, was taken to Eden Medical Center where she died soon after her arrival.  

The Alameda County Coroner said this afternoon that it was not ready to release the names of the deceased, whom a spokeswoman said were not a married couple.


Burning Man organizers can’t escape higher fees for big show

By MARTIN GRIFFITH, Associated Press Writer
Monday July 08, 2002

RENO — Organizers have secured a permit to stage the annual Burning Man counterculture festival on the Nevada desert, but won’t be able to dodge higher federal fees. 

Bureau of Land Management officials say they’re required by regulation to assess organizers a $4 per person fee to hold the popular event on the Black Rock Desert 120 miles north of Reno near Gerlach. 

Burning Man founder Larry Harvey last year urged the agency to lower the fee for the event known for its offbeat artwork, music and games, noting it was $2 before it doubled in 1999. 

Billed as a celebration of art and radical self-expression, the event is expected to draw about 28,000 people from at least 40 states and 20 countries over the week leading up to Labor Day. 

“It’s pretty clear in the regulations what we have to assess,” said Dave Cooper of the BLM’s Winnemucca field office. “We told them we have no flexibility and I think they understand it.” 

Organizers say the issue is not so much the fee itself but what the BLM does with the money. They complain the agency raked in $502,000 from the fee last year, but only spent about half on the festival itself. 

Organizers say BLM now is trying to pay less for law enforcement costs than they did last year. 

The event is staged by Black Rock City LLC, a non-profit based in San Francisco. 

“We’re not trying to get the regulations changed. That’s tilting at windmills,” said Burning Man spokeswoman Marian Goodell. “But at this point we can put pressure to make sure the money is being used for things it should be used for. 

“That money should be going to management of the event itself. We want more bang for our buck,” she said. 

Nearly all the fee revenue from the 17-year-old event goes to the BLM’s Winnemucca district, which manages the Black Rock Desert. 

Cooper said half of the money is spent on law enforcement and other festival-related costs, and the rest goes to the district’s budget. 

“It has definitely helped us financially,” Terry Reid, field manager for the Winnemucca office, told the San Francisco Chronicle. 

Organizers have discussed the fee in Washington, D.C. with aides of eight congressmen, including Sens. Barbara Boxer and Dianne Feinstein, both D-Calif., Sen. John Ensign, R-Nev., and Rep. Jim Gibbons, R-Nev. 

“They were sympathetic to our position,” Goodell said. “The issue is we are the largest special recreation permittee in the United States and this fee is extraordinarily large.” 

No other major issue surfaced during the permit process for the event this year, Cooper said. 

For a third straight year, the festival will be staged at the same spot seven miles north of Gerlach. About half of the site is in a newly created National Conservation Area designed to protect historic trails and unspoiled terrain in the area. 

BLM officials are warning participants that drug laws again will be enforced. 

Organizers are hoping a wet winter will help cut down on dust at the festival site. Streets will be watered to reduce dust during the event.


Mutant strains of HIV resistant to new drugs

The Associated Press
Monday July 08, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Mutant, drug-resistant strains of HIV are growing among San Francisco’s newly infected gay men, a new study suggests. 

The results of the five-year study show an increase from 2.5 percent in 1996 to 13 percent in 2000 in those tested who were resistant to two different classes of drugs. 

The study was conducted by researchers at the University of California, San Francisco. The results were presented at the 14th International AIDS Conference being held July 7-12 in Barcelona, Spain. 

“Some people are becoming infected with a virus that is much more difficult to treat,” said Dr. Frederick Hecht, the study’s co-author and a San Francisco General Hospital AIDS specialist. 

He said the study is important because patterns found among HIV-infected men in San Francisco often provide a blueprint for how the epidemic will evolve in other cities. 

The study found that resistance to the latest class of AIDS drugs developed quickly. The mutated viruses also are being spread by those who are undergoing treatment, the study found. 

However, Hecht cautioned interpreting the results to mean mutant viruses are more dangerous.


Cuba looks overseas to market biotech drugs

By Anita Snow and Paul Elias, The Associated Press
Monday July 08, 2002

With national economy in tatters, island nation’s
Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology Center
generates about $100 million per year
 

 

HAVANA – Inside modern towers that are a pride of Fidel Castro, scientists peer through huge microscopes at tiny proteins they hope to tailor to treat such major killers as AIDS, heart disease and cancer. 

More than 1,000 people work at Cuba’s Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology Center to save lives, ease human suffering — and generate more cash for their socialist country’s battered economy. 

Cuba’s biotech products and technology currently reach markets in more than 40 countries, generating about $100 million annually. 

Havana thinks it can do a lot better. 

It has ambitious plans to increase its drug profits by greatly expanding its overseas markets through the development of novel pharmaceuticals and the sale of other drugs. 

For years as a Soviet bloc adherent, Cuba was among nations that refused to acknowledge Western intellectual property laws, manufacturing its own generic versions of popular drugs. 

Now, Cuba is aiming to sell abroad the genetically engineered protein erythropoetin, or EPO, which is by far the best-selling biotechnology drug. 

EPO is used by kidney dialysis and chemotherapy patients as well as illegally by athletes to boost oxygen-laden red cells in the body. 

It accounted for $6 billion in sales last year for three corporate giants that own commercial rights throughout the industrialized world. But in developing nations, an increasing number of biotech drugs are being produced without any attempts to obtain licenses. 

With 1.3 billion people, China is the largest of these markets — and its potential for EPO sales is huge. 

Amgen Inc., which invented the drug, shares patent rights with Johnson & Johnson and Kirin Brewery of Japan in the most lucrative markets — the United States, Europe and Japan. 

But they have little influence over Cuba, whose well-developed biotechnology program already offers EPO for sale in Argentina, Brazil, India and other countries that don’t acknowledge most U.S. and European drug patents. 

“We are very careful about intellectual property laws,” said Blanca Tormo, a Cuban biotechnology executive. She said Cuba sells EPO only in countries where no entity has exclusive patent rights. 

U.S. patent holders consider this boisterous trade in generic drugs a challenge to their intellectual property. But from Cuba’s perspective, it’s merely good business, and consumers in developing countries are grateful to pay the lower prices. 

In joining the World Trade Organization last year, China agreed to abide by its intellectual property agreements. But those pacts contain mechanisms that can allow developing nations to circumvent patents — especially in pharmaceuticals — where concerns such as public health are deemed to override them. 

But Cuba is not alone in trying to enter China’s seductive EPO market. Amgen, Kirin, the small Canadian biotech company Dragon Pharmaceuticals Inc. and at least four Chinese companies are already selling EPO there. 

While Amgen charges upward of $36 a dose in the United States, the generic EPO sells for as low as $5 in China. U.S. patients each pay upward of $10,000 annually for Amgen’s product, which it calls Epogen. 

Cuba has plenty more to offer, of course, than generic EPO, including its novel biotech products: hepatitis B and meningitis B vaccines, a skin growth factor, interferons, thrombosis and heart attack medicines as well as AIDS treatments. 

It is seeking more partnerships with foreign companies in research into vaccines for AIDS, eight different kinds of cancer and cholera. 

Cuban officials, some of whom attended last month’s annual BIO 2002 industry conference in Toronto, said negotiations for new biotech trade and production agreements were under way with Brazil and nine other countries: Malaysia, Netherlands, Spain, Mexico, Venezuela, Vietnam, Ukraine, Germany, and the United States. Cuba has or is negotiating technology transfer agreements with 14 countries — most of them developing nations including India, Algeria and South Africa. 

Meanwhile, this island nation has produced more than 78 million doses of the hepatitis B vaccine. 

It has also licensed its meningitis B vaccine to Britain’s Glaxo SmithKline, which hopes to eventually sell it in the United States under an exemption to the Cuban trade embargo granted by the Clinton administration. 

In another North American partnership, Cuba is working with the small Canadian company YM Biosciences on trials of a head and neck cancer treatment. 

But not everyone is bullish on Cuban biotech. 

“The U.S believes that Cuba has at least a limited offensive biological warfare research and development effort,” John Bolton, the U.S. undersecretary of state for arms control, said in a May speech. “Cuba has provided dual-use biotechnology to other rogue states.” 

Bolton’s accusation was widely dismissed as unfair by scientists, by Castro himself and by former President Jimmy Carter, whose visit to the island it directly preceded. 

In fact, Cuban biotechnology officials said Bolton unintentionally gave their program an international publicity boost. 

“That man did us a favor,” Tormo said. “Now, everybody is taking a good look at our biotechnology programs.”


After big buzz, chip maker Transmeta struggles

By Matthew Fordahl, The Associated Press
Monday July 08, 2002

Secretive “Intel-killer” has been plagued by delays, slow acceptance 

 

SAN JOSE– For nearly five years during the high-tech boom, engineers at a small start-up secretly cobbled together a new microprocessor that promised to turn the PC world upside down. 

Rumors mounted as the company, Transmeta Corp., maintained silence but hired talent such as Linux luminary Linus Torvalds while attracting investors including Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen. 

Finally, on Jan. 19, 2000, Transmeta unveiled a new Intel-compatible processor dubbed Crusoe that offered power savings, performance and low cost. 

Media and analysts hailed Transmeta as a potential Intel-killer, a product that could beat the semiconductor giant with small, cheap and energy-efficient chips. 

But in the more than 2 1/2 years since that flashy debut, the Silicon Valley upstart has faced more rough seas than its namesake, Daniel Defoe’s resourceful castaway. 

Despite praise for innovation and some acceptance by computer makers, especially in Japan, Crusoe has not been built into any U.S. manufacturers’ notebooks. And a second Crusoe offering with more power, the TM5800, was delayed for six months by production problems. 

The sour economy also softened demand. Revenues plunged, and Transmeta’s top job changed hands three times. Though its stock jumped as high as $45.61 after the initial public offering, it now trades at about $2 per share, down 95 percent. 

“At the moment, the problem isn’t the product,” said Martin Reynolds, an analyst at Gartner. “It’s figuring out exactly what to do with it, finding the market and making it a success.” 

Transmeta hitched itself to long-sought goals in the high-tech world — the need for performance computers that are both small and don’t drain electricity like water leaking from an old tin bucket. 

The result is a hybrid chip that shifts some of the workload of the microprocessor from the hardware to software, with obvious advantages: with fewer transistors, the Crusoe’s processors are smaller, allowing greater integration of components that previously required two or more chips. They don’t require a fan and can fit into small, nontraditional designs. 

More importantly, they require less power and are far more flexible than hard-wired CPUs like Intel’s Pentium or the Athlon made by Advanced Micro Devices Inc. They could also be reprogrammed to run software designed for non-Intel computers. 

Transmeta executives say their production problems are past, and the company is well-positioned to take advantage of trends toward low-power, high-performance and low-cost mobile computing. 

“We’re a young company,” said Matthew Perry, Transmeta’s chief executive. “It’s taken a little bit for the innovative spirits of (manufacturers) combined with the very innovative technology of Crusoe to get some really interesting devices. You’re just now seeing it.” 

Crusoe will be used in Hewlett-Packard Co.’s upcoming Evo PC tablet, a next-generation lightweight notebook that can be written on using a stylus, and in OQO Inc.’s “ultra personal computer,” which can run Windows XP Professional and still fit into a shirt pocket. 

The chip also is used in lightweight offerings by Sony, Fujitsu, Toshiba and NEC. 

But it’s not yet clear how much demand there is for small gadgets powerful enough that a full-fledged PC operating system can run on them. 

Transmeta shipped just 70,000 chips in the first quarter of this year, compared to Intel’s 35 million overall and 5 million in the mobile market, according to Mercury Research. 

“They do need to increase their unit volume to be a long-term concern,” said Dean McCarron, president of Mercury Research. 

Transmeta, which reports its latest financial results later this month, declined to estimate when it might become profitable. 

It had $216 million in cash at the end of the first quarter of 2002 and reported, for the six months ending March 29, a net loss of $80.6 million on sales of just $5.6 million. 

As it prepares its latest Crusoe, the TM6000, Transmeta faces even stiffer competition from Intel, which is now also pursuing low-power chips, a niche it had largely ignored until Crusoe. 

Some analysts believe Transmeta’s mistake was to take on Intel. 

Within a month of Crusoe’s launch, Intel made low-cost mobile Celeron processors available. More competitive offerings followed, with Intel launching a dozen different chips on a single day last October. 

“It was quite easy for Intel” to reduce the clock speed on its chips and thus decrease their power requirements to come up with products that could compete with the Crusoe, McCarron said. 

And because of their unique design, Crusoe-based PCs only met, or trailed, in performance compared to the competition in devices built to run with Intel or AMD’s chips, said Eric Ross, a semiconductor analyst at Investec Inc. 

“Essentially, they have designed a novel processor that doesn’t run the Intel architecture natively,” he said. “They emulate it in software. So there’s an overhead cost built into it.” 

Additionally, some Crusoe-based computer makers shrunk batteries or added power-hungry extras that negated the power-savings from Transmeta’s processors, which are not among the computer components that consume the most energy. 

Meanwhile, Intel and AMD continue to improve the power, performance and price of their mobile offerings. 

“Intel and AMD have been cascading their most advanced technology down to the lowest-end products,” Ross said. “Transmeta’s a very small player that might get crushed as they get more price competitive with each other, particularly at the low end.”


Dot-com shutdown pace slows, signaling shakeout is ebbing

The Associated Press
Monday July 08, 2002

NEW YORK – In a sign that the Internet sector may be nearing the end of its brutal shakeout, the number of shutdowns and bankruptcies by dot-com companies in the first half of this year fell 73 percent from the same period last year, a new report from Webmergers.com shows. 

At least 93 Internet companies closed their doors or filed for bankruptcy protection in the first six months of 2002, down from 345 such casualties during the same period last year, according to the San Francisco research firm that has been keeping a tally of shutdowns. 

June, which had 13 shutdowns, marked the sixth consecutive month in which the number of shutdowns came in at less than 20. That’s a considerable contrast from the 16-month period preceding January, when casualties averaged 44 a month. 

Since January 2000, when the Internet froth was at its peak, at least 862 dot-com companies have failed, according to Webmergers.com data. 

E-commerce and content companies — many of which were business-to-consumer concerns that were quick fatalities during the first wave of the Internet shakeout — dominate the Internet company failures to-date. 

Of the 862 shutdowns, 368, or 43 percent, are e-commerce companies, while content companies have a tally of 217, or 25 percent. Infrastructure, Internet access and professional-services companies account for 16 percent, 10 percent and 6 percent of shutdowns, respectively. 

Over the past two months, shutdowns were dominated by Internet-content providers, infrastructure companies, Internet-services providers, and other providers of dial-up and broadband Internet-access service.


Suspect steals LAPD squad car, chase ends in fatal shooting

The Associated Press
Monday July 08, 2002

LOS ANGELES – A man allegedly knocked an officer down and drove off in his squad car, then fought with several other officers on a freeway before police fatally shot him, authorities said Sunday. 

The incident began when two officers approached the man to conduct a drug investigation in South Los Angeles on Saturday evening, said Lt. Horace Frank. As one of the officers got out of their squad car, the man ran up to him, punched him and knocked him down. 

A fight and gunbattle involving both officers ensued, and the suspect managed to jump into the car and drive away, Frank said. 

The man was then stopped on the Harbor Freeway near downtown. He struggled with officers and disobeyed orders, and they tried to use beanbag rounds and a taser gun to subdue him, Frank said. Police shot and killed the man when they saw him grabbing at one officer’s gun. 

The man’s identity was not immediately determined. 

An unnamed officer was shot in the wrist and underwent surgery. The officer who was knocked down in the initial encounter received a minor hand injury. 

The shooting forced closure of the freeway in both directions for several hours, causing a backup that stretched for miles.


On the Kings River, more power would stop running the rapids

By Mark Sherman, The Associated Press
Monday July 08, 2002

Popular river rafting locale could be bottled up by proposed dam that would hold in 228 billion gallons of water 

 

TRIMMER – Soaked by 58-degree snow melt, the rafters share a group high-five, then slap their paddles in unison in the Kings River. 

No one has gone into the drink in their run through the river’s most challenging rapid, Banzai. 

Such moments explain why people pay more than $100 to spend a few hours on the river. Whitewater rafting is a thriving business on this river that descends unimpeded from the Sierra Nevada. 

Less than two hours from Fresno, this section of the Kings is among the state’s more popular rafting destinations. It supports three outfitters during a season that lasts from early spring to midsummer in average years. 

Plans that have been studied off and on for 40 years would stop the rafting excursions. A proposed dam would flood the river canyon and turn the rapids to a placid lake that could hold 228 billion gallons of water to supply farms and households, and generate power. 

Legislation recently introduced in Congress by Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., would protect the 11-mile stretch of the Kings and 21 other California rivers from dams and other developments. The bill also would give “wilderness” designation to 2.4 million acres of California land, restricting mining and logging. 

William McGinnis, owner of one of the Kings River outfitters, mixes his advocacy for protecting the river with instructions to the three paddlers in the raft he is guiding. 

“Why would you ever want to destroy this?” McGinnis says, pointing out a large granite outcropping high above the river. 

McGinnis, 55, has run Whitewater Voyages for 27 years. He lives in the Bay Area, but eagerly agrees to make the trip to take an Associated Press reporter on a tour of the river. 

Upstream, as it courses through Kings Canyon National Park, the river gained “wild and scenic” status in 1987. Downstream is Pine Flat Dam, built nearly 50 years ago to generate power and regulate water supplies in the Central Valley. Pine Flat Lake, the reservoir created by the dam, also is alive with recreational boaters on a recent hot, sunny weekend. 

But the portion of the river used by whitewater rafters was not protected because of the possibility of building a dam at Rodgers Crossing, a couple of miles north of where the outfitters have campgrounds and parking areas for their customers. 

A compromise reached 15 years ago ultimately would require Congress to approve building the dam, which would cost around $600 million, according to the current estimates. 

The compromise provides ample protection, say Rep. Cal Dooley, D-Hanford, and David Orth, general manager of the Kings River Conservation District. 

“It is unlikely that you ever will build the project on the Kings River,” said Dooley, who opposes including the Kings River in the legislation. “But in legislation that would preclude it in perpetuity, the harm is that you then have totally precluded any option in the future to really revisit this.” 

Orth, who said he had a lot of fun on his two outings on the river, said the water district has no plans to build the dam at the moment. During last year’s energy crisis, staff did rough calculations on the costs of generating electricity at the proposed dam, then concluded the benefits were too small, he said. 

Orth estimated it would take at least 15 years to get necessary go-aheads from state and federal regulators. 

“I think we recognize today’s political reality, but we’re not willing to accept that it’s the reality for ever more,” Orth said. “I was reminded by board members that at one time, Pine Flat Dam was thought to be politically unfeasible.” 

That kind of talk motivates McGinnis and other members of California’s Wild Heritage Campaign. While there are a handful of active logging and mining proposals in California forests, Boxer’s bill mainly is an effort to kill tomorrow’s development plans in the state’s forests and on its rivers. 

Both sides cite California’s projected population growth. Boxer wants to preserve recreation; opponents want to be able to supply water and power when more than 50 million people live in California in the next 20 years. 

The prospects for her legislation and two companion bills in the House of Representatives are dim this year. Boxer hopes merely to have a hearing on the legislation by the end of the year in the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, Corey Brown, a Boxer spokeswoman, said. 

Boxer has said she plans to reintroduce the bill in the next Congress, which begins in January, and attempt to pass it in pieces. 

She has yet to secure the support of her fellow California Democrat, Sen. Dianne Feinstein, who is seeking input from interested parties around the state, spokesman Howard Gantman said. 

McGinnis’ company tries to capitalize on the thrills of the river trip to get clients to offer Feinstein their views. 

His raft is one of seven being used by emergency room workers who have driven more than seven hours from San Diego for an overnight stay that includes two trips down the river and meals. 

Just before the final rapid, Rooster Tail, the boats draw near along the river bank, the group grateful for the sliver of shade beneath a narrow bridge. 

McGinnis launches into his talk about protecting the river for all time. “For those of you who want to do something about it, you’re in luck. We have pens and paper for you to write a letter to Sen. Feinstein telling her you want to protect the river,” McGinnis says. 

The brief lecture complete, McGinnis guides his boat through the rousing finale, which must be what it feels like to take a quick trip through a washing machine — wash, rinse and spin all in one.


Thousands of motorcycle fans gather in Hollister

By William Schiffman, The Associated Press
Monday July 08, 2002

Fourth of July weekend rally draws hordes of bikers and police after April rally in Nevada left three dead 

 

HOLLISTER – Tens of thousands of motorcycle fans jammed into this sleepy farm town Saturday for a Fourth of July holiday weekend rally that recalled one of the pastime’s darkest hours. 

With warm weather expected to push into the 90s, tattooed and leather-clad bikers filled the narrow sidewalks, jostling with goggle-eyed tourists as they snapped up souvenirs, hot dogs and beer or just watched as roaring motorcycles cruised the town’s main drag. 

Hollister’s population swells from 36,000 to 100,000 or more with the rally crowd. Saturday’s crowd was estimated as one of the largest in the event’s five-year history. 

Every inch of curb for blocks on San Benito Street was taken up with gleaming motorcycles parked side by side. Two more rows of bikes were parked down the center of the two-lane blacktop, which was closed to all but motorcycle traffic. 

An army of officers, including local police, California Highway Patrol officers and San Benito County sheriff’s deputies, were on hand to make sure the weekend didn’t turn into a repeat of violence between the Hells Angels and the Mongols biker clubs that left three dead at a rally in Laughlin, Nev., in April. 

Brett Lackey of Martinez worked one of the souvenir booths and soaked up the sun with family and friends Saturday. He said business traffic was brisk, despite talk of violence that has rumbled since the Nevada incident. 

“After what happened in Laughlin, people get nervous,” Lackey said. “There were rumors going around that there might be a showdown, but it has been really peaceful and nice.” 

John Kempf of Hanford also dismissed notions that the event might turn violent. 

“There were rumors, but we didn’t care,” Kempf said. 

In front of Johnny’s Bar & Grill, a life-size image of a young, leather-clad Brando as he appeared in the film “The Wild One” greeted hordes of thirsty riders. 

“At first it would seem like a strange thing to celebrate the original Hollister run, which led to the movie “The Wild One,” which gave motorcycling such a big black eye,” said Dave Edwards earlier in the week. Edwards is the editor of Cycle World, one of the most popular motorcycling magazines in the country. 

While some motorcycle events around the country were canceled after Laughlin, three major runs, in Nevada, Northern California and New Hampshire last month were trouble-free. 

City officials estimate the riders leave behind $6 million to $8 million over the three-day weekend event. 

Ellen Brown, executive director of the Hollister Independence Rally Committee, said the community’s charities depend on the rally for fund-raising, selling food and souvenirs. 

“We’ve been very lucky since Laughlin,” she said. “I really thought that was going to give a lot of ammunition to people who were against the event. We got two negative letters.” 

In hopes of limiting problems, the city passed ordinances banning cans or bottles on the streets and outlawing the carrying of knives over 4 inches long. 

“We have zero tolerance for alcohol violations,” said police Capt. Bob Brooks. “We want to make sure they stay within the bounds of their fantasy and that alcohol doesn’t cloud the line between fantasy and reality.”


Experts see ways to cut contributions to global warming

By Jim Wasserman, The Associated Press
Monday July 08, 2002

SACRAMENTO – Smoother-rolling tires, quick-shifting transmissions and even credits for telecommuting. These are ways California may curb carbon dioxide emissions if Gov. Gray Davis targets the nation’s largest vehicle fleet to fight global warming. 

Though California’s proposed war on tailpipes doesn’t begin until 2009, experts and automotive authorities say there are countless ways to wage it. They cite prospects for more hybrid gas-electric cars and engines that shut down at traffic lights. 

They also tout cleaner-burning natural gas. 

But first Davis must sign the contentious global warming bill that narrowly passed the Legislature last week. The bill proposes the nation’s first state government crusade against carbon dioxide in vehicle exhaust. 

Davis has said “in all probability,” he’ll sign the bill, which triggered bitter opposition from global automakers. They call it a “backdoor” attempt to force higher fuel mileage from more than 2 million cars and trucks sold annually in California. Fewer than 13 percent now get more than 30 miles per gallon, according to the California Motor Car Dealers Association. It also opposes the bill. 

The legislation by Assemblywoman Fran Pavley, D-Agoura Hills, requires the California Air Resources Board to write regulations by 2005 to “achieve the maximum feasible reduction of greenhouse gases.” 

A consortium of 13 American, European and Japanese automakers, the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers, is now vowing to explore “any option” to block the bill if it becomes law, including lawsuits, a public referendum or new legislation next year. Industry lobbyists have long maintained that no technology exists to remove carbon dioxide, a natural nontoxic byproduct of internal combustion, from vehicle exhaust. 

But environmentalists, exulting in their narrow legislative victory, claim the state has plenty of options to rein in vehicle emissions — and hope other states follow its lead. 

“There are a lot of things that are really easy,” says Julia Levin, California policy coordinator for Massachusetts-based Union of Concerned Scientists. “There are straightforward no-brainers.” 

Among suggestions are financial incentives for fuel-efficient tires that increase mileage by 5 to 8 percent, and greater use of natural gas fuels to cut carbon dioxide emissions by 20 percent. 

“There are continuously variable transmissions that shift through large number of gears and smoother transmissions that are not on the market, but are on the shelf,” offers Russell Long, director of the Bluewater Network, the San Francisco-based environmental group that sponsored the bill. 

“It may be slightly more expensive,” he says, “but not much.” 

Jerry Martin, spokesman for the Air Resources Board, which would write regulations to implement the law, says automakers won’t have to invent new technology. He cites technical improvements already in motion to make cars cleaner and more efficient. Among them: variable cylinder valve timing to cut carbon dioxide emissions about 5 percent and cylinders that stop when unnecessary to keep the vehicle moving — cutting emissions up to 6 percent. 

“It’s not so much that it will demand new inventions and force the industry to do a lot that it hadn’t planned on doing,” Martin says. “It would be more like speeding up the evolution of what is happening already.” 

At Torrance-based Toyota Motor Sales USA, officials are banking on plans to sell 300,000 hybrid gasoline-electricity vehicles a year worldwide by 2005. Many of those would land in California, a company spokesman says. 

“That’s one very obvious way that Toyota plans to deal with fuel efficiency and lower emissions levels,” says John Hanson, Toyota’s national product news manager. Many of those cars already get up to 50 miles per gallon, he says. 

Hanson says the next generation of hybrid vehicles, expected before 2009, will raise fuel mileage even higher, even for larger vehicles such as sedans and mid-size sport utility vehicles. 

American Honda Motor Co. also touts its fuel efficiency as a primary tool to reduce carbon dioxide emissions. 

“Honda has the highest average fuel economy of any major manufacturer,” says Ed Cohen, the firm’s Washington, D.C.-based vice president of industry and government relations. 

Cohen notes numerous other ways to trim emissions and fuel burning, including lightweight materials to cut weight, four-valve cylinders to cut fuel consumption, integrated starter-generators that shut off the engine at traffic stops and bigger batteries to run the vehicle’s “amenities,” while drawing less power from the engine. 

General Motors Corp. referred calls to the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers. 

More reductions will come from trimming nitrous oxide emissions — 300 times stronger than carbon dioxide — from catalytic converters designed to curb smog. 

“My guess is in newer cars emissions are going to be lower,” says Tom Durbin, assistant research engineer at the Center for Environmental Research and Technology at the University of California, Riverside. 

Solutions that aren’t in the mix include new taxes on gasoline or sport utility vehicles. The Air Resources Board also can’t force carmakers to sell lighter vehicles, require lower speed limits or make Californians drive less. Those bans were added to the bill to undercut an auto industry advertising blitz that suggested all were possibilities. 

Levin admits that California’s efforts will trim less than 1 percent of the world’s “greenhouse gases” which contribute to global warming. Even in California, she says, new emission limits won’t keep up with dramatic growth projections for driving and fuel consumption in the years to come. 

The California Energy Commission reports gasoline demand could rise to 20 billion gallons yearly by 2020, compared to more than 14 billion gallons annually today. 

“Nobody’s talking about reversing that and getting below today’s level,” Levin says. “Nobody’s talking about reversing the trend. They’re just to slow the growth.”


Man sues former LA bishop for 19 years of alleged sex abuse

The Associated Press
Monday July 08, 2002

LOS ANGELES – A 47-year-old man sued a former Roman Catholic bishop, who was forced to resign in a 1999 sex scandal, for alleged sex abuse that began when he was an altar boy in 1968 and continued for nearly two decades, it was reported Saturday. 

The Superior Court lawsuit was filed Friday by John Manly, a Costa Mesa attorney, who represents the unidentified man, whose name was not part of the civil claim. Manly’s client alleges the molestation began while he was a sixth-grade altar boy at St. Matthias Church in Huntington Park when he allegedly was forced to take a shower with the bishop after playing basketball. The amount of money being sought was undetermined. 

At 17, the plaintiff alleges, the bishop began paying him for various sexual acts, and he continued the relationship after being named spiritual director of the now-closed Queen of Angels Seminary in San Fernando Valley in 1985. 

The suit against G. Patrick Ziemann, 60, who now lives in an Arizona monastery, claims the relationship went on until Ziemann was named auxiliary bishop of Los Angeles in 1987, the Los Angeles Times said. 

Ziemann worked under then-Archbishop Roger M. Mahony, overseeing parishes, schools and other church institutions in Ventura and Santa Barbara counties. In 1992, the Vatican named him bishop of Santa Rosa. 

Manly also claims that the archdioceses of Los Angeles and San Francisco recommended to Pope John Paul II that Ziemann be appointed bishop of Santa Rosa “in part as a reward for his agreement to engage with them in a conspiracy to conceal sexual abuse” within the church. 

A spokesman for the Los Angeles Archdiocese said the church hadn’t seen the lawsuit and could not comment. 

Neither Ziemann nor his attorney could be reached by the Times for comment late Friday. 

Ziemann stepped down as Santa Rosa bishop in 1999 after a priest filed a lawsuit alleging sexual battery, forced oral copulation and abuse of authority. Father Jorge Hume Salas claimed the bishop forced him into a two-year sexual relationship in exchange for withholding from police evidence of Salas’ admitted theft of church collection money. 

Ziemann’s lawyers said that the affair was consensual and that Salas filed the suit after seeking a secret $8-million settlement. The Santa Rosa diocese agreed on a $535,000 settlement payment 10 months later.


Gifted students could go straight to college

By Jessica Brice, The Associated Press
Monday July 08, 2002

California’s budding geniuses can attend community college without going through high school 

 

SACRAMENTO – Eleven-year-old Levi Clancy wasn’t happy in public schools with kids his own age. Spending time in an intensive college-level chemistry class, however, is what he calls a good time. 

He is part of a growing number of highly gifted kids in California who are opting out of traditional public schools – where they complain of being teased and harassed – in exchange for more challenging college courses. 

Levi Clancy, who was taunted by other students, says he decided to attend community college because he was depressed at public school. 

So far, it’s been an uphill battle for Levi Clancy, who started taking classes at Santa Monica College when he was seven. 

“When I first showed up at the college with my son, they laughed at me,” said mother Leila Levi, who complains there are very few public school programs for highly gifted kids. 

Although Levi Clancy’s IQ measures around 150 – the average community college student ranks at 116 – school officials said he wasn’t old enough for college courses, she said. 

Through a series of lawsuits, Leila Levi was able to get her son out of public school and into a two-year college, but only if she went with him as a chaperone. 

Four years later, Levi Clancy says he is ready to move on in pursuit of his bachelor’s degree. He already has his eye on UCLA, wants to become a biological medical engineer and dreams of curing cancer, but universities won’t consider him because he’s too young. 

“They say 13,” Leila Levi said. “So we’re just going to hang out for a while.” 

Sitting back and doing nothing, however, has not been Leila Levi’s style. When they said her son couldn’t take the high school exit exam until he was 16, she bugged the school until they let him take the test at age 10. When they said her son couldn’t go to college, she sued and won. 

“Children in California are only entitled to an education at age level,” she said. “It’s ludicrous. We need to enable our brightest citizens to change the world, not hold them back.” 

Now, Leila Levi is sponsoring two bills to help other highly gifted kids test out of high school and receive a publicly funded education at community college. 

Roughly 408,000 California students were identified as gifted in California last year. Of those students, up to 60,000 students are highly gifted. 

A bill authored by Assemblywoman Lynne Leach, R-Walnut Creek, would nix the age requirement for the high school exit exam, allowing kids with an IQ above 150 to take the test regardless of their age. The other bill, authored by Assemblyman Jay La Suer, R-La Mesa, would provide financial assistance to help with tuition and books. 

Both bills, AB2626 and AB2607, stalled in the Senate Education Committee because of concerns that the kids may not be mature enough to handle a college atmosphere. The bills are expected to be heard by the committee in August after a possible amendment is added to allow community colleges to require chaperones. 

Levi Clancy said students at Santa Monica College showed him greater respect, which made the transition easier. 

“People are really nice to me. We are academic peers,” he said. “In elementary school, they were only my age peers. I was singled out.” 

“The thing is, if you’re unhappy in elementary school and happy at a college, in my opinion you should be able to go to college,” he said. 

Frank Quiambao, president of Los Angeles College, said he expects more colleges to design programs that tailor to the needs of gifted kids. 

“Because they are profoundly gifted, everybody thinks they have it made,” Quiambao said. “But these kids are forgotten. They are overlooked.” 

A pilot program at the college, which starts in August, will help kids ages five through 14 adjust to college life. Quiambao said it will give the kids a challenging academic setting while also giving them with a chance to socially interact with their peers. 

“Community colleges are supposed to respond to the need of the communities they serve,” he said. “We have to develop their talent at an early age to maximize their potential. One of these kids could be the doctor that cures cancer or Alzheimer’s.”


FBI still searching for motive in LA airport shooting

By Sandra Marquez, The Associated Press
Monday July 08, 2002

LOS ANGELES – The government had started deportation proceedings in 1996 against the Egyptian immigrant who gunned down two people at Los Angeles International Airport. But the following year, he gained U.S. residency because of his wife, officials said Saturday. 

It wasn’t clear what caused the Immigration and Naturalization Service to reject Hesham Mohamed Hadayet’s first petition for permanent residency, INS spokesman Francisco Arcaute said. 

The deportation process was started after that rejection, then was stopped when Hadayet gained residency in 1997 through his wife, Hala, who had received an immigration visa through the Department of States’ Diversity Lottery Program, Arcaute said. 

Hadayet’s uncle, Hassan Mostaffa Mahfouz, told The Associated Press in Egypt that Hadayet had only about a year remaining before he qualified for U.S. citizenship. 

Hadayet was happy in the United States, Mahfouz said. 

“I don’t believe what happened,” he said. “I felt that he could not do that.” 

On the Fourth of July, Hadayet was the fourth person in line at the ticket counter for El Al, Israel’s national airline, when he began firing, killing two people and wounding three others, authorities said. He fired off 10 or 11 bullets before he was shot dead by a security guard. 

His wife and sons, Adam, 8, and Omar, 14, were visiting family in Egypt at the time. 

FBI special agent Richard Garcia said Saturday it still wasn’t known if Hadayet harbored anti-Israel feelings, as a former employee claimed he did, and may have been motivated by hate. 

Authorities had also not ruled out terrorism as a motive, and they were also considering the possibility that Hadayet was despondent over his personal or business affairs. Israeli officials said they would consider the attack an act of terror unless it was proven otherwise. 

“We are pursuing all three motives,” Garcia said. 

What is clear, Garcia said, is that Hadayet walked into the airport intending to kill. He was armed with a .45-caliber semiautomatic Glock pistol, a 9 mm handgun and a 6-inch knife. 

The FBI searched the family’s apartment and took a computer, books, binders and other material, but released no details Saturday of what they contained. 

Results from an autopsy conducted Saturday found that Hadayet died of a gunshot wound to the abdomen, said Dr. James Ribe of the Los Angeles County Coroner’s Office. Shooting victim Yaakov Aminov died of a gunshot wound to the abdomen. The other shooting victim, Victoria Hen, who worked behind the El Al ticket counter, died of a gunshot wound to the chest, Ribe said. 

Abdul Zahav, a man who said he worked for Hadayet until he was fired two years ago, said Hadayet once told him he hated all Israelis. “He kept all his anger inside him,” Zahav said. 

A bumper sticker on Hadayet’s front door read, “Read the Koran.” However, Hadayet was apparently an unknown in the mosques attended by most of Southern California’s 1 million Arab Americans. 

After the FBI released his name as the gunman, members of the Muslim Public Affairs Council in Los Angeles began calling members and mosques in suburban Orange County where he lived. No one recognized his name. 

“It’s a very bizarre case because this man is unknown to the community and was not part of any organization,” said Salam Al-Marayati, director of the council. “At this point it just seems like the work of a deranged individual.” 

Police records in Irvine show officers had little contact with Hadayet over the 10 years he lived there. Police were called to his apartment once for a domestic dispute in May 1996, three months after his petition for permanent residency was rejected. They found Hadayet and his wife had been in a “physical confrontation,” but no charges were filed. 

The only other Irvine police files on Hadayet were when he was robbed in 1997 while driving a cab and when he was listed as a witness and victim in a fraud case reported in 2001. 

Also Saturday, authorities evacuated 700 people from an area near the scene of the shooting for about an hour because they found an unattended bag. A broken bottle of vodka was found inside a novelty package shaped like an instrument case that had the words “hunting rifle” printed on it, said Los Angeles Police Officer John Crispins.


Jackson says recording industry cheats minorities artists

By VERENA DOBNIK, Associated Press Writer
Monday July 08, 2002

NEW YORK — Multiplatinum singer Michael Jackson, already feuding with his record company, charged Saturday that the recording industry was a racist conspiracy that turns profits at the expense of performers — particularly minority artists. 

“The recording companies really, really do conspire against the artists — they steal, they cheat, they do everything they can,” Jackson said in a rare public appearance. ”(Especially) against the black artists.” 

Jackson, 43, who began his recording career as a child, spoke at the Rev. Al Sharpton’s National Action Network in Harlem. Sharpton and attorney Johnnie Cochran Jr. recently formed a coalition to investigate whether artists are being financially exploited by record labels. 

He also singled out Sony Music chairman Tommy Mottola, saying he was “mean, he’s a racist, and he’s very, very, very devilish.” Jackson also accused Mottola of using “the n-word” when speaking about an unidentified black Sony artist. 

Sony Music issued a statement calling Jackson’s comments “ludicrous, spiteful and hurtful. It seems particularly bizarre that he has chosen to launch an unwarranted and ugly attack on an executive who has championed his career ... for many, many years.” 

Sony produced Jackson’s last album, “Invincible,” which has had disappointing sales despite an estimated $25 million in promotion. The singer’s fans say Sony didn’t do enough to launch the album. Others in the industry say sagging sales were indicative of Jackson’s declining appeal. 

Jackson mentioned several black artists as victims of the industry, including James Brown, Mariah Carey and Sammy Davis Jr.


More signs could make cyclists safer

By Chris Nichols, Daily Planet Staff
Saturday July 06, 2002

Berkeley will see more of those bright purple Bicycle Boulevard signs soon if a resolution is passed by the City Council Tuesday night. 

The resolution, recommended by the office of the city manager, is a part of the Berkeley Bicycle Plan, a program adopted in April 2000 to make the city safer for cyclists. 

“It’s a small step forward but the signs are an essential component to changing the atmosphere and attitudes on the streets,” said Councilmember Kriss Worthington.  

Cyclists in Berkeley have long complained that the city has not done enough to support a bike-friendly environment. 

Currently, signs are posted on only one of the city’s seven designated Bicycle Boulevards, Hillegass Avenue in south Berkeley. If the resolution is passed, as is expected, signs will be installed on the remaining streets, including Ninth Street, California and King streets, Milvia Street, Virginia Street, Channing Way and Russell Street. 

The Bicycle-Friendly Berkeley Coalition and the Pedestrian Safety Task Force say the signs are a start but that more work needs to be done. The groups argue that additional traffic-calming measures such as adding traffic circles need to be taken.  

“There is a great desire to have the Bicycle Boulevards expanded and for changing the cycling environment in the city,” said Peter Hillier, assistant city manager for transportation.  

Hillier says that installing the signs and adding additional markings to the boulevards are the highest priorities of the office under the Bicycle Plan. In addition to the signs, plans are under way to add arrows and stencil work to the pavement of the boulevards, directing and informing cyclists and drivers alike. 

While the signs indicate a step forward in the process of making the city safer for cyclists, Hillier realizes that signs alone will not satisfy bike advocates.  

“Our next question is how to introduce other traffic-calming elements to enhance the cycling environment,” he said. Ironically, the most effective method of slowing motorists down – speed bumps – is banned in Berkeley.  

Members of Berkeley’s disabled community argue that speed bumps are dangerous and can cause pain to elderly and disabled people when they ride over the bumps. 

The moratorium on speed bumps, however, has led officials to consider traffic circles placed in the middle of intersections that would force motorists to slow as they drove the circle. According to Hillier, one such traffic circle at the intersection of Ellsworth and Derby Streets has been a success so far in south Berkeley.  

Officials have also considered bulb-outs, which extend a sidewalk or plaza in a bulb-like shape into the street. Bulb-outs create a shorter distance for pedestrians to travel when crossing the street and cause traffic to move more slowly. 

Most local residents expressed at least some concern related to bike safety.  

“I try to avoid certain streets like Telegraph and just take the side streets. But I don’t see a big need for safety measures right now,” said Daniel, a Berkeley resident who did not want to give his last name. 

According to UC Berkeley student Erica Holt, more bike lanes and signals for bike riders would be an improvement. “If they made some changes I’d feel more comfortable riding my bike as a form of transportation. Right now I’m scared to ride my bike in Berkeley,” she said. 

Supporters of the Bicycle Plan hope to eventually provide cyclists with a way to travel from north to south and east to west through the city on a path separate from cars. 

Efforts have been made to discuss bicycle safety issues with the Berkeley Police Department, says Worthington. According to the BPD, pamphlets have been produced and workshops have been held in the past on bicycle safety. 

Though the total cost of the sign project is estimated at $51,450, the city has received grants of $17,150 from the Bay Area Air Quality Management Fund and $17,150 from the Alameda County Congestion Management Agency Fund. 

 

 

 

 

 


Discover Berkeley's network
of pedestrian pathways

By Susan Cerny, Special to the Daily Planet
Saturday July 06, 2002

Berkeley, unlike newer cities, was designed during the heyday of the electric streetcar, before going places meant driving a car. Berkeley's hilly residential subdivisions were designed during the first decade of the 20th century when the convenience of nearby streetcar service was an important amenity. In these hillside locations the standard grid pattern of blocks and streets was abandoned for winding roads that complimented and enhanced the undulating hillsides. To make a trip to the streetcar lines more direct, a network of pedestrian pathways, some with stairs, was created.  

The pathways remain today although many are almost hidden from view by overhanging foliage or lack of signage, and some remain unimproved and overgrown. A group of Berkeley residents interested in maintaining and improving the pathways created the Berkeley Path Wanders Association several years ago. The association has just published a map of Berkeley's 136 paths, steps and walkways and it is available in stores for $3.95. The association also sponsors walking tours and they have a web site (www.berkeleypaths.org) where this information is available.  

A favorite walk for a late summer afternoon, especially as the sun begins to set, starts at Rose Walk and ends at the Rose Garden. Take the # 65 bus from downtown out Euclid Avenue to the bus stop at Rose Walk.  

Rose Walk is Berkeley's most beautiful pedestrian pathway. Although there are other classically designed walkways in Berkeley (Bancroft Steps and Orchard Lane, for example) no other walk achieves the great aesthetic success of Rose Walk. It is the only pedestrian pathway where the buildings were designed to create an ensemble, which integrates the walk with a planned development. 

Rose Walk was designed by Bernard Maybeck and completed in 1913 by donations from the neighbors. After the 1923 fire the property bordering the walk was purchased and developed by Dr. and Mrs. Frank Gray, who hired architect Henry Gutterson to design houses, duplexes, and cottages on lots adjacent to, and bordering on, Rose Walk. The complex was built between 1924 and 1936. The walk and cottages are Berkeley Landmarks.  

Beginning at Euclid and Rose Walk climb the steps and walkway connecting Euclid with Le Roy Avenue. At Le Roy turn left and continue around the corner to the intersections of LeRoy, Rose Street and Tamalpais. Continue north on Tamalpais Road about 1/4 mile until it makes a sharp turn up hill. This is an area that did not burn in the 1923 fire and there are many brown shingle houses. On the left are Tamalpais Steps, indicated by a sign, which will take you steeply downhill where you will come out at Codornices Park. On the west side of the park is the only pedestrian tunnel in Berkeley. After going through the tunnel you will come out at the Berkeley Rose Garden where views of the setting sun are spectacular.  

 

Susan Cerny is author of Berkeley Landmarks and writes this in conjunction with the Berkeley Architectural Heritage Association. 


Here’s the story on Reddy

Marcia Poole
Saturday July 06, 2002

To the Editor: 

I read your story on Reddy Real Estate with great interest. I was able to locate some information from the Media Alliance web site regarding the Reddy holdings. The article, titled “The Worst Slumlords in the Bay Area”, was posted over a year and a half ago, before the Reddys bought many other Berkeley apartment houses which now suffer from these same issues. The article is as follows: 

“Lakireddy Bali Reddy’s name hit the front page of Bay Area newspapers late last year when he and his son were indicted for trafficking two teenagers from India for sex. But Reddy’s outrageous conduct is not limited to enslaving young women. His record as a landlord is equally atrocious. 

Reddy is the largest landlord in Berkeley, with real estate holdings valued at $60 million or more. He owns more than 50 residential and commercial buildings in Berkeley--more than twice as many rental units as any other landlord in Berkeley--and his family-run real estate firm, Reddy Realty, owns or controls more than 1,100 apartments throughout Alameda and Contra Costa counties. He also owns two Bay Area restaurants: Pasand Madras Indian Cuisine in Berkeley and Pasand Indian Cuisine in Santa Clara. 

Reddy’s history as a problem landlord in Berkeley has long attracted the attention of tenant attorneys, the Berkeley Rent Board, and others: Last February, the Berkeley City Council voted unanimously to further investigate alleged violations of housing and rent-control laws in buildings owned by Reddy; Reddy generates nearly four times as many complaints as any other landlord in Berkeley; over the past 15 years, the Reddy family has faced 50 lawsuits and small claims court actions, ranging from allegations of unfair rent charges and bogus owner move-ins to unsafe living conditions; Reddy tenants have complained to Berkeley rent board staff that Reddy does not return security deposits, especially to foreign students (many of his tenants are students at UC Berkeley), overcharges them, and provides poor or no building maintenance; and Reddy Realty makes more than five times as many errors on official forms than any other landlord in Berkeley. In Fall of 1999, the Rent Board sent mailings to all Reddy tenants informing them of their tenant rights.” 

There is another egregious problem regarding the City of Berkeley and Reddy Real Estate. One former Berkeley building inspector, Sam Derting, wrote a letter to the Judge who was presiding over Jayaprakash and Annapurna Lakireddy's criminal case and praised the Lakireddy family's closeness to God and personal hard work ethic & proudly extolled his friendship with Jayaprakash. When the Berkeley City Manager was advised about this and a request was made for a review of all past cases involving Mr. Derting's inspections of Reddy Real Estate holdings due to a conflict of interest, he refused. He stated that Mr. Derting no longer worked for the City and the City did not have the staff available to investigate possible overlooked violations. Mark one up for the Reddy Real Estate empire again. 

 

Marcia Poole 

Berkeley 


Internet animators star in a new medium

By Paul Glader, The Associated Press
Saturday July 06, 2002

Simple software tools can
create fine art images
 

 

SAN FRANCISCO — Joe Sparks is a minor celebrity to a subculture of college students and cubicle-dwellers who follow his “Radiskull and Devil Doll” toons from as far away as Japan. 

From an apartment full of music mixers and computers, he blends software animation tools with traditional programming, storytelling and music to create shows in the genre of “The Simpsons,” only these “webisodes” are native to the Internet. 

The dot-com bubble may have burst, but multimedia art like Sparks’ still thrives online. 

With simple tools, such as Flash from Macromedia Inc., programmer-artists can create original cartoons, build fine art images or design games, like “Pound Osama bin Laden in a boxing ring.” 

“Some little broke artist with a computer can dabble with art, music and movies now,” said Sparks, who in the past designed video games and played punk rock. 

The same type of software is also giving sizzle to corporate Web sites and powering so many e-commerce applications that people, perhaps without realizing it, frequently see demonstrations of Flash as they surf the Web. The creations have appeared in online greeting cards, music videos, art museum installations, even the intro to the Rosie O’Donnell TV show. 

Programmer Jonathan Gay began developing Flash in 1993 and sold his company, FutureWave, to Macromedia in 1996, where he still works. 

It’s easy to create original art online with a little time and patience, though the more complex projects, like cartoons, can take hours, he said. 

For struggling artists, the Internet has obvious appeal. 

“You can be a Vincent van Gogh of the Web and actually be known in your lifetime,” said Stewart McBride, president and founder of United Digital Artists, a New York company that trains artists to use the software. 

“Unlike being an unpublished novelist or underground painter,” he said, “you can distribute your work to millions.” 

Sparks’ success with “Radiskull and Devil Doll” is a prime example. 

He was working with the entertainment site AtomShockwave.com at the time, before he was laid off last summer, when he whipped up the story as a demo and put the rock ’n’ roll toon — which he wrote, narrated, animated and composed — on a Web site, telling a few colleagues to check it out. 

Word spread and his story line, based on the sophomoric foibles of a pair of lovable demons, was on its way to becoming an Internet hit. Sparks now gets about 50 e-mails a day from fans, some of whom send him photos of their Radiskull tattoos. 

“I never got quite a visceral first reaction to anything I have ever done,” said Sparks, who created the breakthrough CD-ROM video games “Total Distortion” and “Spaceship Warlock” in the 1990s. 

He said he doesn’t quite understand the appeal of his toons. 

“Joe has become kind of a cult hero for a lot of people,” said Scott Roesch, a vice president at AtomShockwave.com, which owns Sparks’s Radiskull cartoon and uses them to generate ad revenues. 

“We have this kind of coffee break phenomenon where people take a break, watch a movie or animation and then go back to work,” Roesch said. 

Sparks made eight episodes of Radiskull, but because AtomShockwave still owns the franchise, he’s moving on. 

The next project: “Dickey and Jackie,” a toon exploring a simply drawn world of preschoolers against a backdrop of rock music. 

People may hate it — he won’t know until he puts it online. But then again, popular appeal isn’t necessarily the point. 

“Hundreds of years ago, only kings could dabble in music and art,” Sparks said. “Now, there’s a lot of opportunity for people like me who are loners and like to chisel stuff out and share it with others.” 


Arts Calendar

Staff
Saturday July 06, 2002

 

Friday, July 5 

Free Early Music Group 

Singers needed for small group of 15th and 16th century music every Friday 

10 a.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center, Hearst at MLK Way. 

Contact Ann at 665-8863 

 

Saturday, July 13 

Barbara Dane 75th Birthday Concert 

7:30 p.m. 

Frieght and Salvage coffee house, 1111 Addison St. 

Jazz, blues, American folk from around the world 

548-1761 for ticket information 

 

Sunday, July 14 

Hal Stein Quartet  

4:30 p.m.  

Jazzschool, 2087 Addison Street € Berkeley 

845-5373, www.jazzschool.com 

$6-12  

 

Troy Lampkins Group 

4:30 p.m.  

Jazzschool 2087 Addison Street € Berkeley 

Groove-filled, groove-intense music 

845-5373, swing@jazzschool.com 

$6-12  

 

July 25 

Midsummer Motzart  

Festival Orchestra 

8 p.m. 

First Congregational Church 

2345 Channing Way 

Divertimento in D, Piano concerto #17, Symphony #38 “Prague” 

(415) 292-9624 for tickets 

$25-50 

 

Saturday, August 3 

Bata Ketu 

8 p.m.  

Alice Arts Center, 1428 Alice St. 

Oakland. 

Interplay of Cuban and Brazilian  

music and dance  

www.lapena.org 

$20 

 

“Red Rivers Run Through Us”  

Until Aug. 11,  

Wed. - Sun.  

Noon to 5 p.m. 

Berkeley Art Center,  

1275 Walnut St. 

Art and writing from Maxine Hong Kingston's veterans' writing group 

Reception, 2 to 4 p.m.  

644-6893 

 

From the Attic: Preserving  

and Sharing our Past 

Until July 26, Thur.-Sat. 1 to 4 p.m. 

Veterans Memorial Building 

1931 Center St. 

Exhibit shows the 'inside' of museum work 

848-0181 

Free 

 

The Creation of People’s Park 

Through Aug. 31, Mon.-Thur. 9 to 9 p.m., Fri. 9 to 5 p.m., Sat. 1 to 5 p.m. Sun. 3 to 7 p.m. 

The Free Movement Speech Cafe  

UC Berkeley campus 

A photo exhibition, curated  

by Harold Adler 

hjadler@yahoo.com 

Free 

 

Jan Wurm: Paintings and Drawings 

Mon. and Fri. 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tues.-Thurs. 8:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. 

Flora Hewlett Library at the Graduate Theological Union 

2400 Ridge Road 

649-1417 

 

Thursday, July 11 

“New Visions: Introductions 

'02” Reception 

Works from emerging Californian artists 

Reception, 6 to 8 p.m. Display up from July 3 to Aug. 10 

Pro Arts, 461 Ninth St. Oakland 

763-4361 

Free 

 

Saturday, July 20 

“First Anniversary  

Group Show”  

July 18 to Aug. 17 

Ardency Gallery, Aki Lot, 8th Street 

Reception, 5 to 8 p.m. 

13 local artists display work ranging from sculpture to mixed media 

836-0831 

 

Antony and Cleopatra 

Directed by Joy Meads 

June 15 to July 20,  

Thurs.-Fri. 8 p.m. 

La Vals Subterranean Theater  

1834 Euclid 

234-6046 for reservations 

$14 general, $10 student 

 

Abingdon Square  

Previews 16,18,19 at 8 p.m. Runs June 21 to July 6, Thurs. to Sat. 8 p.m. Sundays 7 p.m.  

Julia Morgan Theater for the Arts, 2640 College Ave. 

The Shotgun Players,  

directed by Shana Cooper 

704-8210 www.shotgunplayers.org 

$18 regular, $12 students, previews and Mondays - pay what you can. Opening Night $25\ 

 

Grease 

July 5-Aug. 10, Sunday matinees  

July 14,21,28 Aug. 4 

Contra Costa Civic Theater,  

951 Pomona Ave. El Cerrito 

Directed by Andrew Gabel 

524-9132 for reservations 

$17 general, $10 for under 16 and under 

 

 

Don Pasquale Opera 

July 13, 15, 17, 19 at 8 p.m.  

July 21 at 2 p.m. 

Dean Lesher Regional Center for the Arts, Walnut Creek 

From the Festival Opera  

Association, a comedy by  

Gaetano Donizetti about an arranged marriage 

www.festivalopera.com 

 

Benefactors 

July 18 to Aug. 18, Wed.-Sat. 8 p.m. Sun. 2 and 7 p.m. 

Previews: July 12-14 and 17 

Michael Frayn's comedy of two neighboring couple's interactions 

Aurora Theatre Company  

2081 Addison St. 

843-4822, www.auroratheater.org  

for reservations. $26 - $35  

 

The Shape of Things 

Sept. 13 to Oct. 20 

Aurora Theatre Company,  

2081 Addison St. 

Neil LaBute's love story  

about two students 

843-4822, www.auroratheater.org for reservations 

$26 - $35  

 

The Heidi Chronicles 

July 12 to Aug. 10 Fri. and Sat. 8 p.m. 

Live Oak Theater, 1301 Shattuck 

Actors Ensemble of Berkeley present Wendy Wasserstein’s play about change. 

528-5620 

$10 

 

A Thousand and One Arabian Nights 

July 12 to Sept. 28, Fri.-Sun. 8 p.m. Sun. 4 p.m. 

Forest Meadows Outdoor Amphitheater, Grand Avenue at the Dominican University, San Raphael 

Marin Shakespeare Company’s presents this classic story with original Arabic music. 

(415) 499-4488 for tickets 

$12, youth; $20 senior; $22 general 

 

Alarms and Excursions 

Nov. 15 to Dec. 22 

Aurora Theatre Company,  

2081 Addison St. 

Michael Frayn's comedy about the irony of modern technology 

843-4822, www.auroratheater.org for reservations 

$26 - $35  

 

Poetry Diversified 

1st and 3rd Tuesdays,  

7:30 to 9 p.m. 

World Ground Cafe,  

3726 Mac Arthur Blvd., Oakland 

Open mic and featured readers 

 

Boas Writing Group 

7:30 p.m. 

Cody's, 2454 Telegraph Ave. 

Stefani Barber, Jean Lieske  

and many more 

845-7852 

$2 

 

Saturday, July 6 

Bay Area Arts Coalition  

Poetry Reading 

3 to 5 p.m. 

West Berkeley Branch Library  

1125 University Ave. 

527-99055 

 

Wednesday, July 10 

Carmen Gimenez-Rosello,  

Dawn Trook 

7:30 p.m. 

Cody's, 2454 Telegraph Ave. 

845-7852 

$2 

 

Sunday, July 14 

M.L. Liebler and  

Country Joe McDonald 

Poetry and Music 

7:30 p.m. 

Cody's, 2454 Telegraph Ave. 

845-7852 

$2 

Wednesday, July 17 

Hannah Stein and Kevin Clark 

7:30 p.m. 

Cody's, 2454 Telegraph Ave. 

Authors of “Earthlight and In the Evening of No Warning.” 

845-7852 

$2 

 

Open Mike and Featured Poet 

7 to 9 P.M. First Thursdays and second Wednesdays each month  

Albany Library 1247 Marin Ave 

Thursday, July 11: Poets Tenesha Smith-Douglas and Judith Annenbaum. 

Second Wednesdays are a monthly Poetry Writing Workshop, led by Alison Seevak.  

526-3720 Ext. 19 

Free 

 

Friday and Saturday, July 5 and 6 

Brainwash Movie Festival 

9 p.m. 

Alliance for West Oakland Development Parking Lot, 1357 5th St. Across from W. Oakland BART 

Weird and unique short films and video festival 

(415) 273-1545 

$10 

 

Friday, July 5 

“Remember the Night”  

and “The Good Fairy” 

7:30 p.m. and 9:25 p.m., respectively. 

UC Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, 2575 Bancroft  

Preston Sturges' classic films 

 

Saturday, July 6 

“The Great McGinty” and  

“Christmas in July” 

McGinty at 4:30 and 8:30 p.m.; Christmas at 7 p.m. 

UC Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, 2575 Bancroft  

Preston Sturges' classic films 

 


Out & About Calendar

Staff
Saturday July 06, 2002


Saturday, July 6

 

 

Capoeira Batizado 

2 to6 p.m.  

Capoeira Arts Cafe 

2026 Addison, Berkeley 

A celebration of Capoeira with performances by local arts organization. 

For information: 666-1255, www.capoeiraarts.com 

Free 

 

The Great Rummage Sale 

10 a.m. to 4 p.m. 

Berkeley-East Bay Humane Society, 2700 Ninth Street (at Carleton) in Berkeley 

Warehouse full of household items, books, records, clothing, furniture, and lots more at great prices. All proceeds go to support of our shelter. 

845-7735 

 


Monday, July 8

 

Berkeley Gray Panthers Home Owners Meeting  

Monday, July 8th, 2002 at 3 p.m.  

Berkeley Gray Panthers Office,1403 Addison Street-behind University Avenue Andronico’s Super Market. 

Laurie Capitelli of Red Oak Realty runs down the options of selling homes 

All Welcome 

548-9696 or 486-8010 

Free 

 

Introduction to Accessible  

Software and Hardware  

6:30 to 8 p.m. 

Berkeley Public Library Electronic Classroom, 2090 Kittredge Street 

RSVP to 981-6121- Alan Bern, Special Services Coordinator 

 


Tuesday, July 9

 

Mother’s Morning Out 

10:30 a.m. to noon 

Upaya Center for Wellbeing 

478 Santa Clara Ave. 

Craniosacral Therapy for Infants and Children 

www.upayacenter.org 

Free 

 


Thursday, July 11

 

Great Sierra Backpacking  

Destinations 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo  

Karen Najarian of Sierra Wilderness Seminars presents slides from her more that 20 years exploring the Sierra Backcountry. 

For information: 527-4140 

Free 

 

What Do You Believe? Spiritual Lives of American Teenagers 

6:30 to 8:00 p.m. 

Ellen Driscoll Playhouse 

325 Highland Avenue, Piedmont  

Film presented by Piedmont diversity groups; discussion with filmmaker, Sarah Feinbloom.  

655-5552, or maudep@aol.com 

Free 

 

 


Friday, July 12

 

Celebration of Emma Goldman's Birthday  

8 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. 

Fellowship of Humanity Hall  

390 27th St  

An all-ages, alcohol-free party with live music, DJ, and dance lessons 

http://www.ebcaw.org  

$5 to $10 sliding scale  

 


Saturday, July 13

 

Peach / Stone Fruit Tasting 

Tasting & cooking demonstrations 

10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

Center Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way 

Free 

 

15th Anniversary Derby  

Street Farmers Market 

Live music and & stone-fruit and peach tasting 

Tasting & cooking demonstrations. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

Derby Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way  

Free 

Festival of New Versions  

of Classic Asian Games 

Noon to 5 p.m 

Dr. Comics and Mr. Games,  

4014 Piedmont Ave., Oakland  

Dr Comics and Mr Games Hosts Game a festival featuring two new versions of classic Asian board games 

601-7800 

 


Sunday, July 14

 

Hands-on Bicycle Repair  

11 a.m.to noon 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Learn from an REI bike technician basic bike repairs such as brake adjustments and fixing a flat. 

For information: 527-4140 

Free 

 

Family Health Day 

11 a.m. to 5 p.m. 

Fourth Street and University Avenue 

Explore health concerns in a family oriented environment 

Free 

 


Tuesday, July 16

 

Berkeley Camera  

Club Weekly Meeting 

7:30 p.m. 

Northbrae Community Church 

941 The Alameda 

Share slides, prints with other photographers 

525-3565 

Free 

Introduction to Accessible Software and Hardware  

10:30 a.m. to noon 

Berkeley Public Library Electronic Classroom, 2090 Kittredge Street 

RSVP to 981-6121. Alan Bern, Special Services Coordinator 

 


Wedneday, July 17

 

Doctors Without Borders 

Until July 18 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. 

UC Berkeley, Springer Gateway, West Entrance Crescent 

Interactive exhibit expalining medicines for people in developing countries; Film screenings 

www.doctorswithoutborders.org 

Free 

 


Thursday, July 18

 

Mystique of the Widerness 

7 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Phil Arnot presents slides from over 50 years of exploring such places as Alaska, New Zealand, the Sierra and the Rockies. 

For information: 527-4140 

 

Introduction to Accessible  

Software and Hardware  

3 to 4:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Public Library Electronic Classroom, 2090 Kittredge Street 

RSVP to 981-6121. Alan Bern, Special Services Coordinator 

 


Saturday, July 20

 

Emergency Preparedness  

Classes in Berkeley 

Earthquake Retrofitting: Learn how to strengthen your wood frame home. 

10 a.m. to 5 p.m. 

812 Page St. 

981-5605 

Free 

 


Thursday, July 2

 

California Landscapes:  

A Geologist's Perspective 

7 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

John Karachewski presents an educational slideshw on such amazing places as the Sierra Nevada, Coast Ranges the Great Valley and Cascades 

For information: 527- 4140. 

Free 

 


Saturday, July 27

 

Test Ride Kestrel Bicycles 

11 a.m. to 1 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Preston Sandusky of Kestrel, a premier manufacturer of high-end, carbon-fiber road and mountain bikes, intrduces their latest design. 

For information: 527-4140 

Free 

 

"Neon: The Living Flame" 

7:00 p.m.  

Alameda Museum  

2324 Alameda Ave.  

The Alameda Museum presents Michael Crowe, author, and neon artist Karl Hauser 

lecture by Michael Crowe 

748-0796 or 841-8489.  

Members free, nonmembers $5  

 


Sunday, July 28

 

Hands-on Bicycle Repair  

11 a.m. to noon 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Learn from an REI bike techician basic repairs such as brake adjustments and fixing a flat. 

For information: 527-4140 

Free 

 


Wednesday, July 31

 

Mountain Adventure Seminars:  

Introduction to Rock Climbing 

7 to 9 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

An introduction to rockclimbing including knot tieing, belaying and movement. 

For information: (209) 753-6556 

$115 REI members; $125 non-members 

 


Baseball legend Ted Williams dead at age 83

By Mike Branom, The Associated Press
Saturday July 06, 2002

Last .400 hitter dies after long battle with
strokes and congestive heart failure
 

 

CRYSTAL RIVER, Fla. – Ted Williams, the Boston Red Sox revered and sometimes reviled “Splendid Splinter” and baseball’s last .400 hitter, died Friday at age 83. 

Williams, who suffered a series of strokes and congestive heart failure in recent years, was taken Friday to Citrus County Memorial Hospital in Inverness where he was pronounced dead of cardiac arrest at 8:49 a.m., said hospital spokeswoman Rebecca Martin. 

He underwent open-heart surgery in January 2001 and had a pacemaker inserted in November 2000. 

“With the passing of Ted Williams, America has lost a baseball legend,” said President Bush, a former baseball owner. “Whether serving the country in the armed forces or excelling on the baseball diamond, Ted Williams demonstrated unique talent and love of country. 

“He inspired young ballplayers across the nation for decades and we will always remember his persistence on the field and his courage off the field. Ted gave baseball some of its best seasons – and he gave his own best seasons to his country. He will be greatly missed.” 

The Hall of Famer always wanted to be known as the greatest hitter ever, and his stats backed up the claim. 

He had 145 RBIs as a Red Sox rookie in 1939 and closed out his career – fittingly – by hitting a home run at Fenway Park in his final major league at-bat in 1960. 

Williams was a two-time MVP who twice won the Triple Crown. He hit .344 lifetime with 521 home runs – despite twice interrupting his career to serve as a Marine Corps pilot in World War II and the Korean War. 

“Ted was an American legend,” baseball commissioner Bud Selig said. “Besides being one of baseball’s all-time greats, he was a genuine war hero, having served as a Marine flyer in World War II and in the Korean conflict. 

“When Ted was a young man, he often said it was his goal that people would say of him: ‘There goes the greatest hitter who ever lived.’ Ted fulfilled that dream.” 

Williams’ greatest achievement came in 1941 when he batted .406, getting six hits in a doubleheader on the final day of the season. 

“He is the premier measuring stick for all hitters,” said longtime major league slugger and coach Frank Howard, who played for Williams on the Washington Senators. “He’s light years ahead of anybody as far as hitting a baseball. 

“The country lost a great American today,” Howard said. 

Williams contended his eyesight was so keen he could pick up individual stitches on a pitched ball and could see the exact moment his bat connected with it. 

He also asserted he could smell the burning wood of his bat when he fouled a ball straight back, just missing solid contact. 

“I think he was the best hitter that baseball has had,” said Hall of Famer Bobby Doerr, who played with Williams for 10 seasons. 

“He wanted to be the greatest hitter of all time, and he worked hard at that, but he was also a great teammate. He patted everyone on the back,” Doerr said from Junction City, Ore. 

Williams was a perfectionist who worked tirelessly at his craft and had no tolerance for those less dedicated. He was single-minded and stubborn, a player who reduced the game to its simplest elements: batter vs. pitcher, one trying to outsmart the other. In those instances, he usually won. 

“I am truly heartbroken,” Hall of Fame shortstop Phil Rizzuto said. “We have lost another great ballplayer, another great person.” 

“And when I was just a rookie in 1941, he took me under his wing. After he hit a double one day, he called timeout and told me, ’Kid, you’ve got a chance to play for the Yankees for a long time, so bear down.’ He was a credit to the game and did so much for so many people,” he said. 

Tall and thin, gaunt almost, Williams hardly possessed the traditional profile of a slugger. Yet he was probably the best hitter of his time – and one with a chip on his shoulder. 

Often involved in feuds both public and private during his career, Williams mellowed later in life. 

The best example came in his reaction to an emotional ovation from the crowd at the 1999 All-Star game at Fenway Park, Williams’ longtime playground. 

After a roster of Hall of Famers was introduced, Williams rode a golf cart to the pitcher’s mound, where he threw out the first ball. Suddenly, he was surrounded by a panorama of stars, past and present, who reacted like a bunch of youngsters crowding their idol for an autograph. 

For a long time, they just hovered around him, many with tears in their eyes. 

Then, San Diego’s Tony Gwynn gently helped a misty-eyed Williams to his feet and steadied him as Williams threw to Carlton Fisk, another Boston star. 

The crowd roared. 

“Wasn’t it great!” Williams said. “I can only describe it as great. It didn’t surprise me all that much because I know how these fans are here in Boston. They love this game as much as any players and Boston’s lucky to have the faithful Red Sox fans. They’re the best.” 

It wasn’t always that way for Williams. Revered as a slugger, he also was remembered for snubbing Fenway fans, refusing to tip his hat when he hit the ultimate walk-off home run in his final at-bat at age 42. 

“Gods do not answer letters,” John Updike once wrote in a profile of Williams, who sealed that image in 1941 with an 11th-hour show of courage. 

Going into the final day of the season, Williams was batting .3996. Rounded off, that would be .400, and Red Sox manager Joe Cronin suggested he sit out the day’s doubleheader to clinch that golden number. 

Williams refused. Instead, he played both games, went 6-for-8 and lifted his season average to .406. No one has approached .400 since. 

“He killed the ball, just killed it,” said Pete Suder, who played shortstop for the Philadelphia Athletics that day. “He hit one into the loudspeaker horns. He hit another one over the fence.” 

That year, Williams also led the league with 37 homers, 145 bases on balls and a .735 slugging percentage. Despite all those gaudy statistics, the American League MVP award went to Joe DiMaggio, who had a record 56-game hitting streak. 

The next year, Williams won the Triple Crown, leading the league with 36 home runs, 137 RBIs and a .356 average. But the MVP award went to Yankees second baseman Joe Gordon (.322, 18, 103). 

The same thing happened in 1947, when Williams won his second Triple Crown by hitting .343 with 32 homers and 114 RBIs, but lost the MVP vote again to DiMaggio (.315, 20, 97). 

By then, Williams’ relationship with the writers, particularly in Boston, had deteriorated badly. One writer left him off the MVP ballot entirely in 1947, costing him the award. 

Williams and DiMaggio were fierce competitors. Once in the fog of a cocktail party, they were nearly traded for each other so that the lefty-swinging Williams could benefit from the cozy right-field stands at Yankee Stadium and the right-handed DiMaggio could target the Green Monster at Fenway Park. The next morning, clearer heads prevailed and the deal was called off. 

“He was the best pure hitter I ever saw. He was feared,” DiMaggio said in 1991, the 50th anniversary of Williams’ .406 season and DiMaggio’s hitting streak. 

When DiMaggio died, in March 1999, Williams said there was no one he “admired, respected and envied more than Joe DiMaggio.” 

Williams led the league in hitting six times, the last in 1958, when, at age 40, he became the oldest batting champ in major league history. 

He was elected to the Hall of Fame in 1966, his first year of eligibility. 

Although considered a born hitter by many, Williams worked countless hours to improve throughout his career. He often said hitting a baseball was “the hardest thing to do in sports.” 

“A round ball, a round bat, curves, sliders, knuckleballs, upside down and a ball coming in at 90 to 100 miles an hour, it’s a pretty lethal thing,” he said. 

He once ordered postal scales for the Boston clubhouse so he could be sure of the weight of his bats. In the on-deck circle, he would massage the handle of his bat with olive oil and resin, producing a squeal that disconcerted many pitchers. 

“In order to hit a baseball properly,” he once explained, “a man has got to devote every ounce of his concentration to it.” 

Williams was only 20 when he joined the Red Sox in 1939, beginning a tempestuous, colorful career. He had several nicknames: Thumpin’ Ted, Teddy Ballgame and The Kid. But none stuck like “The Splendid Splinter,” a reference to his skinny, 6-foot-3 physique. 

He was brash and outspoken from the start. In 1940, Williams made headlines when he told a writer: “That’s the life, being a fireman. It sure beats being a ballplayer. I’d rather be a fireman.” 

A few years after retiring, he was quoted as saying: “I’m so grateful for baseball – and so grateful I’m the hell out of it.” 

But he didn’t really stay away. He managed the Washington Senators and Texas Rangers in 1969-72 and maintained lifetime connections with the Red Sox. In 1984, the team retired his number 9. 

Theodore Samuel Williams was born Aug. 30, 1918, in San Diego. Out of high school, he signed a Pacific Coast League contract with his hometown team. 

He played 1 1/2 seasons with San Diego, then was obtained by the Red Sox in 1937 for the then-outrageous sum of $25,000 and five players. After a year in Minneapolis, he came to the majors in 1939. 

With a dependent mother, Williams received a military deferment from his draft board in 1942. When that season ended, though, he enlisted, becoming a Marine flier. In 1946, he returned to lead the Red Sox to the pennant and his first MVP award. 

As a member of the Marine Reserves, was called up as a jet pilot in 1952. After combat service as a fighter pilot in Korea, he rejoined the Red Sox late in the 1953 season. 

After his 1960 retirement, Williams became an avid fisherman and outdoorsman. But he returned to baseball in 1969 as manager of the Washington Senators. 

He managed three years in Washington and one more when the club moved to Texas as the Rangers in 1972. Although he was respected by his peers, Williams’ teams went 273-364, a .429 mark. 

Williams returned to the Red Sox as a vice president, then was a consultant and spring training hitting instructor. But the strokes, especially a particularly severe one in February 1994, limited his vision and mobility. 

He still did occasional public appearances in his wheelchair, and remained quick-witted and an avid fan. Commenting on the 1998 home run duel between Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa, he said: “The McGwire-Sosa thing was so super-great. McGwire is the closest thing to gargantuan at the plate.” 

In 1995, Boston dedicated a $2.3 billion harbor tunnel bearing Williams’ name. At the ceremony, he made it clear he didn’t consider it a memorial. 

“Every place I go, they’re waving at me, sending out a cheer, sending letters and notes,” he said. “And I thought, I’ve only seen it happen to somebody who looks like they’re going to die. ... I’m a long ways from that.” 

Married three times, he had three children: Bobbie Jo, Claudia and John Henry Williams.


Meals must be strapped
in vehicles from now on

By David Scharfenberg, Daily Planet staff
Saturday July 06, 2002

Rule is in response to Cal OSHA citations given to city food program 

 

Berkeley came to an agreement with the California Occupational Safety & Health Administration Wednesday on two safety violations in its Meals on Wheels program for seniors. 

Cal OSHA issued two citations June 20, one for failing to properly secure food containers in vehicles and another for keeping inadequate records on employee safety training. 

Under the July 3 agreement, the city placed straps in the vehicles to hold down containers and Cal OSHA withdrew the corresponding citation, replacing it with a less punitive “notice.” 

Cal OSHA kept the record-keeping citation in place, fining the city $185.  

Fred Medrano, director of health and human services, said that record keeping was not the only problem – the program did not have a safety program to track. 

Now, he said, the city has initiated a training program and agreed to improve record-keeping. 

“I think the staff have taken the initiative to address the problem and we agreed with the Cal OSHA folks in terms of the remedy,” he said. 

Cal OSHA spokesperson Susan Gard praised the city for its efforts. 

“We had a very cordial relationship,” she said. “The employer was quite cooperative.” 

One Meals on Wheels employee, who asked to remain anonymous, said five drivers were injured in recent months, before the straps were put in place. But Medrano said he knew of only one worker’s compensation claim. He said the city, as a precaution, has placed a limit on the amount of weight the driver in question can lift. 

Medrano said there was never any danger of the food containers flying toward the drivers. He said the drivers’ main concern was that they would have to reach back to steady the shifting containers and could be injured in the process. 

Still, the employee said the straps do not solve the problem, arguing that Meals on Wheels should invest in vehicles specifically designed to store food in the rear. 

The program supplies over 240 seniors with meals it deliveres to their homes. The city asks participants to make a small donation, if they can afford it, to help subsidize the program. 

The employee who raised concerns about safety also said the city needs to make temporary Meals on Wheels positions permanent to reduce turnover and ensure stability. Medrano said the city is working to move the program’s three drivers, currently temporary employees, to career status. 

He said the city is also working to reduce its reliance on volunteer drivers, who supplement the city employees. 

“When you rely on volunteers, sometimes they don’t feel as obligated to be on the job as consistently,” Medrano said. “You can’t build a program around that.”


A bond is a 30-year loan

Jill Posener
Saturday July 06, 2002

To the Editor: 

I’d like to correct an inaccuracy in your recent article about bond measures on the ballot in November (June 28). Your reporter wrote that the bond measure for a new animal shelter would cost the taxpayers of Berkeley $12 per year for ‘an undetermined time’. Like other bond measures this one will run it’s course in 30 years. 

Berkeley is one of only two cities in the greater Bay Area which does not yet have a new animal shelter or a plan in place to build one. 

Those of us working to bring about the construction of a clean, safe shelter which meets new humane standards of care mandated by state law, were delighted to see the breadth of support for this measure at City Council.  

Interesting that our furry friends could momentarily heal the familiar rift in our Council chambers! 

 

Jill Posener 

Chairperson, Gimme  

Shelter/Committee To Build a New Berkeley Animal Shelter 

 


Poetry team to compete in Battle of the Bay

By Brian Kluepfel, Special to the Daily Planet
Saturday July 06, 2002

‘Berzerkeley’ Slam 

 

I’ll admit: until this past Wednesday, I was a slam virgin. Oh, I’d seen spoken word performers, poets, open mic performances centered on music. But never the excitement of a “competition” measured out in exact three-minute intervals, in which every performer is given an equal chance to reach the audience and judges in 180 seconds. So it was down to the Starry Plough on Shattuck, home of the Berzerkeley Slam, to see what this was all about, and also to catch members of Team Berkeley who are preparing for next week’s “Battle of the Bay” on their way to the National Slam Championships in Minneapolis Aug. 14-17. 

It is the seeming randomness of the slam that appeals to many: because the judges are picked by lot from the audience, there are no “experts.” Five judges score on a 1-10 scale, high and low scores are discarded. Local events like Berzerkeley Slam offer minimal prize money, whereas the Western Regionals will offer $1,000 and the Nationals $3,000.  

Audience participation is one of the goals of a slam, and heckling is encouraged. 

“Slam is a gimmick,” says Berkeley Slam Master Charles Ellik. “It's a device used to break down the barrier between audiences and poets, a form used to push poets to new levels they never thought they'd achieve.” 

Berkeley’s five poets (four plus one alternate) will take part in the Battle of the Bay, which really serves more as a fund-raiser and practice for the poets than a fierce win-at-all-costs battle (in fact, I was to discover that “competing” isn’t really cool, or what slam is all about, at least in Berkeley). Teams from San Jose, Oakland, San Francisco and Sacramento meet with Team Berkeley at the Black Box in Oakland next Thursday, July 11. Each local team hosts its own event, and there is a sixth called “Tourettes without Regrets.” All proceeds are shared among the teams for traveling expenses and the like. 

Slams are competitions with rules. Each poet performs one original poem which must be shorter than three minutes. Penalties are applied to those who perform too long. Slammers can sing but are not allowed to wear a costume.  

Kenny Mostern, an organizer for the Battle of the Bay, says that all the events are friendly, bonding experiences for the slammers. Mostern, who has participated in slam for seven years, including stints with two semifinalist teams at the national championships, breaks down the genre: “Slam is a very specific spoken-word format. Critics question whether it’s good for the art form, because it introduces competition and a time limit. I think it’s (a formula) like the pop song, or the sonnet. I love pop songs, and I love slam,” he says. Bay Area teams have done well at prior championships: San Francisco and San Jose shared the national title in 1999, with Oakland coming in third.  

Berkeley’s team is coached by Ellik, a slam veteran who moved to the Bay Area in 1997 and was soon the San Francisco Slam Master. “There really wasn’t much happening here, and I helped build up the scene,” says Ellik.  

He decided to focus his activities on the East Bay, where he lives, and now ekes out a living as the host of the Starry Plough’s raucous Wednesday evening slams, which he calls “one of the most competitive in the world.” In fact, people drive from as far as Santa Rosa and Reno to take part in the standing-room only event. This past Wednesday was a special “Amazon Slam,” in which women only were supposed to be involved in the competition. However, since only two women signed up initially, the competition was opened to everyone, and once the judges were chosen, the event began in earnest. (Ellik helps newcomers with a “Tips for Poetry Slams” handout, explaining the intricacies and mores of the art form/competition).  

If the standings from Wednesday’s competition are any indicator, Berkeley’s team looks strong going into Regional and Nationals. Karen Ladson and Rupert E. finished in the top three, and both lost points for going over the time limit (the judges and participants both got more exuberant and enthusiastic for the second round, fueled by poetic inspiration, nicotine and alcohol, perhaps). Ladson had an amusing standoff with a barfly who wouldn’t shut up, but she finally silenced him with an icy stare and continued. 

Kenny Monstren says scenes like this are part of the slam’s charm. “As a performer, you have to have the random appeal that you’d have in any bar. 

And that can change from the Starry Plough to the Black Box to the Justice League in San Francisco," he says.  

As DJ Tek Neek spun tunes ranging from Al Green to Nenah Cherry to the Guess Who, performers shuffled on and off stage, to much love and support from the audience. Some read from notebooks, others strode up to the mic like they owned it and spewed out memorized streams of consciousness; in any case, the quality of all was, to this newbie slam attendee, rather amazing. Although the scores were all relatively high this evening, sometimes Mcs have been known to play up hostilities between audience and judges, adding to the evening’s tension. Amazingly, a woman named Jennifer won the first prize, in only her second slam competition.  

The slam as we know it today coalesced in Chicago in the late 80's, under the creative guidance of a construction worker named Marc Smith, according to slam history. The idea spread across the country, evolving along the way. Every slam has its own traditions and aesthetic. In 1990, the first-ever National Slam was held in San Francisco, beginning a process of establishing "National Rules" and a network of communication that has made it possible for poets to tour the continent like one-person punk rock bands.  

Ellik has high hopes for Team Berkeley, which in last year’s nationals finished 12th out of 54 teams. 

Although he has his own aspirations, he’s keeping them in check for a higher purpose: "I’m a poet and I’d like to compete," he says. "But after the results of last year, lots of people asked me to coach again, and I felt really fulfilled, appreciated and wanted." Probably the same could be said of the performers on Wednesday, for "slam" is a competition in word only, mutual support and respect being the watchwords in this growing national phenomena.  


Cal finishes 20th in Sears Cup

Daily Planet Wire Services
Saturday July 06, 2002

On the strength of an NCAA championship in softball, Cal placed 20th in the final Sears Director’s Cup standings - the Golden Bears’ third consecutive finish in the Top 20.  

Cal was 12th in the Sears Cup race last year and 15th in 2000. Other Top 20 finishes came in 1994 (17th), 1995 (13th) and 1998 (19th).  

The Sears Cup measures a school’s overall level of success based on performances of teams in 20 selected sports and ranks all 323 NCAA Division I institutions.  

In addition to softball this year, which claimed the first NCAA team championship in school history, Cal also earned third-place finishes in women’s crew and men’s gymnastics, sixth place in men’s swimming and eighth in women’s swimming.  

However, Cal’s finish could have been even higher except that four teams that finished among the top five in the nation did not contribute to the standings. Both rugby and men’s crew defended their national titles, but neither sport competes under the NCAA umbrella. In addition, men’s water polo was ranked second in the final poll and women’s water polo was fifth, but the Bears were not among the four teams invited to their respective NCAA championship tournaments, and thus received no Sears Cup points.


New boss for education group

By David Scharfenberg, Daily Planet staff
Saturday July 06, 2002

After 19 years as executive director of Berkeley’s Public Education Foundation, Mary Friedman is calling it quits. Friedman will retire Aug. 1 and pass the reins to Trina Ostrander, the foundation’s current associate director. Ostrander will now guide the organization that started with $4,000 in donations in 1983 and distributed $700,000 throughout Berkeley public schools last year. 

“In the beginning, our ambition was to ask an ever-widening circle of friends to contribute the private funds that would give our teachers the basic resources – books, crayons, petri dishes – that suddenly there was no budget for,” Friedman said. 

“But before we knew it, we were being asked to provide all kinds of support, and a dedicated community of contributors was forming that enabled us to keep working harder and setting our sights higher.” 

The foundation’s accomplishments include a founding role in the Berkeley High School Health Center in the early 1990s, a $300,000 rescue of the district’s elementary school music program in the mid 1990s and a $1.3 million contribution to help construct the new Columbus Elementary School, now called Rosa Parks.  

Community leaders say Friedman will be missed. 

“She’s been such a pillar of support for public education,” said Terry Doran, school board member. But, he added that Ostrander will be an able leader of the foundation. 

“It’s in good hands,” Doran said. “I think Ostrander’s vision of what the organization can accomplish is as enlightened as Mary’s. At the same time, they’ll be hard shoes to fill.” 

Ostrander said Friedman, who will continue to serve as Executive Director Emerita, is leaving behind a formidable organization. More importantly, she said, Friedman is leaving the city with a belief in the power of public education. 

“The whole community, largely because of Mary’s tenacity and vision, feels we can make our schools work,” Ostrander said. 

Friedman said a group of Berkeley education leaders, including then-school board President Steve Lustig, launched the foundation in 1983 in response to the voters’ passage of Proposition 13 in 1978, which capped property taxes and reduced education funding, and a series of elementary school closings in Berkeley in the early 1980s. 

Friedman got involved in 1984 and soon took the leading role in the small organization. She does not recall exactly when she became executive director. But, Friedman says, with a laugh, she probably assumed the title when the foundation printed its first stationary and had to affix a title to her name. 

“At the point in time when she became our executive director, we’d had a good start, but things had slowed down,” said Allan C. Miller, outgoing chairman of the foundation’s board. “Mary just picked up the energy and everything the foundation has become is a result of her leadership.” 

The organization’s signature program in its early years was its Classroom Grants to Teachers effort. That program is still a hallmark of the foundation today. Last year, the group gave $160,000 to individual teachers to support field trips, literacy projects, school gardens and more. 

Friedman said a belief in the power of teachers has animated the grants program. 

“There are so many reasons why children don’t succeed. But I really believe a great teacher can overcome many of these obstacles,” she said. “I think teachers are the heroes of our society.” 

In 1991, the foundation launched the Berkeley School Volunteers program, hiring director Barbara Bowman in 1992. Last year, that initiative produced 46,000 hours of volunteer time in the schools. 

At the same time, the foundation raised some $50,000 in construction funds for the high school health center. 

“That was our first project that took us beyond the classroom,” Friedman said. 

The foundation followed that effort with a $1.3 million campaign that resulted in an additional pre-school room, a science lab, a family resource center and improved athletic facilities at Columbus Elementary School. 

The foundation also raised $300,000 to pay for the elementary school music program in 1994-1995. Funding cuts would have eliminated the program that year without the stop-gap funding. The Berkeley Schools Excellence Project - - a special local tax - - began paying for the program the following year. 

As the new executive director, Ostrander said she will work to maintain the strong classroom grants and volunteer programs, while focusing on large scale programs. 

Ostrander said landscaping projects, library supplies, support for the district’s early literacy push and a teacher training fund, named in Friedman’s honor, are all possibilities. She emphasized that she wants to talk to teachers and administrators to see where the foundation might best concentrate its efforts. 

Friedman said the foundation’s large projects mark some of her proudest moments. But she has taken particular pleasure in providing small grants to programs that have grown, like the garden program throughout the district and the Parent Resource Center at the high school. 

“The way the foundation has been most successful is through small grants, giving great ideas the time to germinate,” Friedman said.  

 

 


Losing local control a disaster

Paul Fletcher
Saturday July 06, 2002

To the Editor: 

Local control of tobacco sales to youths is threatened by AB 1666, which is on the governor's desk for signature. If this becomes law it will be a disaster to the already beleaguered tobacco control programs of Berkeley as well as every county in California. At a time when budgets are being cut in half, programs are being eliminated and staff is being laid off, the fight against big tobacco can ill-afford yet another assault on what is left in the arsenals of county tobacco programs. 

Tobacco lobbyists claim AB 1666 is designed to “monitor retail tobacco sales and to insure compliance with tobacco tax and control laws." But the legislation actually has the potential to preempt all local youth access tobacco laws as well as the enforcement of existing local tobacco retail license laws. This is the latest attempt by the tobacco industry and their allies in the Legislature to undermine the remarkable success of California’s highly effective tobacco prevention program. 

Anyone interested in protecting teens and others from big tobacco's youth-targeted marketing campaigns should phone or fax the governor immediately. We must not stand by and allow AB 1666 to protect the cynical multi-billion dollar tobacco interests, devastate public health programs and escalate long-term stateand local health care expenditures even more. 

 

 

 

Paul Fletcher 

Communications Director American Lung Assn. of the East Bay


2 Green vying for District 4

By Devona Walker, Daily Planet Staff
Saturday July 06, 2002

At least one council race in the November election will likely be amicable. Current City Councilmember Dona Spring, District 4, and environmental activist LA Wood are espousing nothing but words of admiration for each other. 

“We really don’t disagree on that much,” said Spring of Wood. “I think he’s a bit more of a perfectionist than I am. But he’s certainly done good work.” 

Wood echoed her dismay about having to run against an ally. 

“Yes, it’s really too bad that I live in this district,” Woods. “But this is something I’ve wanted to do for quite some time now.” 

Politically speaking, Spring and Wood are both deeply rooted in environmental activism.  

Wood has led a battle against building the Harrison Playfields on Sixth Street due to poor air quality in the area. In addition, he was a key player in the effort to stop nuclear testing in Berkeley. Wood has been a watchdog against the UC Berkeley laboratory since 1993. He also helped set the groundwater standard for the city. 

As a member of Berkeley City Council, Spring has admittedly taken a different role in many environmental battles, but she says that she is still a member of the Green Party and an advocate of the environment’s. 

Spring refers back to Woods’ effort against the playing fields as an example of how she can at times, for better or for worse, be more willing to compromise than he is. 

“I know he thinks I compromise too much, but that’s a part of the job of being on City Council,” Spring said. “There are so many points of view and many perspectives and people involved, that sometimes it’s better to compromise.”  

The playing fields, for instance. “Sometimes you have so many parents involved and the fact that there are no fitting places in the city for the children to play, you compromise and settle for things like the Harrison Playfields because you don’t have the ideal choice laying before you.” 

But, in the next breath, Spring conceded that the fields have evoked numerous concerns about air quality and that Wood’s commitment brought the issue forward. 

“It would have been better if [City Council] had more information,” she said. “It was one of those situations where the right hand didn’t know what the left hand was doing. And I have to give LA credit for banging the drum on that one.” 

According to Spring, city staff had access to air quality information that Council members did not. That caused Council to outweigh the desire of parents to have access to recreational areas for the children over the concerns of environmentalists. 

After Wood brought to light the air quality conditions, the city conducted tests and concluded that because it was near the freeway, the air quality at the playing fields was worse than in other areas. The city has since monitored the air and is trying to fix the problem. 

The Bay Area Green Party will host a panel discussion in September at which it will endorse one of the two candidates. 


News of the Weird

Staff
Saturday July 06, 2002

Mister Softee beats up man 

who doesn’t like his music 

 

HARTFORD, Conn. — The driver of a Mister Softee truck is facing assault and breach of peace charges for allegedly attacking a frequent critic of the music coming from the truck’s loudspeakers, police said. 

Luis Amaro, 51, is accused of charging out of his truck Saturday and swinging a bat at Wilbur Troutman. 

“Mister Softee tried to kill me!” Troutman, 64, said Tuesday as he recovered from arm bruises and a graze to the head. 

Amaro could not be reached for comment. But Felix Rios, who owns the Mister Softee franchise in East Hartford, said Troutman is at least partially to blame for harassing his drivers for the last several weeks. 

Troutman, 64, has been following the Mister Softee trucks throughout his neighborhood, taking pictures and recording the music from the trucks in a campaign to get them banned from city streets, Rios said. 

“I’m not saying what our driver did was right or wrong because I wasn’t there. But I know this driver, and I know he wouldn’t lose his temper without a good reason,” Rios said. 

 

Official utilizes
a public service
 

SPRING LAKE, Mich. — A Michigan lawmaker has come clean about his trash and acknowledged that he put refuse from his farm in a bin at a Spring Lake school then lied about it to a sheriff’s deputy. 

State Sen. Leon Stille said he cut corners while cleaning his farm for his daughter’s wedding because he was running around “like a chicken with his head cut off.” 

Police were called to Jeffers Elementary School after a custodian said someone dumped tires, cans of paint, buckets of unknown material and boxes of trash in the school’s bin. 

Some materials had Stille’s name on them, and the custodian noted the license plate of a vehicle registered to Stille. 

An Ottawa County sheriff’s deputy contacted Stille, who denied dumping the trash. Later, a Sheriff Doug Nowak stopped at Stille’s home, and the lawmaker confessed. 

“He indicated that he did not want any bad press as a result of this, so he did not want to take the initial blame,” Nowak said. 

 

It’s not your plate 

 

VALRICO, Fla. — A couple wanted to express pride in their Italian heritage with the license plate ”2 Dagos,” but were told to return the plate to the state because some people feel it’s an ethnic slur. 

Phil and Fran Lascola said they are fighting the request, saying they don’t consider the term insulting. 

“How in the world could they say this is obscene?” said Phil Lascola. “We’re Italians, we’re not slamming anybody.” 

Florida issued the license plate 18 months ago for the couple’s BMW, but reconsidered its decision when it received a recent complaint. 

The state says it has the right to withdraw or refuse to issue tags that are vulgar or objectionable. 

Controversial plates have included “Atheist,” “Mutiny,” “H-8” (meaning hate), and variations of the “f” word. After a fight, the Gainesville man with the “Atheist” tag was allowed to keep it. 

A Save the Manatee specialty tag that read “EAT UMM” was taken away from a Tallahassee driver. 

Phil Lascola said he received a letter Saturday from the state telling the couple to return their plate. The couple is considering hiring an attorney to handle the dispute. 


Stick it: political messages draw some sneers

By Matt Liebowitz, Special to the Daily Planet
Saturday July 06, 2002

For the past seven years Russell Bates — The Human Bumper Sticker — has been a fixture on Telegraph Avenue.  

On three tables between Bancroft and Durant avenues, Bates sells an array of poignant, humorous and often controversial bumper stickers.  

Some of the stickers advocate earth-friendly or peaceful messages such as “Non-Judgement Day is Near.” Others use irony to urge consciousness, like “HMO Phobic.” Bates’ favorites are “Don’t Believe Everything You Think,” and “Bush, The Only Dope Worth Shooting.” 

Many of Bates’ stickers carry controversial messages, something Bates is entirely comfortable with despite opposition. 

He says since he’s come out in support of Palestine amid the conflict in the Middle East, and has gotten death threats, hate mail and verbal abuse for it. 

“At first I took the threats seriously,” Bates said. “But most of the time it’s people shooting off their mouths.” 

One group offended by the pro-Palestinian stickers was the Zionists who organized boycotts of Bates’ stand. At first, sales went down because of it. But not for long. 

“People will always find something to harass me about,” he said. 

Despite his often unpopular stance on the Middle East, Bates says his position remains firm.  

“I’ve made my stand, these people realize it,” he said. “And I’m not going to change my mind.” 

A “Free Palestine” sticker and a Palestinian flag hang on Bates’ table.  

“One guy asked me if I support terrorist governments,” Bates said. “I said ‘No, I don’t support the Israeli government at all.’ ”  

Though he encounters a good amount of opposition, not all of his encounters end with verbal abuse aimed at him. 

He often has intelligent, civil conversations with Israelis and supporters of the Israeli government who take offense to the words on his stickers. 

Many of the Israeli supporters who approach him “sound like they’re coming straight from the embassy,” Bates said. “The mainstream media is the only way people get their information, and that results in a high chance that certain facts are overlooked.”  

A Berkeley resident since 1973, Bates sold the stickers for 18 years with a partner before setting up his own stand. 

Though Bates himself designs some of his stickers, most are manufactured and sent from a company with branches in the East coast, Midwest and Arcada California. Bates sells them for two dollars each, or three for five dollars.  

Bates sees Berkeley as an ideal place for his work.  

“It could work on the East coast,” Bates said, “but patriotism has run amok out there, and I’m no patriot.”


Gov. Davis expresses support to Israeli leader

The Associated Press
Saturday July 06, 2002

SACRAMENTO — Gov. Gray Davis said he reaffirmed California’s solidarity with Israel Friday in a phone call with Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon. 

After the phone call, Davis joined Pres. Bush in calling for a new and different Palestinian leadership. 

“We can no longer have cease-fires where one side ceases and the other side fires,” Davis said in a press release. “I would hope that the next Palestinian leader will focus on developing his own nation, instead of destroying another.” 

In April, Davis asked Democratic governors to sign a Declaration of Principles stating their full support for Israel through the crisis. New York Gov. George Pataki joined the effort by requesting the same of Republican governors. 

Davis told CNN Friday that he also offered Sharon condolences after the fatal shooting of two Israeli-born victims in the Fourth of July attack at Los Angeles International Airport. Davis said Sharon did not say whether he agrees with Israeli officials who have said they consider the shooting a terror attack. 


City to discuss health risks with radio tower emissions

By Chris Nichols, Daily Planet Staff
Saturday July 06, 2002

City officials and residents will discuss a controversial radio tower installed on the roof of Berkeley’s downtown Public Safety Building at Tuesday’s City Council meeting. 

Some residents think it’s an eyesore and furthermore fear that it may be emitting dangerous microwaves. Residents who say a past study of the tower’s risks and alternatives was not good enough want the city to take another look. 

On Tuesday City Council will consider a second study. 

“There’s a definite concern,” said City Councilmember Dona Spring. “There are health concerns with the electromagnetic radiation and the tower being so close to schools and residences.” 

Despite such fears, members of Berkeley’s Public Works Department say the claims are unfounded.  

“It’s simply not true. It’s not possible for the tower to emit microwave rays. It’s on a totally different frequency,” said Rene Cardinaux, director of Public Works. 

Though Cardinaux says that Public Works has provided expert testimony on the safety of the tower, critics say the testimony is biased. 

Berkeley Planning Commissioner and retired UC Berkeley Research Scientist Gordon Wozniak isn’t afraid to live near the radio tower. Similar structures that have been around since the 1930s have not been known to cause health problems, he said.  

Radio towers and TV towers emit radiowaves and microwaves, but not at radioactive or dangerous levels. 

Ionizing radiation, which is found at health care facilities, research institutions and nuclear reactors, is what has causes damage to the environment, and is a health risk. According to Wozniak, ionizing radiation can change the chemical form of matter but microwaves cannot. Microwaves are only capable of heating things up a little. 

Wozniak said he thought the main concern with the radio tower was one of aesthetics.By Chris Nichols 

Daily Planet Staff 

 

City officials and residents will discuss a controversial radio tower installed on the roof of Berkeley’s downtown Public Safety Building at Tuesday’s City Council meeting. 

Some residents think it’s an eyesore and furthermore fear that it may be emitting dangerous microwaves. Residents who say a past study of the tower’s risks and alternatives was not good enough want the city to take another look. 

On Tuesday City Council will consider a second study. 

“There’s a definite concern,” said City Councilmember Dona Spring. “There are health concerns with the electromagnetic radiation and the tower being so close to schools and residences.” 

Despite such fears, members of Berkeley’s Public Works Department say the claims are unfounded.  

“It’s simply not true. It’s not possible for the tower to emit microwave rays. It’s on a totally different frequency,” said Rene Cardinaux, director of Public Works. 

Though Cardinaux says that Public Works has provided expert testimony on the safety of the tower, critics say the testimony is biased. 

Berkeley Planning Commissioner and retired UC Berkeley Research Scientist Gordon Wozniak isn’t afraid to live near the radio tower. Similar structures that have been around since the 1930s have not been known to cause health problems, he said.  

Radio towers and TV towers emit radiowaves and microwaves, but not at radioactive or dangerous levels. 

Ionizing radiation, which is found at health care facilities, research institutions and nuclear reactors, is what has causes damage to the environment, and is a health risk. According to Wozniak, ionizing radiation can change the chemical form of matter but microwaves cannot. Microwaves are only capable of heating things up a little. 

Wozniak said he thought the main concern with the radio tower was one of aesthetics.


Investors growing wary of high-profile mergers

By Gary Gentile, The Associated Press
Saturday July 06, 2002

LOS ANGELES — On the same day this week, news about two major mergers broke, bookends marking the extremes of the merger and acquisitions frenzy that has clearly run its course. 

Monday, defense giant Northrop Grumman Corp. announced it would buy TRW Inc. for $7.8 billion in stock. The deal was old-school, combining two solid companies in a growth industry. 

A continent away, Vivendi Universal, the result of a heralded merger in 2000, was spiraling toward self destruction. Its flashy chairman, Jean-Marie Messier, was forced to resign as his dream of a cutting-edge media empire vanished under a mountain of debt and red ink. 

The stock market’s reaction to both developments says a lot about the skepticism and fear that has crept into financial markets over high profile mergers. 

The Northrop Grumman-TRW deal, though praised, didn’t cause a ripple in the market. In fact, shares of TRW, which would have been expected to rise on the news, actually fell 40 cents cents Monday. 

The Vivendi Universal woes, the latest in a series of troubles experienced by mega-mergers such as AOL Time Warner and WorldCom, sent investors scurrying. 

“People are very suspicious, they are not enthusiastic about the market, so they are not willing to view things in the way the same merger would have been viewed three or four years ago,” said Lou Altfest, a certified financial planner with L.J. Altfest & Co. in New York City. 

Merger and acquisition activity is in a slump. 

In the first six months of the year, only $200 billion worth of M&A transactions in the United States were announced, according to Thomson Financial. That’s down 45 percent from the same period last year and down 77 percent from the $886.7 billion announced in the first half of 2000. 

Executives are reluctant to pull the trigger on anything but the safest deals, with immediate benefits instead of pie-in-the-sky projections of future profits. 

“People are being more risk averse than they were in the past,” said Steve Baronoff, global head of mergers and acquisitions for Merrill Lynch & Co. “They are more likely to do deals within their industry when they are risk averse.” 

Combinations in sectors less sensitive to recession, such as the defense industry or, as with Nestle SA and Dreyer’s Grand Ice Cream Inc., in the consumer products sector, are more likely to be done than the kind of grand strategy mergers such as Vivendi Universal, experts say. 

Complicating matters is growing doubt over the reliability of corporate financial statements and questions of honesty on the part of CEOs. 

“Corporate executives’ collective confidence in doing mergers and acquisitions has been badly bruised for more than a year,” said Judy Radler Cohen, editor of Mergers & Acquisition Report. “So the recent spate of bad boy/girl CEO news has only further damaged an already skittish corporate America when it comes to doing deals.” 

The difficulties experienced by companies in recent months cast a cloud over all mergers and have considerably shortened the time investors are willing to wait for a deal to work out. 

“Many high-profile mergers in recent years have failed to deliver the promised benefits,” Frederick W. Green, president of The Merger Fund, wrote to shareholders in a recent letter. 

“Not only must senior managers convince themselves that a deal makes sense, but they also must be able to sell the transaction to Wall Street, which is no longer willing to give would-be acquirers a free pass.” 

Green cites the Hewlett Packard purchase of Compaq Computer, which was sold to investors based on its long-term benefits, but which was opposed because of its near-term effects on the company’s earnings and the distractions often caused when two companies integrate. 

“CEOs are under increasing pressure from all sides to get it right when they undertake a significant merger or acquisition, and the crisis of confidence that pervades many executive suites has not been good for our business,” Green wrote. 

Experts say the current slump will probably last a few more quarters, after which pent-up demand will trigger more deals, though probably not the kind of overambitious deals seen in recent years. 


Bush reaches out in video speech to NATO wannabes Bush reaches out in video speech to NATO wannabes

The Associated Press
Saturday July 06, 2002

KENNEBUNKPORT, Maine — President Bush, in a videotaped long-distance speech on Friday, told former East Bloc countries that hope to join NATO that the United States will work “arm in arm” with them to build a free and united Europe. 

“Our nations share a common vision of a new Europe, where free European states are united with each other and with the United States through cooperation, partnership and alliance,” Bush told delegates from the so-called “Vilnius Ten” nations who met Friday in Riga, Latvia. The 10 are making a final collective bid to join NATO ahead of a November summit in Prague. 

Bush said new members will improve NATO’s capability in fighting and defeating terrorism around the globe. 

“We seek a new Europe that has buried its historic tensions and is prepared to meet global challenges beyond Europe’s borders. America will continue to work arm in arm with Europe on fulfilling this vision,” the president said. 

Bush, who was vacationing with his family in Maine, recorded the address earlier in the week.


Burning Man sues to stop the sale of naked women videos

The Associated Press
Saturday July 06, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — The Burning Man festival, an annual celebration of art and self-expression in the Nevada desert, is suing a video company for allegedly filming naked women at the festival surreptitiously and selling the videos. 

Festival sponsors filed suit Monday in federal court in San Francisco, accusing Voyeur Video Inc. of ignoring rules printed on each ticket that prohibit commercial use of photos from the festival without organizers’ consent. 

The suit also accuses the company of trespassing, invading the women’s privacy and violating Burning Man’s trademark. It seeks damages and an injunction against further sale or display of the pictures. 

Clothes are optional for participants at Burning Man, which started in 1986 and is held each Labor Day weekend on a dry lake bed in the Black Rock Desert, about 120 miles north of Reno, Nev.


Police identify driver in Hwy. 101 standoff as Tennessee man

The Associated Press
Saturday July 06, 2002

PALO ALTO — A Tennessee man led police on a 100-mph chase along San Francisco Bay area highways Friday morning before forcing a four-hour standoff that closed the southbound lanes of U.S. 101. 

Robert B. Sidicane of Nashville, Tenn., was booked at San Mateo County jail for reckless driving, felony evading arrest and resisting arrest, police said. 

Sidicane, 41, might be mentally ill, California Highway Patrol spokesman Fritz Eberly said. 

When asked by officers why he fled, Sidicane responded, “I had important things to do,” police said. 

“The non-responsiveness and his evasiveness indicate a potential this is someone who is mentally unstable,” Eberly said. 

Sidicane was taken to Stanford Medical Center for evaluation and then transported to county jail. 

The incident shut down one of two major highways between San Francisco and San Jose. 

Officers ended the standoff by filling the car with firefighting foam and water — Sidicane doused himself and the car with gasoline. Pictures from helicopters above the scene showed a stain of liquid coming from the front of the car and spreading across the pavement. 

Officials had said throughout the morning that there was a passenger in the car, but confirmed at a news conference that only Sidicane was inside. 

Three of the car’s four tires were blown out by a spike strip, and the vehicle sat alone in the second of four southbound lanes starting around 5:30 a.m. The car, a red Oldsmobile with Tennessee license plates, was near the exit to Palo Alto and Stanford University. 

The chase started when an officer stopped to assist the driver of a disabled vehicle in Livermore, about a 40-mile drive from Palo Alto, California Highway Patrol spokesman Richard Franklin said. The driver sped off as the officer approached, heading westbound on Interstate 580 and then crossing the Bay Bridge into San Francisco and heading south on U.S. 101. 

The incident closed U.S. 101 southbound for hours, though northbound traffic was moving fine. It came during the morning rush hour, though traffic was light owing to the holiday weekend. 

It was the second major morning rush-hour traffic problem in three days in the San Francisco Bay area. 

On Wednesday, police shot a man suspected of kidnapping his estranged wife and holding her at gunpoint on a freeway overpass near the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge, a situation that forced officials to close all but one of the freeways approaching the bridge from the east. 


Stalled budget may affect elderly

The Associated Press
Saturday July 06, 2002

SACRAMENTO — The state budget stalemate has delayed much-needed funding to California’s programs for the elderly. 

The Older Americans Act called for the distribution of about $10 million in federal funds on July 1, but the programs will not see that money until the Legislature passes the state budget. 

Gary Burris, fiscal officer for the California Department of Aging, said that the state budget provides state funds and has the authority to spend the federal funds. 

His department notified all 33 area agencies of the delay in funding. The area agencies distribute the funds to nonprofit community agencies that provide the elderly with in-home care, hot meals, transportation and respite services for caregivers. 

One of the agencies, the Personalized Homecare and Homemaker Agency of Sacramento, needs $30,000 this month to provide in-home care to 350 seniors and pay the salaries of 70 employees. 

“Within a couple weeks, we’re in a position of having to fund this out of personal funds,” said agency administrator Robert Howe.


The ’unfitted’ bathroom

Tailored cabinet design concept creates space

The Associated Press
Saturday July 06, 2002

Functional rooms are fitted with wall-hung cupboards and storage areas.Still, there’s plenty to be said for junking the wood-veneer boxes attached to your walls. The rewards of starting from scratch with a few attractive, functional dressers, tables and freestanding cabinets are worth it. 

Space you didn’t know you had is the most notable benefit of this design concept. According to British interior designer Johnny Grey, who focuses mainly on kitchen design, “An illusion of spaciousness (is) achieved by leaving space around each piece of furniture, rather than fitting cupboards from wall to wall.” This now-exposed wall area can host well-placed shelves and hooks for extra storage and display. Your room will be tailored to your specific needs and tastes in a way rooms full of factory-made storage spaces can’t. 

Home designers and those in the cabinet industry have gotten wise to this idea and have begun designing and manufacturing storage units that have the look of furniture and the ease of predesigned cabinets. The bath shown here features attractive vanity cupboards; dresser legs replace the flat-front toe space usually seen where the storage units meet the floors in baths and kitchens. Atop a matching set of drawers and cabinets is a tall, open-faced shelf secured to the wall, which reveals its contents — towels, photos and art — without shame.  


Take high-quality family time

The Associated Press
Saturday July 06, 2002

High-quality family time takes on new form with every generation, but there are some constants that modern design can accommodate quite nicely. For example, the age-old activity of cooking with mom (or dad), although usually more of an ideal than a norm in our hectic lives, has influenced the size and splendor of many modern kitchens. Dual sinks, large islands, snack bars, passthroughs and built-in desks create enough space for helpers, snackers, storytellers and bill-payers — bringing everyone together in a common space. 

Passthrough bars are especially useful in facilitating family-together time. By joining the kitchen to other areas of the home, passthroughs allow family members to remain close while pursuing different activities. They create subtle room divisions without blocking the sound of laughter or the sight of children at play. And, of course, passthroughs are ideal for serving buffet-style meals at larger gatherings.


Window replacement is a do-it-yourself job

By Morris and James Carey, The Associated Press
Saturday July 06, 2002

Q. How do I replace a window? The current window is double-hung with sash weights, and I want to replace it with a new vinyl window. 

 

A. Replacing double-hung wood windows with vinyl ones is about the simplest and most cost-effective of all window replacements. That is the case, that is, as long as the main frame of the existing window is in good condition and can be reused. Here’s how it happens. First, all the trim is removed from the four inside faces of the main frame. You dont have to remove the ropes and weights. They can be left in the hollow sides of the window frame. However, we do suggest spraying expansive foam into the balance of the void to improve energy-efficiency. 

After the trim is removed, it becomes apparent that the main frame has an offset in it that goes all the way around. The inside half of the frame is slightly smaller than the outside half of the frame. The replacement window comes in its own frame, and is set in place from the outside fitting into the larger opening. It butts up against the face of the smaller portion of the frame. 

If the main frame doesn’t have a jog, wood trim is added to create one. Trim is used to cover the caulked joint between the frame of the new window and the old one. Our first double-hung window replacement job took about 60 minutes per opening — soup to nuts — removal, installation, caulking, trim and paint touchup. This a legitimate do-it-yourself project. 


FBI: Gunman went to LA airport intending to kill

By Andrew Bridges, The Associated Press
Saturday July 06, 2002

LOS ANGELES — The heavily armed Egyptian immigrant who fatally shot two people at the ticket counter of Israel’s national airline went to the Los Angeles airport to kill, the FBI said Friday. 

“Why he did that is what we are still trying to determine,” FBI special agent Richard Garcia said. 

Hesham Mohamed Hadayet was the fourth person in line at the El Al counter when he opened fire, authorities said. He fired 10 or 11 bullets before he was fatally shot himself by an airline security guard, as hundreds of people dived for cover. 

Three other people were wounded, including a guard who was stabbed by Hadayet as he fought with the wounded gunman. A fourth bystander suffered heart trouble after the attack. 

In his pockets, authorities found an extra magazine for each gun, FBI spokesman Matt McLaughlin said. “I think it’s safe to say he planned to reload his guns and didn’t get the chance to do it,” McLaughlin said. 

Hadayet was identified by tracing the weapons he used, a law enforcement source said, speaking on condition of anonymity. Hadayet had owned one of the guns “for years” and purchased the other a couple of months ago, the source said. 

The shooting could have been a random act of violence or a hate crime, Garcia said. He said authorities also had not ruled out a number of potential motives, including terrorism, though Hadayet, 41, was not on any FBI or federal aviation “watch” lists. 

Israeli officials said they would consider the attack an act of terror unless it was proven otherwise. A source close to Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres said Peres’ granddaughter was in the terminal at the time of the attack. 

Hadayet was armed with a .45-caliber semiautomatic Glock pistol, a 9 mm handgun and a 6-inch knife, authorities said. The FBI said it wasn’t clear whether he acted alone or why he had drivers’ licenses with two last names — Hadayet and Ali. 

Abdul Zahav, a man who said he worked for Hadayet until he was fired two years ago, said Hadayet once told him he hated all Israelis. 

“He kept all his anger inside him. So he can’t hold it anymore, he can’t hold it anymore,” Zahav said. 

Hadayet’s California licenses also had two birth dates, July 4, 1961 and April 7, 1961. Authorities believe the discrepancy was caused when he filled out his application and wrote 4-7-61 instead of 7-4-61. 

Relatives said Hadayet was a Cairo-born accountant who ran a limousine company out of his Irvine apartment. Hassan Mostafa Mahfouz, who is married to Hadayet’s aunt, said Hadayet had studied commerce at Ain Shams University in Cairo, and had worked as an accountant in a bank before he left for the United States in 1992.


Mom sentenced for fatally stabbing son

The Associated Press
Saturday July 06, 2002

REDWOOD CITY — A woman who pleaded guilty to killing her 13-year-old son was sentenced to 37 years to life in prison Friday in San Mateo County Superior Court. 

Donna Anderson, 49, will have to serve the full 37 years before becoming eligible for parole, Deputy District Attorney Steve Wagstaffe said. 

The former obstetrician, who is from Minnesota, pleaded guilty on June 7 to fatally stabbing her son Stephen Burns on Feb. 24 while he was visiting his father, Frank Burns, in Burlingame. She was also convicted of stabbing Frank Burns, her ex-husband, in the leg as he tried to restrain her. 

“The one question we did not get answered is why,” Wagstaffe said. “She refused to answer, and that will be forever unknown.” 

After being declared competent to stand trial, Anderson dismissed her lawyer and acted as her own counsel. 

Anderson read from a lengthy, typewritten statement at her sentencing, Wagstaffe said, telling the court she expressed regret for her crime by pleading guilty and accepting her life in prison. 

“She is easily the most brilliant defendant I have prosecuted in my 25 years,” Wagstaffe said. 

A wrongful death suit filed by the Burns family against Anderson will likely be brought to court this fall. 


More power would stop the Kings River rapids

By Mark Sherman, The Associated Press
Saturday July 06, 2002

TRIMMER — Soaked by 58-degree snow melt, the rafters share a group high-five, then slap their paddles in unison in the Kings River. 

No one has gone into the drink in their run through the river’s most challenging rapid, Banzai. 

Such moments explain why people pay more than $100 to spend a few hours on the river. Whitewater rafting is a thriving business on this river that descends unimpeded from the Sierra Nevada. 

Less than two hours from Fresno, this section of the Kings is among the state’s more popular rafting destinations. It supports three outfitters during a season that lasts from early spring to midsummer in average years. 

Plans that have been studied off and on for 40 years would stop the rafting excursions. A proposed dam would flood the river canyon and turn the rapids to a placid lake that could hold 228 billion gallons of water to supply farms and households, and generate power. 

Legislation recently introduced in Congress by Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., would protect the 11-mile stretch of the Kings and 21 other California rivers from dams and other developments. The bill also would give “wilderness” designation to 2.4 million acres of California land, restricting mining and logging. 

William McGinnis, owner of one of the Kings River outfitters, mixes his advocacy for protecting the river with instructions to the three paddlers in the raft he is guiding. 

“Why would you ever want to destroy this?” McGinnis says, pointing out a large granite outcropping high above the river. 

McGinnis, 55, has run Whitewater Voyages for 27 years. He lives in the Bay Area, but eagerly agrees to make the trip to take an Associated Press reporter on a tour of the river. 

Upstream, as it courses through Kings Canyon National Park, the river gained “wild and scenic” status in 1987. Downstream is Pine Flat Dam, built nearly 50 years ago to generate power and regulate water supplies in the Central Valley. Pine Flat Lake, the reservoir created by the dam, also is alive with recreational boaters on a recent hot, sunny weekend. 

But the portion of the river used by whitewater rafters was not protected because of the possibility of building a dam at Rodgers Crossing, a couple of miles north of where the outfitters have campgrounds and parking areas for their customers. 

A compromise reached 15 years ago ultimately would require Congress to approve building the dam, which would cost around $600 million, according to current estimates. 

The compromise provides ample protection, say Rep. Cal Dooley, D-Hanford, and David Orth, general manager of the Kings River Conservation District. 

“It is unlikely that you ever will build the project on the Kings River,” said Dooley, who opposes including the Kings River in the legislation. “But in legislation that would preclude it in perpetuity, the harm is that you then have totally precluded any option in the future to really revisit this.” 

Orth, who said he had a lot of fun on his two outings on the river, said the water district has no plans to build the dam at the moment. During last year’s energy crisis, staff did rough calculations on the costs of generating electricity at the proposed dam, then concluded the benefits were too small, he said. 

Orth estimated it would take at least 15 years to get necessary go-aheads from state and federal regulators. 

“I think we recognize today’s political reality, but we’re not willing to accept that it’s the reality for ever more,” Orth said. “I was reminded by board members that at one time, Pine Flat Dam was thought to be politically infeasible.” 

That kind of talk motivates McGinnis and other members of California’s Wild Heritage Campaign. While there are a handful of active logging and mining proposals in California forests, Boxer’s bill mainly is an effort to kill tomorrow’s development plans in the state’s forests and on its rivers. 

Both sides cite California’s projected population growth. Boxer wants to preserve recreation; opponents want to be able to supply water and power when more than 50 million people live in California in the next 20 years. 

The prospects for her legislation and two companion bills in the House of Representatives are dim this year. Boxer hopes merely to have a hearing on the legislation by the end of the year in the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, Corey Brown, a Boxer spokeswoman, said. 

Boxer has said she plans to reintroduce the bill in the next Congress, which begins in January, and attempt to pass it in pieces. 

She has yet to secure the support of her fellow California Democrat, Sen. Dianne Feinstein, who is seeking input from interested parties around the state, spokesman Howard Gantman said. 

McGinnis’ company tries to capitalize on the thrills of the river trip to get clients to offer Feinstein their views. 

His raft is one of seven being used by emergency room workers who have driven more than seven hours from San Diego for an overnight stay that includes two trips down the river and meals. 

Just before the final rapid, Rooster Tail, the boats draw near along the river bank, the group grateful for the sliver of shade beneath a narrow bridge. 

McGinnis launches into his talk about protecting the river for all time. “For those of you who want to do something about it, you’re in luck. We have pens and paper for you to write a letter to Sen. Feinstein telling her you want to protect the river,” McGinnis says. 

The brief lecture complete, McGinnis guides his boat through the rousing finale, which must be what it feels like to take a quick trip through a washing machine — wash, rinse and spin all in one.


News of the Weird

Staff
Saturday July 06, 2002

55 bands at the
Indy Jazz Fest
 

 

INDIANAPOLIS — Classic rockers — and musicians who have just started their careers — will perform at the first Indy Summer Stages. 

Organizers have billed the music festival, which begins Friday, as “Three days, three stages, 55 bands and you.” And like last month’s Indy Jazz Fest, the festival’s lineup isn’t limited by genre or style. 

Ted Nugent, Foreigner and Blondie will play alongside bands such as Widespread Panic, G. Love and Special Sauce, and Johnny Socko. 

Even Rockfour from Israel will take the stage for an afternoon. 

“That’s the spice of life right there,” said John Bell, guitar player and singer for Widespread Panic, which will perform two sets on Saturday night. 

“If we’re all approaching things the same way, I think that would be pretty redundant. Fifty-five times redundant,” Bell said. 

Organizers plan to make Indy Summer Stages an annual event, but Tasker Day, executive director of Indy Jazz Fest Inc., doesn’t anticipate competition for talent and sponsorship. Different music will bring a different crowd, he said. 

“Their target market, and the demographics that they’re going after are so different that, as it turns out, I don’t think it’s going to affect either one of us,” Day said. “They’re after a very different dollar.” 

 

Stone Cold confused in NH  

 

CONCORD, N.H. — A worldwide producer of wrestling programs and specialty products is throwing its weight behind a trademark complaint against a New Hampshire businessman. 

World Wrestling Entertainment Inc. of Stamford, Conn., said it has first dibs on use of the name “Stone Cold,” and a small music label producer in Portsmouth called Stone Cold Records is confusing its customers. 

The group said a “cloud will be placed” over its products if the music producer is allowed to keep the name. In a complaint filed with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office in Washington, it seeks to have Stone Cold Records’ trademark canceled. 

At issue is whether concurrent use of the names is confusing to customers, whether the name is being used to sell similar products, and who had rights to the name first. No hearings have been scheduled. 

Stone Cold also has been used as a nickname for WWE wrestler Steve Austin, who has been suspended because he did not show up for two performances. Austin has often promoted Stone Cold products. 

“I have put so much time and effort and money into the label itself that I’m not going to give up,” Dexter Durant, owner of Stone Cold Records, said recently. “I believe in freedom. Being in New Hampshire, it just makes me want to stand up and say, ‘Who the heck do they think they are?”’ 

WWE spokesman Gary Davis said the group may be willing to compromise, though he didn’t give specifics. 

“We are moving forward and are having discussions with Stone Cold Records to see if we can work this out amicably,” Davis said. 

 

Czech-owned collection
may be claimed  

PRAGUE, Czech Republic — The Czech government decided against sending a state-owned collection of paintings to an exhibit in France, because of possible restitution claims by the children of the collection’s former owner. 

The Vincenc Kramar collection, which is worth more than $500 million, had been set to travel to Paris, where it was to have been displayed as part of a festival of Czech culture that opened last month and runs until December. 

Culture Minister Pavel Dostal said Wednesday authorities decided against sending the paintings because they fear that the children of the collection’s original owner, Vincenc Kramar, could file restitution claims abroad. 

The collection includes several early paintings by Pablo Picasso, a Picasso self-portrait and paintings by Georges Braque, Pierre Auguste Renoir and Paul Gauguin. 

Kramar’s heirs claim their father was under pressure by the communist regime when he donated the collection to the Czech National Gallery in 1960. Czech courts have rejected their claim. 

“The government decision is very wise,” said Milan Knizak, the director of the National Gallery.


Town criers belt out their best in competition

By Catherine Lucey, The Associated Press
Saturday July 06, 2002

PHILADELPHIA — Bellowing out “Oyez! Oyez!” and “hear ye, hear ye,” town criers from the United States and Canada unfurled their ornate scrolls Friday in the North American Town Criers Competition. 

“Come one, come all, come hear my call. My message’s clear, for every year,” boomed Bruce Bedell, of London, Canada. 

Dressed in Revolutionary War-era garb — brocade waistcoats, knee-britches and velvet jackets with lace frills at the neck and wrists — about 20 criers clanged their bells through three rounds of competition. 

The first call was a greeting, a rhyming cry of no more than 125 words delivered in rolling, singsong voice. The middle cry was a response to the Declaration of Independence and the last a thank you. 

“The biggest thing is you want people to remember what you said and they remember it if it’s humorous,” said defending 2000 champion Chris Whyman, 41, of Kingston, Ontario. 

A panel of six judges ranked criers on sustained volume, deportment, content and the use of the attention-getting devices, like bells. 

First-place honors went to John Webster of Markham, Ontario, who has previously won three world trophies in the Bermuda International Competition. 

Criers say the job dates back to ancient Greece, but Friday’s display was closer to 1700s criers who delivered news to townspeople, many of whom were illiterate. 

“Town criers are basically what newscasters are today,” said host Rich LaLena, 45, wearing a gold waistcoat and dark, three-cornered hat. “The only difference is we don’t do that editorializing.”


Siblings recall seven years of abuse while under agency’s care

By Tal Abbady, The Associated Press
Saturday July 06, 2002

MALABAR, Fla. — Sitting together in the home of their adoptive parents, the six children seem unshaken as they describe seven years of beatings and other abuse at the hands of their foster family. 

The Roe children — Jesse, 15; twins Jordan and Joseph, 14; Toby, 12; and twins Suzanna and Robbie, 9 — realize they are finally safe. 

“We stuck together,” Jordan said in a recent interview. “We depended on Jesse. He kept track of us, kept us in line.” 

“I didn’t know I had that responsibility,” said Jesse, who now plays basketball, is learning to drive and dreams of becoming a Navy Seal. “I didn’t know what a normal life was.” 

The children’s harrowing years with foster parents Jackie and Frank Lynch — and the role the Department of Children & Families played in the disturbing story — have come to illustrate Florida’s troubled child welfare system. 

The agency has been under intense criticism for failing for 15 months to notice the disappearance of 5-year-old Rilya Wilson, a Miami girl under its supervision. That case has drawn national attention and become an issue in the governor’s race. 

In May, the agency agreed to a $5 million settlement of a lawsuit stemming from the Roe children’s abuse. Documents filed under the 1999 lawsuit suggested the agency “ignored clear signs of danger” by licensing the Lynch home for foster care. 

Records also showed Jackie Lynch’s daughter from a prior marriage was removed from her care in 1987 for sexual and emotional abuse. Frank Lynch had an arrest record for obstruction of justice and owed $16,000 in child support, and Jackie’s son Michael was arrested as a teen-ager after he allegedly videotaped himself having sex with a 14-year-old. 

The Roe children lived with the Lynches from 1990 to 1997. They say their foster parents locked them in a room, beat them regularly and fed them a diet of Nyquil and cereal soaked in Kool-Aid. The children attended school erratically and rarely left one small room. 

“We were always getting hit a lot by Jackie, Frank and Michael for no reason,” said Jordan, a poised young teen-ager. 

The children say Michael Lynch son used to be beat them and that he allegedly would shove Jordan or Joseph inside a plastic crate, tape it shut and toss it into the swimming pool. 

“I used to think — I’m going to die,” Jordan said. 

Efforts to reach the Lynches, who moved to Alabama in 2000, were unsuccessful. Telephone numbers in their names have been disconnected. In 1997, Jackie Lynch plead guilty to one count of child negligence and paid a $140 fine after an undisclosed plea bargain. 

The siblings were removed from the Lynch home in 1997 “because of the pervasive abuse they suffered,” according to court records. 

Their adoptive parents, Rod and Kathy Rodrigues, said it was a struggle to help the children overcome the years of abuse. 

On their first night as a family, the couple put the children to bed in separate rooms. The next morning, they found all six asleep in a clump on the floor, much as the they were forced to do during their years in the Lynch home. 

The siblings dismantled a bedroom dresser and made a fort of the panels. They lit fires, flooded bathrooms, slammed into walls and cut their own foreheads with scissors. 

“It took two years before we decided to hang on to them,” said Rod Rodrigues, 47. 

Jordan and Joseph were slightly cone-headed from constantly banging their heads against walls. 

“You could mark their growth based on the holes in the walls,” 37-year-old Kathy Rodrigues said. 

There were also medical and developmental problems. The siblings arrived malnourished and emaciated. The Lynches allegedly routinely sedated them with adult-strength Nyquil, likely the cause of the liver damage that showed up on medical tests, according to Kathy Rodrigues.


Bush in Maine for birthday

By Sandra Sobieraj, The Associated Press
Saturday July 06, 2002

President turns 56 Saturday 

 

KENNEBUNKPORT, Maine — President Bush shuttered the White House to business Friday and escaped — with a gaggle of daughters, nieces, nephews, brothers and wayward pets — for a long birthday weekend at the seaside compound where his family has summered for more than 100 years. 

First up: a spin in his father’s speed boat with daughter Jenna. No driving privileges for the birthday boy, though; it was the former president at the wheel when the boat zipped into a cove, and the current president called out to neighbors that he felt great. 

The president, who turns 56 on Saturday, flew to his parents’ home on the rocky Maine coast after a quick morning phone call to Afghan President Hamid Karzai. Beyond that and his daily intelligence briefings, Bush planned little more taxing than some golf and fishing before his Monday afternoon return to work in Washington. 


Court rules as unconstitutional same-sex law

By Caryn Rousseau, The Associated Press
Saturday July 06, 2002

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — The state Supreme Court ruled Friday that a law barring sexual relations between people of the same gender was an unconstitutional invasion of privacy. 

The Legislature passed the law in 1977, and it apparently has never been used to prosecute anyone. 

The seven plaintiffs challenged the law, though, because they don’t want their conduct to be considered illegal, according to the Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund, which represented them. 

“We agree that the police power may not be used to enforce a majority morality on persons whose conduct does not harm others,” the court said in the ruling. 

“A fundamental right to privacy is implicit in the Arkansas constitution” and the state has a tradition of protecting that right, the court wrote. 

A judge had ruled in 2001 that the law was unconstitutional, but the state appealed. The attorney general’s office argued the Legislature should be allowed to consider moral judgments when creating laws. 

A dissenting opinion by two justices said the court should not act because there was no criminal case brought under the law. The plaintiffs failed to show an actual threat of prosecution or harm from the law’s existence, the dissent said. 

The law carried a penalty of a $1,000 fine and up to a year in jail. 

Arkansas was one of six states that criminalized gay and lesbian sexual conduct involving consenting adults. The others are Kansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Texas and Utah. 


Pilots charged after flying through NYC sky

By Devlin Barrett, The Associated Press
Saturday July 06, 2002

Sanctions could range
from a written reprimand
to license revocations 

 

NEW YORK — Two pilots were charged Friday with reckless endangerment for flying through restricted airspace around New York City, spurring fears of a July Fourth terrorist attack. 

The two planes flew just 25 feet over a swimming area, well below the required 1,000-feet minimum, federal authorities said. The pilots had been returning to their New Jersey base from Massachusetts, where they towed advertising banners above holiday beachgoers. 

Pilots Andre Morais and Daniel Oliveria, both of Miami, each face up to seven years in prison if convicted of reckless endangerment and violating air traffic rules. 

Queens District Attorney Richard Brown said they flew dangerously low Thursday evening while cruising past Rockaway Beach. 

“Their alleged aggressive and reckless actions put many lives in danger, including their own, and showed extremely poor judgment during a heightened state of security, especially on our nation’s birthday,” Brown said. 

Three helicopters followed the planes along the New Jersey coast to the airfield in Wall, N.J., about 40 miles south of Manhattan, where the pilots landed. 

Neither pilot had their radio or transponder on, officials said. 

The FBI questioned the men for several hours, determined they posed no terror risk and released them. Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Jim Peters said the pilots could face flight sanctions ranging from a written reprimand to revocation of their licenses. 

Arrest warrants were issued Friday in New York for the men, according to the prosecutor’s office. 

The planes are owned by Aerial Sign Corp. in Hollywood, Fla. The company’s chief executive officer, Jim Butler, dismissed the charges as “grandstanding.” 

“Until I receive the tapes from the air traffic control facility, I cannot reach the conclusion that these people did this,” Butler said.


Firefighters now fearing floods in Colorado hills

By P. Solomon Banda,, The Associated Press
Saturday July 06, 2002

DENVER — Firefighting crews laid straw on charred hillsides and placed concrete barriers along roads Friday to prevent floods in areas stripped bare by wildfires. 

A tenth of an inch could send water and debris down Mitchell Creek toward homes in Glenwood Springs, said Guy Meyer of Garfield County Emergency Management. About 200 homes were evacuated for a few hours Thursday because of the threat of flooding. 

Dozens of trucks and front-end loaders were used to install concrete blocks to convert roads into a diversion channel that would move rainwater away from a subdivision toward the Colorado River. 

“We’re going to probably leave this up there for at least two years until that area is vegetated and the threat of mudslides dissipates,” Meyer said. 

Crews also put down hay and straw, kept in place with netting, to absorb rain. 

“We all pretty much knew that there was a part two to this and that the fire in and of itself wasn’t the end of it,” Meyer said. 

The wildfire burned 138,000 acres, destroyed 29 homes and crept to within a few miles of Denver’s southern suburbs before it was contained Tuesday. Thunderstorms were forecast through Saturday for Glenwood Springs and other burned areas. 

Near Durango, firefighters were gaining the upper hand on a 73,145-acre wildfire that was 75 percent contained. Four ranches and 34 homes remained evacuated. 

Wildfires also burned Friday in Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico and Utah. 

In northeastern Arizona, officials tallied the damage from the state’s largest-ever wildfire, which burned 469,000 acres during the last two weeks. It was 90 percent contained Friday. 

Officials said the blaze caused at least $28 million in damage and destroyed 467 homes. No homes have been lost in recent days, but the figure rose because fire departments were able to reach secluded homes that weren’t counted initially.


Holiday turns to sorrow after N.J. fire

By Geoff Mulvihill, The Associated Press
Saturday July 06, 2002

GLOUCESTER CITY, N.J. — Investigators may never learn what started the blaze that killed three little girls and three of the firefighters who tried to save them, an official said Friday. 

The utter destruction of the twin wood homes Thursday will make it more difficult to determine the fire’s cause, said Mark Chait, an agent with the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms in Philadelphia. 

Authorities said, however, that there was no evidence the fire was set. 

The blaze turned Thursday’s holiday into a mourning day for the Philadelphia suburb of 11,500. 

One of the men who died, Thomas G. Stewart III, had used a fire truck’s loudspeaker system to propose to Danielle Ruggiero in front of a cheering crowd gathered at a high school football stadium to watch fireworks Wednesday night. 

About 12 hours later, Stewart was called to the fire in a 2 1/2-story duplex where 3-year-old twins, Claudia and Colletta Slack, and their 5-year-old sister, Alexandra, were trapped. 

Before rescuers could reach the girls, the roof collapsed. A neighbor said the cave-in looked like a falling deck of cards. 

The little girls were killed, along with Stewart, Mount Ephraim Fire Chief James E. Sylvester and Deputy Chief John D. West. Five other firefighters were pulled out alive and suffered only minor injuries. 

Neighbors said their mother, Katia Williamson, 24, rushed back into the house to try to save them. She was listed in critical but stable condition Friday at a Chester, Pa., hospital. 

Their father, Frank Slack, 27, was treated for smoke inhalation, said Greg Reinert, a spokesman for the Camden County prosecutor’s office. 

The ATF doesn’t normally investigate residential fires. Chait said the agency joined the probe partly because of the three firefighters’ deaths, and because of a personal connection:


Local artist’s 3-D drawing
wins SF chalk art contest

Bob Baldwin
Friday July 05, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO – Berkeley artist Aimeé Baldwin took first place in the Chalk Art Contest at the annual North Beach Festival. 

The prize-winning drawing of a picnic, which contained many foods plus an open copy of Lawrence Ferlinghetti’s book Howl, employed shading and perspective to great advantage so that when viewed from the sidewalk it appeared three-dimensional.  

Aimeé’s art is familiar to many Berkeley residents. Her giant papier maché rabbit greets customers at The Phoenix Pastificio on Shattuck Avenue, where diners enjoy their meals beside a mural painted by her and friend Anandami Arnold depicting porticos that look out onto an Italian landscape. 


Group seeks sunnier city

Peter Sussman and Judith Scherr
Friday July 05, 2002

To the Editor: 

The city’s elected officials and staff members, as well as its commissions, boards and agencies, conduct the people’s business. The people do not cede to these individuals and entities the right to decide what their constituents should know about the operations of local government. 

That’s what the San Francisco Sunshine ordinance says. And the same goes for Berkeley. Government business is our business, and it invariably works better and more equitably when its operations are open to public view. 

Yet many of us – reporters, commissioners and other citizens – have been thwarted when we’ve tried to gather information from, and gain timely access to, the city government and school administration. The Berkeley Citizens Sunshine Coalition wants to know if you’re getting all the information you need to fulfill your role in government, or if your attempts to gain access have been stymied ... and if so, how. We invite your specific suggestions for better communication to and from government. We also want to know where Berkeley is doing a good job in keeping its citizens informed on and involved in the operations of government. 

So please fill out this questionnaire and return it to us at Berkeley Citizens Sunshine Coalition, 2887 College Ave. #338, Berkeley, CA 94705-2154; or e-mail your comments to our open "bulletin board" at B–Sunshine@yahoogroups.com or our more private mailbox at Berkeleysunshine@yahoo.com. Read the comments at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/B-Sunshine/ 

(Please answer any questions that are germane to your experiences.) 

What issues have you addressed for which you needed information from the city government? (No more than two sentences please.) 

Could you get timely access to all the documents and records you needed, and if not, what was the nature of the documents you couldn’t get? 

What departments did you deal with, and at what level were they unresponsive? 

Were you aware of all council/board/commission discussions of the issue you were addressing, and if not, how do you think you should have been able to get the notification you needed? 

Did the general public and the press have the access they needed to assess the issues you have dealt with, and if not, what or where were the barriers? What procedures would you suggest to remove the barriers or generally improve the efficiency of the process? 

Have you been satisfied with the lines of communication when you wished to address public officials, such as during public comment periods at meetings? Has enough space been available to accommodate large crowds? 

Have officials been able to meet with you? (That is, has any official been formally barred from meeting with you?) 

 

Can you think of any realistic measures that would enhance or better organize public participation at meetings? 

Are you satisfied that meetings are held with adequate public notice and that what is to be discussed is clearly stated, with sufficient background material available in a timely enough manner for the public to make informed judgments? 

On the issues you’ve dealt with, do you believe council members and commissioners have had adequate access to the background material before voting and time to read the  

This questionnaire was prepared by the Berkeley Citizens Sunshine Coalition, a newly formed group of journalists, elected and appointed officials and other citizens working for a more open Berkeley government. Please contact us at the address above and come to our next meeting, which will be devoted to soliciting public input on Berkeley citizens’ information and access needs. The meeting will be held at 7 p.m. on July 18 in Meeting Room A, Central Library. 

 

Peter Sussman and Judith Scherr 

For Berkeley Citizens  

Sunshine Coalition 


Preston Sturges films
shown every weekend in July

by Peter Crimmins, Special to the Daily Planet
Friday July 05, 2002

Easy Living
The Great McGinty
Sullivan’s Travels
 

 

During the height of summer, when the heat and the bounty of the season beckon Berkeleyans to taste its pleasures, spiritual discipline might suffer. Who wants to visit church or temple when the sun is shining and the ice-cream truck is chiming? Those wanting in religious rigor might consider a secular facsimile, and attend weekly movie screenings. Beginning this weekend and continuing every Saturday in July the Pacific Film Archive will be showing romantic comedies by the genre’s greatest writer-director, Preston Sturges. You would have to look hard to find Divine messages in these films, but their divinity is plentiful and – why not? – regular attendance resembles weekly mass. 

Made during Hollywood’s Golden Age – the fabled, Edenic 1940s when America had just kicked Hitler’s butt and the studio system was churning out sparkling comedies and brooding noir – the films of Preston Sturges were the cream of an already impressively creamy crop, smart-laced slapstick with wit to burn. In a world of "Men In Black II" and "Reign Of Fire," these bon-bons of black and white charm truly are "Christmas In July." 

The 1940 film from which the Pacific Film Archive series gets its title (screening July 6) has signature Sturges elements: fat cat capitalists amazed by how much money they throw away, scrappy lower-class characters riding a tsunami of circumstance into ill-gotten riches, and chaos in the streets (in this case the usual pie-in-the-eye fight is escalated to throwing fresh fish across a crowded avenue). When a lowly number-cruncher in an anonymous pool of number-crunchers is distracted by the possibility of winning a slogan contest at Maxford House Coffee ("Grand To The Last Gulp") his supervisor delivers a pep talk about the respectability of the lower-middle class work ethic. Success is not measured in money, he says, but self-worth. But that lowly dreamer believes he has won the jackpot and everyone around him picks up his self-confident cue, believing he is winner because he acts like a winner. The unexpected present of virtual credit blows over his entire tenement as he and his fiancé buy half a toy store for the neighborhood kids. 

The pattern becomes a familiar one. In "Easy Living" (1937, written by Sturges, directed by Mitchell Leisen, screening Sunday, July 7) Jean Arthur plays a struggling young single woman. She is working at a magazine with the improbably pious title "A Boy’s Constant Companion." Fortune literally falls upon her in the way of a mink coat hurled out the high window of a wealthy banker (Edward Arnold) in fit of rage over his wife’s spendthrift habits. Although the coat causes her to lose favor and lose employment with the magazine’s uptight matronly clucks, she unexpectedly enters high society through a series of absurd coincidences connected with the expensive fur (and, once again, a food fight). 

And then again in "The Great McGinty," when a bum in a bread line (Brian Donlevy) falls in with a corrupt political machine and, lacking charm or smarts but with unlimited backing of an underworld boss, winds up the governor. Perhaps two years ago, these films and their lessons of success that favors the lucky or the clever would have been reaffirming to those caught up in the internet-economy bubble that was backed by unlimited venture capital. Now the frothy screwball stories, in which riches and power come to those who merely think they’ve got it, strike a sour note in the spleens of those of us with obsolete skills and spotty experience who did not make a mint during the boom times. 

"Sullivan’s Travels," (July 27) reverses the pattern, but the message is all the same and so are the players. The denizens of the so-called Sturges Stock Company are a stable of flawlessly comic character actors, including the sledgehammer style of William Demarest, whose vociferous, one-note curmudgeon would eventually be softened by the small screen to the housekeeper on "My Three Sons." In “Sullivan’s Travels,” a Hollywood director (Joel McCrea) is on an undercover research mission exploring poverty to make a socially-conscious film "O Brother Where Art Thou," which eventually puts him in the doldrums of poverty, for real. This is the film from which the Coen Brothers titled their hobo odyssey, although the two films have nothing in common save jumping, moving boxcars.  

Before going out on the trains, Sullivan’s stately butler (stock company regular Robert Greig) warns him in a Sturges-esque speech against patronizing the poor. Echoing similar speeches from "McGinty," and "Easy Living," Sturges repeatedly makes the point that there is no shame in the lower class, and that the poor, for the most part, don’t want sentimentalized help from the rich. ("Did you ever think they wanted to be left alone?" Governor McGinty asks his do-gooder wife of an arranged marriage.) Sullivan, however, doesn’t heed the hired help’s warning ("He get’s kind of gruesome sometimes, doesn’t he?") and goes meddling in the Hoovervilles. Eventually he is pulled out of a swampy prison work detail (having been accused of a murder) by a publicity stunt and returns to his rightful place of privilege in Hollywood. 

As a summery, religious substitute Sturges’ films fall shy of preaching the humble lifestyle. His telegraphed moralizing affirms that the meek shall inherit the earth, but while eking our sympathies for the luckless underdog caught in an unexpected windfall, his plots celebrate sleight-of-hand, power of suggestion and the luck of the gambler. For all the buoyant hijinks Sturges weaves about the quiet nobility of the lower class, in the end it is better to be rich and laugh all the way to the bank.


Arts Calendar

Staff
Friday July 05, 2002

 

Friday, July 5 

Free Early Music Group 

Singers needed for small group of 15th and 16th century music every Friday 

10 a.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center, Hearst at MLK Way. 

Contact Ann at 665-8863 

 

Saturday, July 13 

Barbara Dane 75th Birthday Concert 

7:30 p.m. 

Frieght and Salvage coffee house, 1111 Addison St. 

Jazz, blues, American folk from around the world 

548-1761 for ticket information 

 

Sunday, July 14 

Hal Stein Quartet  

4:30 p.m.  

Jazzschool, 2087 Addison Street € Berkeley 

845-5373, www.jazzschool.com 

$6-12  

 

Troy Lampkins Group 

4:30 p.m.  

Jazzschool 2087 Addison Street € Berkeley 

Groove-filled, groove-intense music 

845-5373, swing@jazzschool.com 

$6-12  

 

July 25 

Midsummer Motzart  

Festival Orchestra 

8 p.m. 

First Congregational Church 

2345 Channing Way 

Divertimento in D, Piano concerto #17, Symphony #38 “Prague” 

(415) 292-9624 for tickets 

$25-50 

 

Saturday, August 3 

Bata Ketu 

8 p.m.  

Alice Arts Center, 1428 Alice St. 

Oakland. 

Interplay of Cuban and Brazilian  

music and dance  

www.lapena.org 

$20 

 

“Red Rivers Run Through Us”  

Until Aug. 11,  

Wed. - Sun.  

Noon to 5 p.m. 

Berkeley Art Center,  

1275 Walnut St. 

Art and writing from Maxine Hong Kingston's veterans' writing group 

Reception, 2 to 4 p.m.  

644-6893 

 

From the Attic: Preserving  

and Sharing our Past 

Until July 26, Thur.-Sat. 1 to 4 p.m. 

Veterans Memorial Building 

1931 Center St. 

Exhibit shows the 'inside' of museum work 

848-0181 

Free 

 

The Creation of People’s Park 

Through Aug. 31, Mon.-Thur. 9 to 9 p.m., Fri. 9 to 5 p.m., Sat. 1 to 5 p.m. Sun. 3 to 7 p.m. 

The Free Movement Speech Cafe  

UC Berkeley campus 

A photo exhibition, curated  

by Harold Adler 

hjadler@yahoo.com 

Free 

 

Jan Wurm: Paintings and Drawings 

Mon. and Fri. 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tues.-Thurs. 8:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. 

Flora Hewlett Library at the Graduate Theological Union 

2400 Ridge Road 

649-1417 

 

Thursday, July 11 

“New Visions: Introductions 

'02” Reception 

Works from emerging Californian artists 

Reception, 6 to 8 p.m. Display up from July 3 to Aug. 10 

Pro Arts, 461 Ninth St. Oakland 

763-4361 

Free 

 

Saturday, July 20 

“First Anniversary  

Group Show”  

July 18 to Aug. 17 

Ardency Gallery, Aki Lot, 8th Street 

Reception, 5 to 8 p.m. 

13 local artists display work ranging from sculpture to mixed media 

836-0831 

 

Antony and Cleopatra 

Directed by Joy Meads 

June 15 to July 20,  

Thurs.-Fri. 8 p.m. 

La Vals Subterranean Theater  

1834 Euclid 

234-6046 for reservations 

$14 general, $10 student 

 

Abingdon Square  

Previews 16,18,19 at 8 p.m. Runs June 21 to July 6, Thurs. to Sat. 8 p.m. Sundays 7 p.m.  

Julia Morgan Theater for the Arts, 2640 College Ave. 

The Shotgun Players,  

directed by Shana Cooper 

704-8210 www.shotgunplayers.org 

$18 regular, $12 students, previews and Mondays - pay what you can. Opening Night $25\ 

 

Grease 

July 5-Aug. 10, Sunday matinees  

July 14,21,28 Aug. 4 

Contra Costa Civic Theater,  

951 Pomona Ave. El Cerrito 

Directed by Andrew Gabel 

524-9132 for reservations 

$17 general, $10 for under 16 and under 

 

 

Don Pasquale Opera 

July 13, 15, 17, 19 at 8 p.m.  

July 21 at 2 p.m. 

Dean Lesher Regional Center for the Arts, Walnut Creek 

From the Festival Opera  

Association, a comedy by  

Gaetano Donizetti about an arranged marriage 

www.festivalopera.com 

 

Benefactors 

July 18 to Aug. 18, Wed.-Sat. 8 p.m. Sun. 2 and 7 p.m. 

Previews: July 12-14 and 17 

Michael Frayn's comedy of two neighboring couple's interactions 

Aurora Theatre Company  

2081 Addison St. 

843-4822, www.auroratheater.org  

for reservations. $26 - $35  

 

The Shape of Things 

Sept. 13 to Oct. 20 

Aurora Theatre Company,  

2081 Addison St. 

Neil LaBute's love story  

about two students 

843-4822, www.auroratheater.org for reservations 

$26 - $35  

 

The Heidi Chronicles 

July 12 to Aug. 10 Fri. and Sat. 8 p.m. 

Live Oak Theater, 1301 Shattuck 

Actors Ensemble of Berkeley present Wendy Wasserstein’s play about change. 

528-5620 

$10 

 

A Thousand and One Arabian Nights 

July 12 to Sept. 28, Fri.-Sun. 8 p.m. Sun. 4 p.m. 

Forest Meadows Outdoor Amphitheater, Grand Avenue at the Dominican University, San Raphael 

Marin Shakespeare Company’s presents this classic story with original Arabic music. 

(415) 499-4488 for tickets 

$12, youth; $20 senior; $22 general 

 

Alarms and Excursions 

Nov. 15 to Dec. 22 

Aurora Theatre Company,  

2081 Addison St. 

Michael Frayn's comedy about the irony of modern technology 

843-4822, www.auroratheater.org for reservations 

$26 - $35  

 

Poetry Diversified 

1st and 3rd Tuesdays,  

7:30 to 9 p.m. 

World Ground Cafe,  

3726 Mac Arthur Blvd., Oakland 

Open mic and featured readers 

 

Boas Writing Group 

7:30 p.m. 

Cody's, 2454 Telegraph Ave. 

Stefani Barber, Jean Lieske  

and many more 

845-7852 

$2 

 

Saturday, July 6 

Bay Area Arts Coalition  

Poetry Reading 

3 to 5 p.m. 

West Berkeley Branch Library  

1125 University Ave. 

527-99055 

 

Wednesday, July 10 

Carmen Gimenez-Rosello,  

Dawn Trook 

7:30 p.m. 

Cody's, 2454 Telegraph Ave. 

845-7852 

$2 

 

Sunday, July 14 

M.L. Liebler and  

Country Joe McDonald 

Poetry and Music 

7:30 p.m. 

Cody's, 2454 Telegraph Ave. 

845-7852 

$2 

Wednesday, July 17 

Hannah Stein and Kevin Clark 

7:30 p.m. 

Cody's, 2454 Telegraph Ave. 

Authors of “Earthlight and In the Evening of No Warning.” 

845-7852 

$2 

 

Open Mike and Featured Poet 

7 to 9 P.M. First Thursdays and second Wednesdays each month  

Albany Library 1247 Marin Ave 

Thursday, July 11: Poets Tenesha Smith-Douglas and Judith Annenbaum. 

Second Wednesdays are a monthly Poetry Writing Workshop, led by Alison Seevak.  

526-3720 Ext. 19 

Free 

 

Friday and Saturday, July 5 and 6 

Brainwash Movie Festival 

9 p.m. 

Alliance for West Oakland Development Parking Lot, 1357 5th St. Across from W. Oakland BART 

Weird and unique short films and video festival 

(415) 273-1545 

$10 

 

Friday, July 5 

“Remember the Night”  

and “The Good Fairy” 

7:30 p.m. and 9:25 p.m., respectively. 

UC Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, 2575 Bancroft  

Preston Sturges' classic films 

 

Saturday, July 6 

“The Great McGinty” and  

“Christmas in July” 

McGinty at 4:30 and 8:30 p.m.; Christmas at 7 p.m. 

UC Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, 2575 Bancroft  

Preston Sturges' classic films 

 


Out & About Calendar

Staff
Friday July 05, 2002


Saturday, July 6

 

Capoeira Batizado 

2 to6 p.m.  

Capoeira Arts Cafe 

2026 Addison, Berkeley 

A celebration of Capoeira with performances by local arts organization. 

For information: 666-1255, www.capoeiraarts.com 

Free 

 

The Great Rummage Sale 

10 a.m. to 4 p.m. 

Berkeley-East Bay Humane Society, 2700 Ninth Street (at Carleton) in Berkeley 

Warehouse full of household items, books, records, clothing, furniture, and lots more at great prices. All proceeds go to support of our shelter. 

845-7735 

 


Monday, July 8

 

Berkeley Gray Panthers Home Owners Meeting  

Monday, July 8th, 2002 at 3 p.m.  

Berkeley Gray Panthers Office,1403 Addison Street-behind University Avenue Andronico’s Super Market. 

Laurie Capitelli of Red Oak Realty runs down the options of selling homes 

All Welcome 

548-9696 or 486-8010 

Free 

 

Introduction to Accessible  

Software and Hardware  

6:30 to 8 p.m. 

Berkeley Public Library Electronic Classroom, 2090 Kittredge Street 

RSVP to 981-6121- Alan Bern, Special Services Coordinator 

 



Tuesday, July 9 

Mother’s Morning Out 

10:30 a.m. to noon 

Upaya Center for Wellbeing 

478 Santa Clara Ave. 

Craniosacral Therapy for Infants and Children 

www.upayacenter.org 

Free 

 


Thursday, July 11

 

Great Sierra Backpacking  

Destinations 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo  

Karen Najarian of Sierra Wilderness Seminars presents slides from her more that 20 years exploring the Sierra Backcountry. 

For information: 527-4140 

Free 

 

What Do You Believe? Spiritual Lives of American Teenagers 

6:30 to 8:00 p.m. 

Ellen Driscoll Playhouse 

325 Highland Avenue, Piedmont  

Film presented by Piedmont diversity groups; discussion with filmmaker, Sarah Feinbloom.  

655-5552, or maudep@aol.com 

Free 

 


Friday, July 12

 

Celebration of Emma Goldman's Birthday  

8 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. 

Fellowship of Humanity Hall  

390 27th St  

An all-ages, alcohol-free party with live music, DJ, and dance lessons 

http://www.ebcaw.org  

$5 to $10 sliding scale  

 


Saturday, July 13

 

Peach / Stone Fruit Tasting 

Tasting & cooking demonstrations 

10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

Center Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way 

Free 

 

15th Anniversary Derby  

Street Farmers Market 

Live music and & stone-fruit and peach tasting 

Tasting & cooking demonstrations. 

Berkeley Farmers' Market 

10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

Derby Street at Martin Luther King, Jr. Way  

Free 

Festival of New Versions  

of Classic Asian Games 

Noon to 5 p.m 

Dr. Comics and Mr. Games,  

4014 Piedmont Ave., Oakland  

Dr Comics and Mr Games Hosts Game a festival featuring two new versions of classic Asian board games 

601-7800 

 


Sunday, July 14

 

Hands-on Bicycle Repair  

11 a.m.to noon 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Learn from an REI bike technician basic bike repairs such as brake adjustments and fixing a flat. 

For information: 527-4140 

Free 

 

Family Health Day 

11 a.m. to 5 p.m. 

Fourth Street and University Avenue 

Explore health concerns in a family oriented environment 

Free 

 


Tuesday, July 16

 

Berkeley Camera  

Club Weekly Meeting 

7:30 p.m. 

Northbrae Community Church 

941 The Alameda 

Share slides, prints with other photographers 

525-3565 

Free 

Introduction to Accessible Software and Hardware  

10:30 a.m. to noon 

Berkeley Public Library Electronic Classroom, 2090 Kittredge Street 

RSVP to 981-6121. Alan Bern, Special Services Coordinator 

 


Wedneday, July 17

 

Doctors Without Borders 

Until July 18 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. 

UC Berkeley, Springer Gateway, West Entrance Crescent 

Interactive exhibit expalining medicines for people in developing countries; Film screenings 

www.doctorswithoutborders.org 

Free 

 


Thursday, July 18

 

Mystique of the Widerness 

7 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Phil Arnot presents slides from over 50 years of exploring such places as Alaska, New Zealand, the Sierra and the Rockies. 

For information: 527-4140 

 

Introduction to Accessible  

Software and Hardware  

3 to 4:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Public Library Electronic Classroom, 2090 Kittredge Street 

RSVP to 981-6121. Alan Bern, Special Services Coordinator 

 


Saturday, July 20

 

Emergency Preparedness  

Classes in Berkeley 

Earthquake Retrofitting: Learn how to strengthen your wood frame home. 

10 a.m. to 5 p.m. 

812 Page St. 

981-5605 

Free 

 


Thursday, July 25

 

California Landscapes:  

A Geologist's Perspective 

7 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

John Karachewski presents an educational slideshw on such amazing places as the Sierra Nevada, Coast Ranges the Great Valley and Cascades 

For information: 527- 4140. 

Free 

 


Saturday, July 27

 

Test Ride Kestrel Bicycles 

11 a.m. to 1 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Preston Sandusky of Kestrel, a premier manufacturer of high-end, carbon-fiber road and mountain bikes, intrduces their latest design. 

For information: 527-4140 

Free 

 

"Neon: The Living Flame" 

7:00 p.m.  

Alameda Museum  

2324 Alameda Ave.  

The Alameda Museum presents Michael Crowe, author, and neon artist Karl Hauser 

lecture by Michael Crowe 

748-0796 or 841-8489.  

Members free, nonmembers $5  

 


Sunday, July 28

 

Hands-on Bicycle Repair  

11 a.m. to noon 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

Learn from an REI bike techician basic repairs such as brake adjustments and fixing a flat. 

For information: 527-4140 

Free 

 


Wednesday, July 31

 

Mountain Adventure Seminars:  

Introduction to Rock Climbing 

7 to 9 p.m. 

REI Berkeley, 1338 San Pablo 

An introduction to rockclimbing including knot tieing, belaying and movement. 

For information: (209) 753-6556 

$115 REI members; $125 non-members 

 


Perspective

Jared Green

Staff
Friday July 05, 2002

“Hi, I’m Jamal Sampson, your 2003 NBA Rookie of the Year.” 

That’s the thing that must have flashed through former Cal freshman and current Milwaukee Bucks second-round, second-thought Jamal Sampson’s head when he made the most momentous decision of his young life: to enter the NBA Draft after just one year of college. 

Who can really blame him? A 19-year-old kid who has known nothing but adulation and fame since he was the tallest boy scout on the block. A kid who fully admitted he “didn’t have to practice hard in high school, didn’t even have to play hard most of the time.” A kid who won the MVP in the first college tournament he played in. 

With all that behind him, how could he think anything bad could happen? He was compared to the wunderkind of last year’s draft, high schools stars who were three of the top four picks and are now making millions. So what if all three spent most of last season carrying bags and listening to their new coaches explain everything they didn’t know about the game? At least they were living The Life, right? Escalades, ice and the more, ahem, adult perks of the big leagues. 

Sampson, on the other hand, had to go to classes every day and even pay attention. He had to travel to Pullman, Wash., and Corvallis, Ore., instead of New York and Chicago. And above all, he had to watch those other guys on SportsCenter on a nightly basis when he just knew he belonged alongside them. 

Only he didn’t. Those who watched Sampson play on a regular basis saw a physically gifted player who had almost no offensive game against players his own size, a skinny kid who was abused by any post player over 250 pounds. Anyone who was paying attention could have told him that he wasn’t ready for the NBA, not even close. 

That’s the most amazing thing, thinking about the geniuses who gave Sampson the advice, “Of course you’re ready. Get thee to the next level.” Did they actually see him play? He hired an agent, cutting off any chance of a return to college ball, where he could have developed his game. Did that agent actually tell him he would be a first-round pick, the only way to guarantee a contract? 

You hear a lot of college players say they can’t live on what schools give them. Let’s see: free tuition and books, free housing, two training table meals a day, and a little bit of pocket money. I remember my college days, and they certainly didn’t include any of those perks. I was happy when dinner consisted of more than a package of Top Ramen and a soda. The most exciting day of the year was when the school bookstore bought my books back, meaning enough money in my pocket for Burger King and a few cold ones at the friendly neighborhood pub. 

So now Sampson finds himself stuck in beautiful Milwaukee, the NBA’s answer to Bakersfield. And that’s if he’s lucky enough to sign with the Bucks, who will plop him at the end of the bench and use him for practice fodder. If he doesn’t, he ends up playing for the Pennsylvania ValleyDawgs for a little more than minimum wage, or if he’s feeling adventurous, somewhere in Eastern Europe, where they throw coins at the visiting players and it’s mighty hard to find a decent hamburger.  

Think American Studies 101 is looking so boring now?


City unveils its
hate crime plan

By Kurtis Alexander, Daily Planet Staff
Friday July 05, 2002

The Berkeley Police Department says that reports of hate crime have continued since May when city leaders first pledged to address the growing problem of racially- and religiously-motivated crime. 

Amid post Sept. 11 unrest, the first four months of 2002 brought an unprecedented number of hate crimes to Berkeley, ranging from broken windows at Jewish temples to anthrax threats aimed at Latino organizations.  

By the end of April, a number of anti-violence demonstrations had begun in the city, calling upon leaders to take action against the discomforting trend. 

Two months and nearly a half dozen hate crimes later, the city manager has developed a plan. He needs only the support of City Council to move forward with it. 

Among several propositions outlined in the four-page “Hate Crime Response” proposal are calls for specialized training of police officers, creation of a hotline to report hate crimes and rewards of up to $5,000 to people who provide information about hate crime perpetrators. 

While a lot of debate has ensued about how to craft the city’s hate crime policy, the holiday-week release of the proposal has not yet generated much reaction. 

Today is the official release date of the document, and Berkeley’s City Council is expected to weigh in on the plan at their regularly-scheduled meeting next Tuesday. 

“It’s really necessary that a city like Berkeley, which is usually a leader in civil rights and progressive thought, take action,” said Federico Chavez, member of the Latinos Unidos of Berkeley. Chavez has not yet seen the city’s proposal but was thrilled about its arrival. “Without this action, the ugly head of xenophobia will continue to rear itself,” he said. 

The proposed hate crime plan, funded through a restructuring of city resources and without additional moneys, also calls for the distribution of brochures about hate and the immediate eradication of hate graffiti. 

And in addition to training for police, the plan proposes hate crime training for safety dispatchers and employees of the city’s Department of Health and Human Services. 

Responding to concerns that the hate crime plan might favor certain ethnic or religious groups, the city manager’s proposal explicitly states that representatives from several ethnic groups will play a role in the plan’s execution. 

“Members of all affected communities will be consulted in creating training components,” the proposal reads. 

Furthermore, the city will convene a town hall meeting this fall to gather additional input from residents concerned about hate, according to the city manager’s Chief of Staff Arrietta Chakos. 

As part of the proposed police training, two homicide detectives will be sent to a one-week hate crimes training class, put on by the statewide Peace Officer Standards Training. 

The training falls short of establishing a separate police unit to address hate crime, like in Oakland and San Francisco and like many Berkeley residents had urged. But according to city officials, it’s the best way to deal with the issue given limited resources. 

The city manager’s plan was developed by a 10-person team consisting of employees from the city manager’s office, the police department, the city attorney’s office, the city’s Neighborhood Services department and the Department of Health and Human Services. Proposals submitted from City Councilmember Kriss Worthington and Mayor Shirley Dean provided the basis for the team’s deliberations. 

“We’ve been waiting for this [city manager plan], and can expect a thoughtful, meaningful response,” said Dean. 

Worthington, though, has been critical of Dean and certain councilmembers for not voting for hate crime plans he proposed in April. 

“We’ve missed many opportunities,” he said.


Again, tritium a problem?

Michael Bauce
Friday July 05, 2002

To the Editor: 

Thanks for printing Steve Geller's off-the-wall, ongoing pronouncement that local enviornmentalists are hysterical and that tritium carries absolutley no risk to health. 

On this day, like all other days, most of us have accumulated dangerous levels of radiation merely by living in the modern world. Because radiation is cumulative, it makes absolutely no sense to continously debate whether the radiation levels of tritium or any other substance are safe or not; this is scientific mumbo-jumbo at best. The evidence that this type of reasoning is absurd is reflected in the continued rise of cancer, despite assurances from our government that radioactive substances are OK at low levels. Perhaps an X-ray or two was harmless when you went for a dental check-up, but multiply that times 100 and you'll understand why so many suffer from toxic conditions, regardless of how many times we visit the doc. 

So, in the end, what is not so hysterical is the death of loved ones from unknown causes. 

 

Michael Bauce 

Berkeley


CBS sued over televised
roommate knife incident

By Brett Martel, The Associated Press
Friday July 05, 2002

Big Brother 2 contestant
says network should not
have televised her assailant 

 

NEW ORLEANS – A contestant who had a knife held to her throat on the TV reality series “Big Brother 2” is suing CBS, alleging the network never should have allowed the assailant on the show because of his past arrests. 

During the show, fellow contestant Justin Sebik put a knife to Krista Stegall’s throat while kissing her and asked if she would be mad if he killed her. Sebik maintained he was joking but was kicked off the show. 

Sebik, a bartender from New Jersey, had been arrested on assault charges in 1996 and was charged with assault and theft in 1997, according to the lawsuit. He also had shown signs of aggression toward other people on the show before the knife incident, the lawsuit alleges. 

“I don’t think there’s any doubt (CBS) made a huge mistake letting him in and keeping him in,” said Stegall’s attorney, Clayton Burgess. 

Stegall, a former waitress from Opelousas, La., and now a morning radio personality in nearby Lafayette, filed the lawsuit last week in New Orleans seeking unspecified damages from the company. Several production companies and their insurers are also listed as defendants. 

“We think there is no merit to this lawsuit and we are prepared to defend it vigorously,” CBS spokeswoman Nancy Carr said. 

The contestants in “Big Brother 2” lived together in a house and were cut off from the outside world. They plotted to have each other evicted by a vote of fellow house guests each week; the last remaining contestant won $500,000. 

CBS is working on a third “Big Brother” series for the fall.


Notre Dame fiasco sparks
continuing bio controversies

By Nancy Armour, The Associated Press
Friday July 05, 2002

From simple clerical errors to half-truths and long-forgotten lies, some coaches and athletic administrators aren’t always what they say they are. 

College degrees were worked on but not completed. Letters claimed to be earned in a sport were never received. Awards are made to sound better than they really were. 

“I hope most of them are just honest mistakes, not an ethical problem,” said Wally Groff, the athletic director at Texas A&M. “I’d like to believe that.” 

Last December, George O’Leary left Notre Dame in disgrace after admitting he’d lied about his academic and athletic credentials. Since then, resumes and biographical sketches have been scrutinized as never before, and at least a half-dozen coaches and athletic directors — even the president of the U.S. Olympic Committee — have lost their jobs. 

Everyone is suspect. Athletic directors as well as graduate assistants. And at universities around the country, the once-informal process of updating existing bios now often comes with official forms to be kept on file. 

“I guess we just have to appreciate it comes with the territory,” said John Heisler, associate athletic director at Notre Dame. “You would have to have your head in the sand to not understand why there are questions being asked.” 

In athletics, practical experience has always mattered more than fancy credentials. A resume was something to be passed around at the introductory news conference and then forgotten. 

“We’ve gone on the honor system that, ‘Yes, you looked at this and yes, it’s accurate,”’ said Pete Moore, associate director of athletic communications at Syracuse and the president of the College Sports Information Directors of America. 

“What has happened has caused all of us to re-evaluate and take a look at how we acquire and maintain that information.” 

The challenge now for schools and organizations is avoiding becoming the next headline. At the annual convention of sports information directors earlier this week, one seminar was called “The Resume Crisis.” 

Most schools now have coaches sign forms acknowledging they’ve read their biographical sketches and that the information was accurate. 

Within days of being hired as Notre Dame’s head coach, O’Leary admitted he’d lied on his resume. He’d never lettered in football at New Hampshire as he claimed, and he didn’t earn a master’s degree from New York University. 

If it had happened at any other school, it might not have sparked such a furor. But this was Notre Dame, where the spotlight is bright and far reaching. 

While newspapers throughout the country scrambled to examine the resumes of the coaches they cover, many athletic directors told their coaches and staffs to reread their bios — and this time, do it closely. 

Still, major inaccuracies kept coming. In May, USOC president Sandy Baldwin was forced to resign after admitting she’d lied about the academic credentials on her resume. 

The head football coach at tiny Allegheny College was forced out. Charles Harris stepped down the day before he was to be introduced as Dartmouth’s new athletic director after questions were raised about his resume. Last week, an assistant at Richmond was fired, reportedly because of an inaccurate bio. 

“Even though there’s been these high-profile cases, it’s really amazing to me there hasn’t been a stop,” Moore said. 

As the embarrassments mounted, so did the schools’ wariness. Tom Collen was hired as Vanderbilt’s women’s basketball coach May 1 after a successful stint at Colorado State that included a 129-33 record and four trips to the NCAA tournament in five years. 

When Vanderbilt checked his credentials, records at Miami of Ohio listed one master’s degree with two majors. Collen gave Vanderbilt athletic director Todd Turner a resume with only one master’s degree, and said he’d never presented his credentials differently. 

But then the resume Collen gave Colorado State in 1997 was found — showing two master’s degrees. Vanderbilt gave him the choice to resign or be fired. He quit May 2. 

“He portrayed it in such a way here that his resume had always been accurate,” Turner said at the time. “That really was a difficult thing for us to deal with.” 

A month later, Miami discovered a mistake in its records. Collen had, in fact, earned two master’s degrees. 

Two months after the debacle, Collen is still without a job. 

“It’s just going to take some time to sort it all out,” he said from his home in Fort Collins, Colo. “That’s about the only statement I’d like to make right now.”


Berkeley ballet dismisses
instructor, students walk out

By Devona Walker, Daily Planet Staff
Friday July 05, 2002

Low morale at the nearly 30-year-old Berkeley City Ballet has prompted up to 15 of it 85 students to put away their dancing shoes in protest of the dismissal of one of their favorite teachers. 

Andrea Gaudet was terminated from BCB over artistic differences and a personality conflict with artistic director Elizabeth Godfrey. 

But the agency’s staff and board say the separation was not simply a fight, according to Tom Maier, president of the board of directors for BCB. 

“I’m concerned that people will try to portray it as two grown-up, strong-willed women getting into a fight, and there were far more nuances involved in it than that,” Maier said. “I think that often in the arts community personality differences and artistic vision blend together. And sometimes you will have a situation where one person says ‘I think we are going the wrong direction’ and another will say ‘No, I think we are going the right direction.’ ”  

At the heart of the differences between Godfrey and Gaudet was the way the school was being run and the way some ballets were being staged, Maier said. 

“Andy is a great teacher and a great friend,” Maier said. “It was very difficult and sad to say ‘maybe we should part ways.’ ”  

Maier also said that BCB may try to work with Gaudet through an occupation mediator to seek a situation in which Gaudet would return to BCB. 

“We’ve listened to the concerns of parents and many of the students here and decided that maybe there was something we could do to restore this relationship, but sometimes those relationship cannot be restored,” Maier said. “But this was a horrible gut-wrenching decision to make.” 

Gaudet too said she was sorry to part with BCB, but that it had to be done. 

Gaudet was unavailable to comment any further on the separation between her and the school. She would also not commit to whether she would take the school’s proposition to work with a mediator.  

The staffing situation with Maier has damaged the school, but it is not the first time. Maier concedes that some of these personnel changes have been unsettling to students.  

“Those staffing changes, however, were to be expected as the school often hires teachers who are still professional dancers, and often those teachers will choose to leave to perform,” Maier said. 

After Gaudet was let go, approximately 10 to 15 of the 85 students who attend BCB dropped their classes and quit the school, all apparently in protest of Gaudet’s dismissal. The fewer number of students has hurt BCB’s budget but the school has been able to compensate for that with more than projected revenue coming in from grants and loans, according to Maier. 

Maier would not discuss details about the separation between BCB and Gaudet.


Television service assumes new magazine format
Television

By Frazier Moore, The Associated Press
Friday July 05, 2002

Mag TV will acclimate
viewers to video-on-demand 

 

NEW YORK — You’ve put in a hard day. Now you’re ready to chill in front of the TV and watch some basket-weaving. Or maybe you’ve got a taste for motorcycles. Or outer space. Or Shakespeare. 

What are the odds you could click to a show devoted to that interest whenever you get the urge? 

It’s a slam-dunk thanks to a new cable-TV service called Mag Rack, which, although available so far to just a tiny audience, is a reminder to the rest of us that video-on-demand (VOD) is a reality, after years of delays and disappointments. 

The concept for Mag Rack is pretty simple. Navigate to the Mag Rack channel. Choose from more than two dozen narrowly defined topics (narrow for TV, anyway) including bird watching, wedding tips, “Wine World” and “The Bible and You.” 

Then, within each of these “magazines,” the viewer can select any of several stories, all available as video-on-demand — which means you can select the program, then pause, rewind and fast-forward it at will, all through your set-top cable box. 

Ready? “Welcome to ‘Maximum Science,”’ an announcer intones — “bringing you the latest in science when YOU want to see it.” And on your TV screen you see a menu of stories (or would that be a table of contents?) with a scientific bent. 

Each subject area is replenished by a new “issue” of Mag Rack-produced programming (an hour or more, “chapterized” into blocks) each month, while past “issues” are archived along with the current fare on the cable operator’s computer server. 

In short, Mag Rack seems to be a pretty faithful video equivalent of the newsstand-browsing experience combined with the sporadic way most people like to read their magazines — with the added advantage that Mag Rack is typically packaged with the subscriber’s premium service at no extra charge. 

“We thought there were large constituencies of viewers who were very passionate about certain subjects, but were being underserved by television, even in the 500-channel universe,” says Matthew Strauss, Mag Rack’s general manager. 

While it might not warrant “a 24/7 digital network,” he adds, “each of those micro-niches might be perfect for a VOD service.” 

Currently the 9-month-old Mag Rack is seen only by Long Island, N.Y., subscribers of Cablevision (parent of Mag Rack as well as the Bravo and American Movie Classics networks), which has announced that in the next few months Mag Rack will also come to areas served by Insight Communications, focused in the Midwest. 

Video-on-demand-enabled digital subscribers are a tiny fragment of the nation’s 100-plus million TV household. But it’s growing: An estimated total of 6 million by the end of 2002 is expected to double a year later. 

A recent headline in Electronic Media magazine raised the question, “Is VOD cable’s satellite killer?” 

In any case, digitally upgrading their systems is one way the cable industry is fighting against rivals like DirecTV, whose services are often bundled with Tivo-like recorders for the customer’s home that can store satellite-delivered programming for future playback. 

Direct-broadcast satellite (DBS) systems also offer pay-per-view programming at frequent intervals. But full on-demand capability isn’t possible so far. 

On cable, most video-on-demand consists of movies and other programming (like HBO) already available on other channels. That redundancy factor sets Mag Rack apart, says Strauss — “We are producing content for this new VOD technology and only for VOD.” 

Industry observers are voicing early approval for Mag Rack. 

“It’s another weapon cable operators can use to fight off the entrenchment of DBS and market themselves as a leading-edge provider,” says Sean Badding of the Carmel Group. 

“It’s not a killer application, but it’s one more way of differentiating themselves from satellite,” agrees Adi Kishore, an analyst with the Yankee Group in Boston. 

Whether viewers who can get Mag Rack will watch it is another matter. Kishore cited figures from late 2001 indicating that of five customers with a VOD system, only one of them tried it. 

“You’ve got to educate the viewers on video-on-demand,” he said, “and with Mag Rack there’s an additional teaching step.” 

Strauss argues that Mag Rack is a made-to-order way to explain to newcomers the possibilities of VOD. 

“We want them to perceive it as more than just a mechanism — taking programming and sticking it on a server — but as a branded, editorial service that becomes synonymous with VOD,” he says. 

Now, ready for your parenting, car-buying or yoga TV?


Corporation Yard area to stay intact

By Devona Walker, Daily Planet Staff
Friday July 05, 2002

The Landmark Preservation Commission on Monday gave landmark status to the Corporation Yard and the Radcliffe building, effectively stopping the city from demolishing the building and redeveloping the area. 

This may be the last battle for some centralwest Berkeley residents who have been fighting to preserve this belt of green space. One resident, in fact, says he’s battled the city for more than a decade to have the Corporation Yard removed. 

LA Wood foresees the landmarking phase as, in a sense, the beginning of yet another battle: attaining more green space. 

Berkeley has outgrown the Radcliffe building and would need to demolish and replace it to accommodate the growing number of municipal employees. 

Consequently, landmarking the building and much of the site may force the city’s hand, and in turn it could choose to relocate the Corporation Yard. The Department of Public Works director has in the past said that the Corporation Yard is not in the best location, but that the city can simply not afford to purchase additional land. 

In the end, Wood says he hopes it will turn the yard into a park. 

“The scheme was the district should have two-acres per thousand, and it doesn’t,” Wood says.  

“In other words, this area has somewhat less green space than what you might see in other areas of the city,” he said about District 2 where the corporation yard is located. “So it’s only natural that part of this courtyard return to being some sort of park. It probably should happened in the ’80’s but our priorities were different.”  

The Corporation Yard is saddled between Strawberry Creek Park and the city of Berkeley Lawn Bowling Greens. 

“Historically, if you look back at public documents, they have been saying move the yard. It is the largest nonconforming land use in Berkeley,” Wood said. “It could have been moved years ago but there was never a champion on Council and they’ve never looked at the corporation yard and how nonconforming it is, and how it impacts the surrounding neighborhood.” 

“Now there is an opportunity for a park to happen,” Woods added. 

Woods and others, however, concede that in the current climate of the city that some of the Corporation Yard may have to go to other uses. 

Woods, in fact, has been campaigning to get Building Opportunities for Self-sufficiency (BOSS) to develop on part of the site. The nonprofit is currently trying to build near the Harrison Playfields.


News of the Weird

Staff
Friday July 05, 2002

Some cool pigs in Mich. 

 

TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. — The Murray family’s three little pigs have a new way to beat the heat. 

Isaac Murray, an electrical field technician, has installed a shower in his pigpen so his swine will have no reason to whine during a heat wave that has sent temperatures into the 90s. 

“When he told me he wanted to build a shower for the pigs, I thought, ’You’re kidding me,”’ Judith Murray, Isaac’s wife, said Wednesday. “I thought the kids should just go out and spray them a couple times a day; that’s what 4-H says to do.” 

But when Isaac Murray designed and set up the plumbing apparatus, the family agreed it was a great invention. 

It runs automatically for two minutes every two hours, all day long. 

“The pigs love getting in it, and it’s good for them,” Judith Murray said. “Pigs can only cool off through their noses, and so they need to be cooled down with water.” 

The Murrays’ pigs are now trained to shower every time the device starts running. 

“They have a pecking order,” Judith Murray said. “The little one has to wait until the other two are done before it can go in.” 

 

Unusual vehicle used in
jewelry heist attempt
 

 

BEATRICE, Neb. — A man with an appetite for the finer things has been charged with shoplifting after reportedly swallowing a gold ring he came across at a local jewelry store. 

John Walker, 42, was arrested Tuesday after police were called to Leo’s Jewelry. A clerk said Walker was handling two rings, pushed his chair away from a counter and fell to the floor. The clerk said when he got up one of the rings was missing. 

Walker allowed police to pat-search him, but during a conversation a bright object was seen in his mouth, police said. When asked what it was, Walker swallowed. 

Police then requested a search warrant to have an X-ray taken. The ring, valued at $629, was spotted in Walker’s stomach, Capt. William Fitzgerald said. 

Police also found that Walker was wanted on a Lancaster County theft warrant. He was being held in the county jail in Lincoln. 

 

Stray dog recruited by
US customs agent
 

 

MILWAUKEE — Drugs. Danger. Doggy treats. 

That’s what might be in store for a stray dog suddenly thrust from scrounging his next meal to protecting the nation’s borders. 

An animal control officer found the black Labrador, now named Kevin, roaming the streets. Kevin ended up at the Wisconsin Humane Society, where he caught U.S. Customs Agent Paul Paulson’s eye. 

Paulson thought Kevin might make a good candidate for the agency’s canine enforcement corps, which sniffs out drugs and currency in cars and freight and on people. 

The Customs Service has been adopting dogs from shelters across the eastern United States for more than 20 years. Paulson said agents mainly look for sporting breeds such as Labrador retrievers and German shorthair pointers because of their natural drive to repeatedly retrieve objects. 

But Humane Society officials were skeptical about exposing Kevin to the dog-eat-dog border patrol world. 

“We were a little worried about Kevin,” said Barry Ashenfelter, the Humane Society’s community relations director. “He has so much energy, it would have taken a professional dog trainer to get him under control.” 

That’s exactly what Kevin is going to get. 

The Customs Service adopted him Monday. Now he’s on his way to Front Royal, Va., where he’ll be enrolled in a canine enforcement training program. 


Civil grand jury hammers county office of education

Daily Planet Wire Service
Friday July 05, 2002

High marks go to Oakland
Parks and Recreation 

 

OAKLAND — The Alameda County civil grand jury has released its final report of the year, which gives high marks to Oakland Parks and Recreation Director Harry Edwards, but finds problems in the Port of Oakland and the Alameda County Office of Education. Edwards, who was hired in May 2000 to head the Office of Parks and Recreation and was given a record $57 million to work with, is credited in the report with turning around a decline in services by overhauling a weak central management structure. 

Seeing that the office had become a personnel”dumping ground,” Edwards fired some 100 employees, reassigned others and even brought in the Alameda County District Attorney's Office to investigate two cases of suspected embezzlement. 

The report concludes that Edwards “has made progress in restoring (Oakland) Parks and Recreation to acceptable service levels and has established integrity within the department increasing staff morale and accountability.” 

The report recommends that Edwards be kept as director and that the city of Oakland continue to place a high priority on the parks and recreation office in its budget. The grand jury was also asked to look into a disputed security contract at Oakland International Airport after receiving a complaint that alleged that ABC Security Inc. received the contract using improper political considerations and illegal means. 

Ultimately, although the grand jury found that the selection process was flawed, it found nothing to substantiate the allegations of wrongdoing. 

However, in investigating the Port of Oakland, the grand jury also found a tense working relationship between the board of commissioners and airport staff. The problem is characterized as of a more serious nature and endemic to the current structure of governance. 

According to the report, the grand jury investigation found that the commissioners — who are appointed by the Oakland mayor and confirmed by the City Council — appear to believe that the staffers work for them.  

In a particular case, the report says, a commissioner referred to a staff member as non-responsive, burnt out, entrenched and civil service protected. 

The staff members on the other hand, consider the commissioners as political appointees concerned only with political matters. 

“These respective allegations reveal a work atmosphere that is antagonistic and not functioning in the best interest of the citizens of Alameda County,”the report states. 

The report recommends that the Port of Oakland adopt and publicize a clear mission statement outlining the responsibilities of commissioners and staff and establishing a clear line of authority. 

According to Port spokesman Harold Jones, the port is pleased that the grand jury found no wrongdoing in the awarding of the contract.  

Addressing the alleged problem, Jones said that the airport contract allowed the port to see that there was”room for improvement”in dealing with the relationship between staff and the commission. 

Jones said that the port has already made the necessary adjustments and that there is no need for the mission statement, because there is already a clear notion of what the responsibilities are for commissioners and the staff. 

The grand jury's harshest criticism was heaped upon the Alameda County Office of Education, marking this the second year in a row that the grand jury has targeted the institution in its report. 

Last year, the grand jury found a strained relationship between the Board of Education and the superintendent, suggesting that either the superintendent be appointed by the board, or that the board be eliminated completely. 

This year, the grand jury found that the relationship between the superintendent and the board remains adversarial. 

“An apparent unwillingness to collaborate and/or compromise to establish an effective working relationship is hampering the work of the (Alameda County Office of Education),” the report says. 

The grand jury also found that most of the elected board members do not have a clear understanding of the budget or the budget process, which impairs the board's budget responsibilities. 

According to Superintendent Sheila Jordan, most of the grand jury's concerns were settled at the last election, when she was re-elected to her seat and several board members lost their bids. 

Their departure, Jordan said, has led to the beginnings of a reorganization that will result in a more productive Office of Education and have the board working alongside the superintendent. 

Should the grand jurors take another look at the Office of Education next, Jordan predicted, their report will be different. 

“I think they're going to see a hard-working majority,” Jordan said.


Illegal cheese found in Napa County

The Associated Press
Friday July 05, 2002

The California Department of Food and Agriculture said it has discovered a number of unlicensed cheese manufacturing operations in the state, including one in Napa County. 

The CDFA said it found 30 pounds of illegally produced soft cheese in Napa County. One person was issued a citation. 

The illegally produced cheese, sometimes called "bathtub cheese,'' poses a health threat because unlicensed producers often use raw milk, the CDFA said. 

Four people were arrested in Corona, two for offering 30 gallons of raw milk for sale, and two for selling unlicensed soft cheese, the CDFA said. 

The CDFA is testing the milk and cheese for potentially harmful bacteria. 

CDFA investigators also found six cattle for sale in Napa County lacked proper documentation. 

Unlicensed products are often sold door-to-door, at flea markets and swap meets and may contain listeria, E.coli or salmonella.


UC Berkeley provides online
database of Asian immigration

By David Scharfenberg, Daily Planet staff
Friday July 05, 2002

Searching for information about Asian immigration to the United States just got easier thanks to a web site created by UC Berkeley’s Haas School of Business and the federal government’s National Archives and Records Administration. 

The Early Arrivals Records Search database – available on-line at http://groups.haas.berkeley.edu/iber/casefiles – facilitates records searches on people who immigrated to San Francisco and Honolulu, Hawaii, in the 19th and early 20th centuries. 

The database allows the user to determine whether the National Archives has a case file for a particular individual. It provides a case number and displays basic information on the individual’s immigration. 

Citizens and researchers still must travel to the National Archives’ San Bruno office to obtain the full file. 

“Those interested in seeing a file still need to drive to San Bruno to do so, but they can save themselves many steps by using the database first,” said Robert Barde, academic coordinator at the Haas School’s Institute of Business & Economics Research. 

Millions of Asian Americans passed through immigration stations in San Francisco and Honolulu between 1882 and 1955, and many were subject to extensive investigation under the Chinese Exclusion Act, which severely limited legal Chinese immigration. 

The National Archives’ San Bruno office maintains some 250,000 case records on investigations conducted by the Immigration and Naturalization Service. 

A typical case file includes biographical information, family history and other documents. Some files include coaching materials used by “paper sons” – those who posed as the children of already-admitted immigrants to gain entry to the United States. 

Maps of homes and villages in China, marriage certificates and family photos are also included in some files.  

 


Proposal would help
500 farmers

The Associated Press
Friday July 05, 2002

OAKLAND – A proposed settlement would allow more than 500 farmers to escape $350 million in potential damages linked to the bankruptcy of canned fruit and tomato processor Tri Valley Growers. 

The deal, made public Wednesday, comes after negotiations between unsecured creditors and the growers. 

The proposal calls for the unsecured creditors, who filed the suit in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Oakland, to pay the attorneys fees the growers incurred in defending the suit. The growers would then move forward with their suit against former Tri Valley Chief Executive Officer Joe Famalette, the board of directors and Deloitte & Touche, the co-op’s accounting firm. 

The unsecured creditors would then receive 70 percent of any money awarded to the growers, after attorney fees and court costs are paid. 

The unsecured creditors also would obtain the right to sue the same parties for activities that occurred in 1998 and after. 

The growers would also abandon claims for money owed for crops delivered to the co-op after it filed for bankruptcy. 

“Once the growers read and understand the settlement, I’m confident they’ll approve,” said Roger Schrimp, a Modesto attorney representing some growers in the lawsuit. “The growers have been sued for such an enormous amount of money that the cost of defending themselves would be horrendous.” 

Growers have until July 24 to object to the settlement, which was filed June 26 in U.S. Bankruptcy Court. 

Attorneys representing the hundreds of unsecured creditors could not be reached Wednesday. 

Tri Valley Growers is one of the nation’s biggest canned fruit and tomato processors. The collapse of the 68-year-old co-op, which had been losing millions of dollars for the past three years, left tomatoes rotting in fields this summer and forced some farmers to bulldoze their fruit trees to cut their losses. 

An Aug. 7 hearing has been scheduled before Judge Edward D. Jellen. 


Federal court rejects
retreat at Fort Baker

Staff
Friday July 05, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — A federal court cleared the way for the National Park Service to develop a conference center and retreat at Fort Baker, a former military post near the Golden Gate Bridge. 

Federal magistrate Elizabeth Laporte rejected the nearby city of Sausalito’s challenge to the development of the Civil War-era fort. 

Sausalito took the matter to U.S. District Court in San Francisco saying the plan for the facility violated the intent of the legislation that created the Golden Gate National Recreation Area. That legislation includes maintaining “unique and spectacular sites,” and not building on the land, the city says. 

But Laporte noted that the development would be modest, in keeping with the town’s desires. 

The park service has selected a team of developers from San Francisco to negotiate a lease for the center, which is to be a self-supporting project. The land is being transferred from the U.S. Department of Defense to the park service. 

The Retreat at Fort Baker would have 156 guest rooms using existing buildings and 11 new ones. The original plan called for a 350-room maximum.


Nervous resident hopes to sell
Malibu on firefighting planes

By Paul Wilborn, The Associated Press
Friday July 05, 2002

MALIBU — In the canyons of Malibu and Topanga, where a tree-shrouded retreat just inland from the jagged lips of the Pacific Ocean starts around $500,000 and spikes up from there, fire is a fact of life. 

Up here, arson watch volunteers patrol for signs of smoke. Deputies enforce brush removal requirements around houses. And people spend the dry months between June and December watching nervously for fire trucks. 

Topanga resident Tony Morris isn’t content to watch and worry. He’s launched what may be a Quixotic crusade to talk his wealthy neighbors into spending $50 million for two state-of-the-art water dumping bombers known as Super Scoopers. 

A documentary filmmaker and journalist, Morris fled the 1993 Topanga/Malibu wildfire with his family, a few documents and his son’s bunny. He spent two days thinking his was one of the 350 houses destroyed by that blaze, which also killed three people. 

His house survived, but Morris was reborn as a fervent believer in the fixed-wing CL 415s used extensively in Canada and Southern Europe to douse wildfires but are rare in the United States. 

His evangelism has won him some local disciples, but so far he hasn’t converted Los Angeles County fire officials or cash-strapped county supervisors. So Morris is going where the money is — to the millionaires and billionaires who call these canyons home. 

“The houses in the path of fire out here are owned by the wealthiest people in the world,” Morris said. “We think these people will open their pocketbooks.” 

According to Forbes Magazine, the Topanga/Malibu area is the 11th wealthiest community in the United States. The median price for a house in Topanga Canyon is $635,000, said Karen Dannenbaum, who manages a local real estate office. In Malibu, a tiny fixer-upper is $500,000 and from there, she says, “the sky’s the limit.” 

Two major fires in Malibu and Topanga in the 1990s destroyed hundreds of homes, and led to devastating mudslides. The canyon brush is born to burn, Morris said, but with thousands of high-priced houses and thousands more people living in the rugged canyons, nature can no longer be allowed to take its course. 

That’s where the Super Scoopers come in, Morris said. 

He and other locals spent $7,000 last year making a documentary heralding the planes as a fire-season savior. He is in the process of launching a nonprofit corporation, Aerial Fire Protection Association, and hopes to start picking up checks in several months.


Three dead
in LA airport
shooting

By Chelsea Carter, The Associated Press
Friday July 05, 2002

LOS ANGELES — The Los Angeles airport was jammed with holiday travelers Thursday when May Park entered the international terminal. 

Park, of Miami, was standing near the ticket counter for Israel’s El Al Airlines when he heard three shots — “just bang, bang, bang, in a row.” 

Three people fell to the ground. Then, stunned silence. And then, panic. 

Some travelers ran for the doors, some dove behind ticket counters, some took refuge in airline offices. 

“This is impossible,” Park said. “I couldn’t believe it.” 

The late morning attack left three people dead, including the gunman, who was killed by an El Al security guard. The FBI said the man appeared to be acting alone, and that there was no immediate indication of a terrorist link. 

Hakin Hasidh, 43, of Dusseldorf, Germany, was standing in a line adjacent to the El Al counter when he heard shots. He said he turned to see the gunman, who quickly was tackled by three men who looked to Hasidh like passengers. The shots appeared to be random, he said. 

“It’s really hard to tell whether he was aiming at the counter, at people behind the counter or at people in line,” Hasidh said. 

Richard Whittington, of Austin, Texas, traveling with his 79-year-old mother, Letta Lou, said he froze for long moments after the shots. ’“We were waiting for something else to happen, a bomb or something,” he said. 

Police quickly cleared the international terminal and closed the road running in front of it, causing a huge traffic jam on highways already busy with July 4 travelers. 

The airport’s domestic terminals, housed in several buildings separate from the international terminal, remained open, though traffic was slow. 

But at least 20 international departures and 15 international arrivals were delayed or canceled as the terminal was shut for more than four hours. The delays affected 6,000 passengers, according to airport officials. 

Hundreds of people milled outside the terminal, some hoping to make flights, others to meet them. Information was scarce. 

Los Angeles resident Alma Rodriguez, described the frustrating wait for her mother-in-law, arriving from Guadalajara, Mexico. “The airline told her plane landed. But she can’t come out, and we can’t go in,” she said. 

For passengers, the disruption and the uncertainty over the gunman’s motive intensified fears of traveling on July 4 — fears heightened before the shooting by government warnings of possible terrorist attacks. 

Sugi Faiz, who was waiting with her 9-year-old daughter for an El Al flight, panicked when she heard the shots. “We ran and ran,” she said. 

Her daughter clung to her, and “is very, very scared,” Faiz said.


Auto industry opposes bill that would
reduce carbon dioxide emissions by 2009

By Stefanie Frith, The Associated Press
Friday July 05, 2002

SACRAMENTO — Californians aren’t shy about taking to the open road, and the balance between automotive freedom and environmental stewardship is strong in the nation’s largest car market. 

In a place where the car culture is as embedded as surfing, automakers are watching warily to see if other states will follow California’s lead in a mandate to reduce carbon dioxide emissions in cars and light trucks by 2009. 

The bill, already approved by the state Legislature, is sitting on the desk of Gov. Gray Davis, who said it’s likely he’ll sign it. 

“Most Americans believe that we can have the choice of the auto or truck we want and still do a better job with the cleaning up the environment around us,” Davis said during an interview with San Francisco’s KGO radio. “I believe this bill strikes the appropriate balance, and that’s why I’m strongly inclined to sign it.” 

The bill, if signed, would be the nation’s first to target carbon dioxide emissions and the state’s strongest push in years to make cars run cleaner. 

But there is sizable opposition from the automotive industry, which has threatened to go to court to fight it. 

While the state has set trends embraced by the industry, they’ve also bedeviled it by pushing for tougher consumer regulations, primarily the nation’s first “lemon law,” and for legislation requiring carmakers to cut exhaust emissions and increase fuel efficiency. 

Industry analysts say the California law will set a national trend. 

Because more than 2 million cars were sold in California last year, whatever transpires there ripples through the entire industry, said Jim Motavalli, editor of the Norwalk, Conn.-based E: The Environmental Magazine. 

“Manufacturers can’t not sell cars there, so they have to go by California’s standards,” he said. “Whatever California does, they (other states) do, too.” 

That’s one reason the industry fights so hard in California, said Kris Kiser, vice president of state affairs for the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers. The industry employs 463,000 people in the state and sells $100 billion worth of cars a year, he said. 

Unlike other automotive-centered states, California’s industry centers more on research and design, and lack manufacturing facilities that are dominated by strong labor unions. That, Kiser said, means California is an easier target for environmental and consumer legislation the automotive industry might be opposed to. 

“If people want to buy SUVs, let them. People should decide what they drive, not bureaucrats,” he said. 

Automakers claim the carbon dioxide emissions bill will dictate what Californians will be able to drive because there is no existing technology to reduce the carbon dioxide emissions blamed for global warming. That, industry proponents said, means building smaller cars that don’t use as much gasoline as SUVs or trucks. 


Pac Bell to
pay fine under
settlement

The Associated Press
Friday July 05, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Under a tentative settlement with state regulators, SBC Pacific Bell has agreed to pay what would be a record $27 million fine for billing tens of thousands of customers for high-speed Internet service they never requested. 

Pacific Bell initially downplayed the problems, but on Wednesday recognized them and promised to improve its DSL billing practices and promptly credit any customers who are billed improperly. 

Since 1999, about 800 customers have complained to the state Public Utilities Commission that Pac Bell billed them — sometimes twice — for DSL services they didn’t order, didn’t receive or wanted to drop. Under the settlement, the company acknowledged incorrectly billing between 30,000 and 70,000 customers. 

DSL, which stands for digital subscriber line, is a high-speed Internet service that works over ordinary telephone lines but is many times faster than standard dial-up connections. 

“They lied to the public, they lied to the press, and they lied to the commission,” said Regina Costa of The Utility Reform Network, a San Francisco-based consumer group. 

One customer said that a month after inquiring about DSL service, she received a bill charging her $99.95 for activation and a monthly service fee. 

“I didn’t even have a computer at the time,” said Bobby Schaefer of San Diego. “I was gathering information.” 

If approved by the commission and an administrative judge, the $27 million fine will go to the state’s general fund. It would be the largest ever levied by state utility regulators, surpassing the $25.6 million Pac Bell was fined last year for misleading marketing tactics. 

Pacific Bell CEO Chuck Smith said the company is pleased with the agreement. 

“We faced a tremendous challenge in pioneering the delivery of new technology to California consumers, and it is disappointing that along the way we experienced customer-service issues,” he said in a statement. “We identified those issues, and we dedicated significant resources to correct them.” 

Pacific Bell, a unit of San Antonio-based SBC Communications, has about 800,000 DSL customers. The company said it has created a new DSL billing center with 100 staff.


Retired USA Today founder tells of rediscovering his home town

By Chet Brokaw, The Associated Press
Friday July 05, 2002

EUREKA, S.D. — When the founder of USA Today visits the rural town where he was born, he often spends time at the Luncheonette Cafe, chatting with old friends about everything from their arthritis to world affairs. 

“It’s sort of a reality check,” said Al Neuharth, who retired in 1989 as chairman of the newspaper’s parent, the Gannett Co. “It’s that sort of earthy talk — whether it’s about politics or sports or health — just what people in small towns are interested in.” 

The tough businessman, who oversaw the rise of USA Today and still writes a weekly column for the newspaper, also founded the Freedom Forum, a group that promotes freedom of the press. 

He’s taking advantage of his retirement to travel, including about four trips a year to the town where he was born 78 years ago. 

Neuharth recently left his home in Cocoa Beach, Fla., to make a trip to Eureka in the Freedom Forum’s big bus with four of his six adopted children: Alexis, 11; Karina, 5; and twins Andre and Ariana, 4. (Two-year-old twins Aliandro and Rafaelina stayed home with his wife, Rachel, because they’re too young for such a trip.) 

Neuharth wanted to show them life in a small town on the northern Plains, where cars don’t have to be locked, children can ride bikes without fear of traffic and everyone knows each other. 

Neuharth had plans to show his kids sites all around the state. But he particularly wanted them to see his hometown, a tidy city of 1,200 founded by German immigrants. 

Neuharth said he was so busy working when his now-grown son and daughter were young that he always had to figure out how to get them off his lap so he could get back to work. 

“With these kids, I try to keep them around as much as I can. It’s a whole different approach for me as a father,” he said. 

Neuharth’s hometown sometimes comes up in his column, which he has used a couple of times to praise the Luncheonette Cafe. Bob Jung, owner of the restaurant, said the retired newspaperman knows a lot of people in Eureka. 

“He’s just an old hometown guy. He talks to everybody,” Jung said. 

Mayor Ron Cooper said Neuharth fits right in with morning coffee drinkers when he sits at the counter. The mayor said Neuharth also helped build an information center for visitors, and the Freedom Forum donated money to build a playground near the swimming lake on the edge of town. 

“I know the community really, really appreciates him. Every time we’ve asked, he’s helped,” Cooper said. 

Neuharth was born in Eureka in 1924. His father died when Neuharth was 2. When he was 10, his mother moved the family to another small town, Alpena, to be near her parents. He became a newspaper carrier at age 11 and later worked for the weekly Alpena Journal. 

After serving in World War II and graduating from the University of South Dakota, Neuharth worked for The Associated Press for two years. He and a friend then launched SoDak Sports, a weekly tabloid that covered South Dakota sports. In 1954, after two years, the venture failed. 

Neuharth worked as a reporter and editor for The Miami Herald and Detroit Free Press before joining Gannett as general manager of its two newspapers in Rochester, N.Y., in 1963. He started a newspaper in 1966 that would become what is now Florida Today. 

Neuharth became Gannett’s CEO in 1973 and the company’s chairman in 1979. Gannett became the nation’s largest newspaper company, and USA Today, which he launched in 1982, eventually became the country’s most widely read newspaper. 

In Eureka, Neuharth’s presence tends to draw attention. Heads turned when he drove through downtown in a white Mercedes station wagon with Florida license plates. 

Neuharth’s one-story house in Eureka — which he bought for $15,000 last year, 66 years after his mother sold it for $1,700 — also draws some stares. On the front porch is a locked newspaper vending machine containing one paper — the first edition of USA Today, dated Sept. 15, 1982.


Nervous resident hopes to sell
Malibu on firefighting planes

By Paul Wilborn, The Associated Press
Friday July 05, 2002

MALIBU — In the canyons of Malibu and Topanga, where a tree-shrouded retreat just inland from the jagged lips of the Pacific Ocean starts around $500,000 and spikes up from there, fire is a fact of life. 

Up here, arson watch volunteers patrol for signs of smoke. Deputies enforce brush removal requirements around houses. And people spend the dry months between June and December watching nervously for fire trucks. 

Topanga resident Tony Morris isn’t content to watch and worry. He’s launched what may be a Quixotic crusade to talk his wealthy neighbors into spending $50 million for two state-of-the-art water dumping bombers known as Super Scoopers. 

A documentary filmmaker and journalist, Morris fled the 1993 Topanga/Malibu wildfire with his family, a few documents and his son’s bunny. He spent two days thinking his was one of the 350 houses destroyed by that blaze, which also killed three people. 

His house survived, but Morris was reborn as a fervent believer in the fixed-wing CL 415s used extensively in Canada and Southern Europe to douse wildfires but are rare in the United States. 

His evangelism has won him some local disciples, but so far he hasn’t converted Los Angeles County fire officials or cash-strapped county supervisors. So Morris is going where the money is — to the millionaires and billionaires who call these canyons home. 

“The houses in the path of fire out here are owned by the wealthiest people in the world,” Morris said. “We think these people will open their pocketbooks.” 

According to Forbes Magazine, the Topanga/Malibu area is the 11th wealthiest community in the United States. The median price for a house in Topanga Canyon is $635,000, said Karen Dannenbaum, who manages a local real estate office. In Malibu, a tiny fixer-upper is $500,000 and from there, she says, “the sky’s the limit.” 

Two major fires in Malibu and Topanga in the 1990s destroyed hundreds of homes, and led to devastating mudslides. The canyon brush is born to burn, Morris said, but with thousands of high-priced houses and thousands more people living in the rugged canyons, nature can no longer be allowed to take its course. 

That’s where the Super Scoopers come in, Morris said. 

He and other locals spent $7,000 last year making a documentary heralding the planes as a fire-season savior. He is in the process of launching a nonprofit corporation, Aerial Fire Protection Association, and hopes to start picking up checks in several months.


Casino proposed for Yuba racetrack
complex would create 2,000 jobs

Staff
Friday July 05, 2002

YUBA CITY — Resort developers have joined an American Indian tribal group to announce plans to develop a casino-hotel on a site that Yuba County officials had hoped would host a racetrack. 

Officials at Chicago-based Forsythe Racing Inc. say they are still committed to developing the racetrack. On Tuesday, however, they also announced plans for an approximately $90 million casino resort to be built in partnership with a 500-member Oroville tribal group known as the Estom Yumeka Maidu Tribe. 

The casino proposal got a cool reception from Yuba County supervisors, who wanted to see a racetrack on the site five miles south of Marysville. They hoped the racetrack would generate an estimated $120 million a year with fans packing into a 45,000-seat grandstand to watch Indy-style events. 

But the $100 million racetrack venture, which was supported by 86 percent of local voters, never got off the ground. 

Tribal representatives said the casino-hotel project would create as many as 2,000 jobs and infuse the local economy with millions of dollars. 

A Yuba County supervisors committee is studying the new plans. 


Home and Garden
On the home

How to select the proper door knob

By James and Morris Carey,
The Associated Press
Friday July 05, 2002

The announcer introduced the program as “On The House” and then us as “The Carey Brothers,” and soon the fate of our new Saturday morning home-improvement radio talk show would be on the line. 

We were new at broadcasting, but eager. We wanted to help. An early caller wanted to know how to install a doorknob. “Why did you bother calling us?” we said, “Anyone can change a doorknob!” Although the caller had been unfairly chastised for his good question, he did finally get an answer. We still rib each other about the stupid things that we did in our early radio days. 

How, you ask, could our history about talk radio have anything to do with a home-improvement newspaper column? Well, we decided to pick up where we left off 16 years ago, kick it up a notch and talk about selecting a doorknob. There’s a lot to know. 

Besides the old-fashioned deadbolt, there are four basic types of doorknobs:  

Passage hardware is primarily used where a lock is not needed. This could be on a hall door, the door between the kitchen and dining area or a secondary bedroom where it would be dangerous for a child to be locked in.  

Privacy hardware is the opposite of passage. It has a lock built in. We commonly see privacy hardware on the master bedroom door, on a bathroom door and on the side door of the garage. A privacy lock is designed to be unlocked from the inside of the room it protects, but also can be unlocked from outside the room with a small screwdriver.  

Keyed hardware is like privacy hardware except that it can only be unlocked from the outside with a key. Although we commonly see keyed doorknobs on exterior doors, they often are used on sheds and gates for added security, or on the inside of the home, on a closet for example, to prevent access to firearms and the like. Dummy hardware is the kind we personally use. Dummy hardware is there for looks. It doesn’t do anything. When you have double doors, chances are good the “inactive” door has a dummy on it to match the latch side. Dummy knobs also are used on doors where a latch exists at some location other than at the knob. 

All door hardware is bright and shiny when new. However, with less expensive doorknobs the finish doesn’t last. The key-lock system in cheaper locks can be opened by an adolescent with a hairpin. Key-lock systems are available in 5- and 6-pin configurations. A 6-pin lock is harder to pick than a 5-pin lock. Why make it easy for crooks? 

The building code requires deadbolts (with a 1-inch throw) at all exterior doors. Our uncle and aunt added a Florida room (glassed-in room addition) to their home. Uncle Omar added a deadbolt which operated with a key on both sides (double-cylinder deadbolt). He figured that even if someone broke the glass in the door they wouldn’t be able to get the door opened. When we last visited their home, we made sure that they knew that double-cylinder deadbolts have a disadvantage, too. We told them that a person could not escape with the bolt locked — without a key in hand. Then we posed the question. “Ever try putting a key into a lock with a fire raging behind you?” We also live by the philosophy that locks are for honest people. If a thief wants to get in, a glass door won’t keep him out. When is a double-cylinder lock safe? We don’t know. 

By the way, the answer to the question 16 years ago was: remove the two screws that hold in the latch bolt. Next, remove the two screws that hold the knobs together. Pull the knobs apart and then remove the latch-bolt assembly. Replace the new hardware in reverse order. The strike-plate (the metal plate on the door frame) can be reused or can be replaced by removing an additional pair of screws, replacing the plate and reinserting the removed screws. This process is the same for about 75 percent of doorknobs in the United States — regardless of whether the hardware has a knob or a lever. 

Note: When installing lever hardware, one must often lower the handle in order to easily access the screw to the inside of the door. 

For more home improvement tips and information visit our Web site at www.onthehouse.com. 

Readers can mail questions to: On the House, APNewsFeatures, 50 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, NY 10020, or e-mail Careybro(at)onthehouse.com. To receive a copy of On the House booklets on plumbing, painting, heating/cooling or decks/patios, send a check or money order payable to The Associated Press for $6.95 per booklet and mail to: On the House, P.O. Box 1562, New York, NY 10016-1562, or through these online sites: www.onthehouse.com or apbookstore.com. 


Tip of the week

Staff
Friday July 05, 2002

No decorative surface is more colorful or interesting than ceramic tile. Unfortunately, we can’t recommend tile grout as an easy-to-clean surface. Although grout cleaners are available at your local tile store, you’ll find it easier and less expensive to use common household products to do the job. For colored grout, vinegar works wonders — either straight or in strong solution. How often is it that someone recommends any kind of a cleaner to you that you can gargle — although you’d need to be a big vinegar lover to do so. For white grout, you have a choice. Bleach or hydrogen peroxide. Peroxide is slightly more expensive than bleach, but it’s safer to use.


As events swirl around them, Californians celebrate

By Eugene Tong, The Associated Press
Friday July 05, 2002

Parade featured fire truck from WTC wreckage 

 

RANCHO CUCAMONGA — As unsettling events swirled around them, Californians gathered for Fourth of July celebrations with a sense of anxiety and renewed purpose. 

Hundreds lined the main street of Rancho Cucamonga, 40 miles east of Los Angeles for a parade that featured girders and a fire truck retrieved from the wreckage of the World Trade Center in New York City. 

But word spread quickly through the flag-waving crowd that a gunman opened fire at Los Angeles International Airport and a small plane crashed into a crowd celebrating Independence Day in the Los Angeles suburb of San Dimas. 

“It’s scary because you don’t know where it’s going to be safe,” said Donna Gutierrez, 41, of Upland. “It’s hitting close to home now.” A terrorist attack, Gutierrez said, “could happen to any of us here.” 

A flatbed truck bearing the twisted mass of girders that had once supported one of the world’s tallest buildings rolled silently past the solemn crowd. 

Tammy Wiles admitted that the news of the airport shooting and the plane crash left her with a heightened sense of anxiety, but said she would not give into the fear. 

“It’s a little scary but you can’t let it keep you inside the house,” said Wiles, 44, of Fontana. 

Parade spectators like Miregi Huma saw a chance to send a message with the simplest of acts, like waving a flag on Independence Day. 

“The main thing is to make sure they (terrorists) don’t get what they want from you: the fear of not being able to do what we want to do on a regular basis,” said Huma, 28, of Studio City. 

Across California, many found deeper meaning in the Fourth of July. Jeffrey Orth, known to San Francisco commuters as the Flag Man, walked across the Golden Gate Bridge waving an American flag for the last time Thursday morning. 

Orth, a 52-year-old real estate agent, began his four-mile walks carrying an American flag on Nov. 2, shortly after seeing a television report that the landmark might become the next target of terrorists. Commuters applauded, honk their horns and waved flags and signs that read “Thank you Flag Man” in show of support. 

“I think that sense of celebration of the American spirit will continue without my daily reminder,” Orth said. “Hopefully all of America will reflect for a moment on the freedoms we enjoy and take for granted.” 

For others in San Francisco, concerns about security outweighed their desire to celebrate en masse. 

“We’ll stay at home and have dinner with a glass of wine and watch the fireworks on TV,” said Lilian Martinez. “People have to celebrate this day, but with all this about terrorists we’re afraid that something might happen.” 

Retired Los Angeles County firefighter Tom Talbott attended Rancho Cucamonga’s Fourth of July parade to view the girders of the World Trade Center and pay respects to those who gave their lives to save others in the collapse of the Twin Towers. 

“It’s a time for us to reflect on what we have, what we want to keep, and what’s important to us. The thing that’s important is our freedom, our ability to be who we want to be and who we are,” he said. 


Airline tells pilots arrested for alleged
drunkennes that they will be fired

The Asscociated Press
Friday July 05, 2002

MIAMI — America West is firing the two pilots charged with trying to fly a jetliner to Phoenix while drunk, a company spokesman said Wednesday. 

Pilot Thomas Porter Cloyd and co-pilot Christopher Hughes “have been sent a letter notifying them that our intention is to terminate their employment,” said spokeswoman Janice Monahan. 

She said the letters were delivered Tuesday. The pilots can appeal through their union contract if they choose, she said. 

The airline has worked closely with Miami-Dade police, who provided information the airline needed to proceed with the firing, Monahan said. She didn’t elaborate. 

Cloyd, 44, and Hughes, 41, were charged Monday by Miami-Dade County police with operating an aircraft under the influence and operating a motor vehicle under the influence. 

Both had blood-alcohol levels above the legal limit of 0.08 when they were ordered to return their Phoenix-bound plane, carrying 124 passengers, back to the gate Monday morning because a screener had noticed they smelled of alcohol. Hughes initially told police it was “merely mouthwash,” according to police reports. 

Meanwhile, Arizona police records show that Cloyd has been arrested twice for alleged alcohol-related offenses while at his home in Arizona. 

Two years ago, Cloyd was arrested on a charge of disorderly conduct after allegedly harassing his downstairs neighbor. He told police he had been “drinking a lot” before he shouted obscenities, pounded on her door and stomped on his floor, records show. 

He was sentenced to two years’ probation. 

In 1998, Cloyd had been drinking when he was arrested for misdemeanor domestic assault at his home in Chandler, Ariz., near Phoenix. He admitted he spit on his then-wife and shoved her into a refrigerator with his chest. 

Prosecutors dropped the domestic assault charge after Cloyd took an anger-management class, said Carla Boatner, administrator for Chandler Municipal Court. 

A spokesman for the Cloyd’s family, Steve Hicks said, “We’re saddened by the occurrences and the allegations made against them.” 

Hughes declined to comment Tuesday. 

Federal Aviation Administration policy requires pilots to report if they have been charged with certain alcohol-related offenses, such as driving under the influence. Their pilot’s certificate is suspended after a third offense, said FAA spokesman Christopher White.The Asscociated Press 

 

MIAMI — America West is firing the two pilots charged with trying to fly a jetliner to Phoenix while drunk, a company spokesman said Wednesday. 

Pilot Thomas Porter Cloyd and co-pilot Christopher Hughes “have been sent a letter notifying them that our intention is to terminate their employment,” said spokeswoman Janice Monahan. 

She said the letters were delivered Tuesday. The pilots can appeal through their union contract if they choose, she said. 

The airline has worked closely with Miami-Dade police, who provided information the airline needed to proceed with the firing, Monahan said. She didn’t elaborate. 

Cloyd, 44, and Hughes, 41, were charged Monday by Miami-Dade County police with operating an aircraft under the influence and operating a motor vehicle under the influence. 

Both had blood-alcohol levels above the legal limit of 0.08 when they were ordered to return their Phoenix-bound plane, carrying 124 passengers, back to the gate Monday morning because a screener had noticed they smelled of alcohol. Hughes initially told police it was “merely mouthwash,” according to police reports. 

Meanwhile, Arizona police records show that Cloyd has been arrested twice for alleged alcohol-related offenses while at his home in Arizona. 

Two years ago, Cloyd was arrested on a charge of disorderly conduct after allegedly harassing his downstairs neighbor. He told police he had been “drinking a lot” before he shouted obscenities, pounded on her door and stomped on his floor, records show. 

He was sentenced to two years’ probation. 

In 1998, Cloyd had been drinking when he was arrested for misdemeanor domestic assault at his home in Chandler, Ariz., near Phoenix. He admitted he spit on his then-wife and shoved her into a refrigerator with his chest. 

Prosecutors dropped the domestic assault charge after Cloyd took an anger-management class, said Carla Boatner, administrator for Chandler Municipal Court. 

A spokesman for the Cloyd’s family, Steve Hicks said, “We’re saddened by the occurrences and the allegations made against them.” 

Hughes declined to comment Tuesday. 

Federal Aviation Administration policy requires pilots to report if they have been charged with certain alcohol-related offenses, such as driving under the influence. Their pilot’s certificate is suspended after a third offense, said FAA spokesman Christopher White.


Small plane
slams into
park crowd

By Andrew Bridges, The Associated Press
Friday July 05, 2002

Accident killed 3, injured 13 

 

SAN DIMAS — A small private plane struggling to gain altitude after takeoff crashed into a Fourth of July crowd at a public park, killing the pilot and two other people and injuring 13, some of them children picnicking with their families. 

Federal Aviation Administration spokeswoman Laura Brown said the crash “sounds completely like an accident” and Gov. Gray Davis said the pilot issued two mayday distress calls after takeoff from Brackett Field, a small airport near the park. 

“The wings clipped on the trees. It went nose first. Bodies flying all over the place,” said witness Javier Franco. He said two girls were trapped under the plane. 

“Other people took the bodies out of the plane. I can’t forget seeing the bodies on the ground,” he said. 

The pilot and a 12-year-old girl who was trapped beneath a wing of the plane died at hospitals, and one adult died at the crash site, said Los Angeles County Fire Department spokesman Brian Jordan. 

Several of the injured were in critical condition, including children, and about half the victims had minor injuries, said fire Capt. Mark Savage. 

A passenger on the plane survived, said FAA spokesman Jerry Johnston. Firefighters said they were not sure how many people were on the four-seat plane. 

Scuba divers searched the lake to make sure there were no other victims, said Los Angeles County sheriff’s Deputy William Spear. The FAA and National Transportation Safety Board also are investigating the crash. 

The twin-engine Cessna 310 crashed near Puddingstone Reservoir at Frank G. Bonelli Regional Park, where hundreds of people were barbecuing and celebrating the Fourth of July. The park is about 30 miles east of Los Angeles. 

People were setting up tents on the grassy area where the plane came down, said Frine Flores, who was picnicking about 300 feet away. She watched the plane crash between a picnic table and a red hammock that had been stretched between two trees. 

“It was just like a big roar before it crashed and then, I can’t even explain the sound at impact. It was like crunching of metal,” said Flores, 32, of Pasadena. “Everyone was just crying, as if it was their family that was traumatized.” 

By early afternoon, the scene was strewn with both the plane’s wreckage and the remains of holiday parties. Paper plates and cups were scattered across the ground. A child’s push scooter was propped next to a picnic table a few feet from the wreckage, and an airplane engine rested on a crumpled green lawn chair. 


Endangered frog loses 4 million protected acres

Staff
Friday July 05, 2002

The Associated Press 

 

SAN FRANCISCO — The endangered California red-legged frog has lost nearly 4 million acres of protected land after federal wildlife officials agreed to reassess the economic impact on areas that are slated for development. 

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service made the critical habitat designation in March 2001 following a 70 percent decline in habitat and a 90 percent drop in the frog’s population. But the Home Builders Association of Northern California and two other groups challenged the protected acres, and on Tuesday a judge in Washington D.C. approved a deal under which the government will redraw the boundaries by 2005. 

“It didn’t pass the straight-face test — the service saw that and that’s why they agreed so readily to go back and redo the process,” Paul Campos, a lawyer for the San Ramon-based home builders association said Thursday. “We hope they will take their time to do a proper analysis and determine where the red-legged frog actually exists.” 

The acreage had included parts of 28 of the state’s 58 counties, from Tehama and Plumas counties in the north to the Mexican border. About a third of the land is public. 

The home builders association sued last year, saying Fish and Wildlife officials did not prove the entire acreage was vital to the frog’s survival. The groups also argued that the agency had inadequately analyzed the economic effect on areas that are mostly foothill and suburban land ripe for development. 

Environmentalists were upset that they weren’t part of settlement negotiations. The judge signed the consent decree 10 days before a deadline for the groups to submit comments on the settlement. 

“It’s really bad news for the frog,” said Michael Sherwood, an attorney at Earthjustice, the law firm representing the Sierra Club and other groups. 

Under the settlement, two protected areas totaling 199,000 acres will remain intact. They are near Jordan Creek in Tuolumne and Mariposa counties and in the Angeles National Forest near Los Angeles. 

The frog is believed to be the star of Mark Twain’s short story, “The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County.” 

The U.S. Department of the Interior said the decision to settle was influenced by a recent federal appeals court ruling that eliminated protections for the southwestern willow flycatcher, an endangered bird. The decision came after the New Mexico Cattle Growers Association filed a suit claiming the agency did not properly consider the economic consequences of the designation. 

“Fish and Wildlife agrees that a more robust economic analysis is required,” said Interior Department spokesman Hugh Vickery. “The designation is going to be done. It just means it will be redone with a more stringent analysis.” 

In addition to the red-legged frog and the southwestern willow flycatcher, 19 West Coast species of salmon and steelhead along with the pygmy owl have lost habitat protections in the past year. 


Firefighters subdue blaze
in Lake Tahoe wildlands

By Brendan Riley, The Associated Press
Friday July 05, 2002

STATELINE, Nev. — Firefighters on land and in the air edged toward victory Thursday over a blaze that hit this tourism destination on the July Fourth weekend, burning some 672 wooded acres between a California ski resort and Nevada casinos at Lake Tahoe’s south shore. 

“We really did throw everything at it as quick as we could,” said Laura Williams, spokeswoman for the Sierra Front Fire Dispatch Center in Minden, Nev. 

The assault paid off as some 657 firefighters, aided by calmer winds and higher humidity, succeeded in cutting a line around 60 percent of the burn area less than 24 hours after the fire broke out. 

“The fire behavior is real low,” Forest Service spokesman Rex Norman said. 

After an initial assault that included air tankers and helicopters, he said only helicopters were being used on Thursday as the fire died down. 

Full containment was forecast for Sunday, although Norman said it could come sooner. Control was expected by Wednesday. 

And the annual July Fourth fireworks display remained on schedule. The fireworks explode over the lake north of the fire. 

While flames licked within a few yards of exclusive homes and condominiums perched above the lake, no structures were damaged. Several thousand people voluntarily left their homes as the fire approached. 

Dan Garrison, general manager of The Ridge Tahoe said some 1,500 guests either were asked to leave or were turned away when they tried to return. Parts of the resort were coated with a fire-retardant mud as the flames neared. 

“I feel pretty good today. I wouldn’t have said the same thing last night,” he said on Thursday. 

The fire broke out just after noon on Wednesday under a gondola on the California side of the line that carries wintertime skiers and summertime sightseers up the scenic mountain at Heavenly ski area. 

Whipped by gusty winds, the flames pushed northeast into Nevada, threatening the homes and closing the twisting road that links the Minden-Gardnerville area in the Carson Valley with the lake. 

The winds died down at dusk, giving hand crews a chance to start building a line around the fire, Norman said. Humidity from the lake also helped retard the fire’s growth. 

The size of the fire was estimated at 200 acres Wednesday night. Norman said Thursday’s 672-acre estimate didn’t reflect expansion, but more accurate measuring. 

The fire was burning in a heavily wooded area that is off limits to skiers. Dead and dying trees are scattered among the living pines as a result of drought and bark beetle infestations, fire officials said. 

Robert O’Donald, a contractor whose home lay within the area targeted for evacuation, had been working on a remodeling job in Turlock when he heard about the fire. 

“I thought it was gone. It’s a relief to see it’s still here,” he said on Thursday. 

But as he packed some personal items, he added, “It’s not over yet. It’s a nightmare.” 

——— 

Associated Press writer Tom Gardner contributed to this report. 


SF Wine Group
buys Livermore
Valley Vineyard

Staff
Friday July 05, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — The company best known for its boxed wine is hoping its purchase of Concannon Vineyard in Livermore Valley will continue its move into the fine-wine arena. 

The Wine Group, based in San Francisco and known for its Franzia brand wine-in-a-box, recently bought the Glen Ellen and MG Vallejo brands from wine and spirits conglomerate Diaggeo. 

The price of Concannon Vineyard wasn’t disclosed, and the purchase is expected to close by the end of July. 

The purchase, which includes the winery, 170 acres of vineyard and all the winery’s inventories, is seen as a validation of the Livermore Valley as a wine region. 

“This is a really good thing for Concannon and the valley as a whole,” said Concannon’s director of marketing Laura Kirk Lee. “It adds credibility to the area as a viticultural area.” 

Concannon is known for its petite sirah, and its wines range in price from $9 to $24 a bottle. 

The winery was founded in 1883 by James Concannon, an Irish immigrant, and it stayed in his family for 97 years. Concannon, a registered historical landmark, switched hands numerous times between 1980 and 1992, when eight investors bought it. One of the investors was Eric Wente of nearby Wente Vineyards. 

Concannon and Wente are the only large-volume producers in the Livermore Valley, although there are many small wineries. Concannon produces 60,000 cases a year. 

The Wine Group also markets Corbett Canyon, Foxhorn, Austin Vale from Australia, Costa Vera from Chile, Altamonte from Argentina, Mistrane from France and Mogen David from New York. 


Tahoe water level lowest in years

Staff
Friday July 05, 2002

RENO, Nev. — As the boating and beach season kicks off at Lake Tahoe, there’s lots of beach but a little less boating. 

The lake’s water level is the lowest it’s been in years — 6,225.06 feet above sea level, more than a foot below water levels recorded at the same time last year. By November, the lake is expected to drop below its natural rim of 6,223 feet for the first time since 1994. 

While that means more sandy beaches for sunbathers, it means more rocks and other shallow-water obstructions that can ruin a boater’s day. 

“People need to be careful,” said Chief Jim DeVane of Lake Tahoe’s U.S. Coast Guard station. 

In Tahoe City, Calif., Paul Niwano of Tahoe Water Adventures has the evidence stacked up on his counter — costly boat propellers dinged and shredded from hitting rocks. 

Low water levels also are plaguing boaters in places such as Washoe Lake State Park, where the main boat ramp is closed. 

“It’s very shallow. It just isn’t recommended to launch boats, even small ones,” said park aide Albert Lea. Boat ramps are open at Stampede Reservoir near Truckee, Calif., but water is low. 

The situation is far better at some other popular boating lakes such as Boca Reservoir, where higher water levels are expected to be maintained most of the summer for boaters, according to federal Water Master Garry Stone. 

Lahontan Reservoir is also in good shape as the holiday approaches, with both boat ramps open and boating activity picking up. 

John Packer of Zephyr Cove has lived at Lake Tahoe for nearly 30 years and has seen low lake levels before, particularly a decade ago when Tahoe dropped below its natural rim several years in a row during eight years of drought. 

“Its nothing like that yet,” Packer said. “The lake at this point looks pretty good.” 

But Packer said he’s glad his speedboat is moored to a buoy fairly far offshore. He also plans to keep a wary eye out for rocks and other obstacles while cruising the lake this summer. 

“You’ve just got to be careful,” Packer said. “You’ve got to be cognizant of the fact the lake is lower.” 


5 family members found
drowned in Lake Isabella

Staff
Friday July 05, 2002

LAKE ISABELLA — The death toll in a family drowning tragedy grew to five with the discovery of another body in Lake Isabella. 

The Kern County Coroner’s office on Thursday identified the parents as Martin and Charlotte Skaggs, both 45, and the girls as Melanie, 10, April, 8, and Lindsey, 7. 

A 5-year-old boy remained hospitalized on life support. 

The family members drowned on Tuesday in the 11,000-acre reservoir in the Kern River Valley. The body of the third child was not recovered until Wednesday evening. 

They family reportedly had been living out of a car and staying with friends in the area. 

“There is a lot of speculation of what happened, but based on interviews with witnesses, we do not feel this is anything more than a tragic accident at this point,” Kern County sheriff’s Cmdr. Marty Williamson said. 

“I’ve been here 26 years and I can’t remember such a tragic event with so many deaths,” he said. 

The six family members apparently were playing on a sandbar in chest-deep water about 100 feet from shore when one of the girls slipped into deep water. The girl may have been pushed from the shoreline by the wind when she came up, and “everybody panicked,” Sheriff Carl Sparks said. 

A camper, who was parking his Jet Ski on shore, saw the family splashing in the water and asked if they were OK, but no one answered. When the camper turned around and saw no one, he got on his Jet Ski and found the mother and her son, Williamson said. 

Charlotte Skaggs was taken by helicopter to a hospital where she was pronounced dead. 

Authorities found the father in about 30 feet of water. Two of the girls were recovered from about 10 feet of water. 

The parents had previous drug convictions, but investigators had no indication alcohol or drugs were used. Routine toxicology tests will be done on the bodies of the two adults, Williamson said. 

Two other boys in the family, ages 12 and 14, had been placed in foster care. The boys were at a friend’s house when the drowning occurred. 

The children were known to be good students, and friends described the family as close-knit. 

Lake Isabella is about 153 miles northeast of Los Angeles, about 30 miles northeast of Bakersfield. 


Car Talk

CLICK AND CLACK TALK CARS

by Tom and Ray Magliozzi
Friday July 05, 2002

RUNNING AC IN OFF-SEASON WON'T HELP CONDENSER 

I just got the sad news that my air-conditioning condenser is gone, and it's going to cost me $900 to replace. When I told my husband, he said that I should have known that car air conditioners have to be run at least once a month throughout the year to keep the seals in good shape. Well, I DIDN'T know that! I did an informal poll at work, and no one else knew it, either. Is it true? – Jane 

 

TOM: Well, it's sort of like what the Jewish grandmother says about chicken soup: "It couldn't hurt." 

 

RAY: But it wouldn't have helped you, Jane. The reason you run the AC every so often in the off-season is so the moving parts of the compressor don't seize and so the seals stay soft and pliant. 

 

TOM: But your compressor didn't fail, Jane. Your condenser did. And there's nothing in the condenser that moves. The condenser is located in front of the radiator, and it simply cools and condenses the AC's refrigerant. My guess is that some sort of roadway debris hit it and knocked a hole in it, or it just rotted out. And running the AC in the winter would have done nothing to prevent that. 

 

RAY: Many cars automatically turn on the AC when you use the front-window defroster. And in those cars, you obviously never have to think about it, because you'll inevitably use the AC all year round. But some cars don't have that feature. And on those cars, it can't hurt to turn on the AC once a month or so during the winter. 

 

TOM: And don't worry about freezing. You can turn the heat up full blast with the AC on. That doesn't cause any problems at all. And it'll keep you from suffering from "heiniethermia."  

 

Used cars can be a great bargain, and reliable, too! Find out why by ordering Tom and Ray's pamphlet "How to Buy a Great Used Car: Things That Detroit and Tokyo Don't Want You to Know." Send $3 (check or money order) and a stamped (57 cents), self-addressed, No. 10 envelope to Used Car, P.O. Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853-6475. 

Got a question about cars? Write to Click and Clack in care of this newspaper, or e-mail them by visiting the Car Talk section of cars.com on the World Wide Web.


INS arrests Hussein’s
stepson Saffi in Florida

By Terry Spencer, The Associated Press
Friday July 05, 2002

Found to be enrolled in same flight school as one  

of Sept. 11 hijackers 

 

MIAMI – Saddam Hussein’s stepson has been arrested on immigration charges after enrolling in a flight school that had been used by one of the Sept. 11 hijackers, federal authorities said. 

Mohammed Nour al-Din Saffi, a citizen of New Zealand who has worked as a commercial airline pilot, planned to attend classes at Aeroservice Aviation Center, said James Goldman, an INS assistant director for investigations. 

FBI spokeswoman Judy Orihuela said one of the Sept. 11 hijackers trained at the flight school. The South Florida Sun-Sentinel identified the hijacker as Zaid Jarrah, who is belived to have been one of the organizers and pilots of the attacks along with Mohamed Atta. 

According to the Immigration and Naturalization Service, the Iraqi leader’s stepson was traveling as a tourist and had not applied for a student visa that would have allowed him to take courses. 

There was no evidence that Saffi was connected to any terrorist group. 

Goldman said Saffi was seeking recertification training at the flight school. The FBI said he is employed by an airline in New Zealand. 

Saffi, 36, also failed to tell customs agents of his intent to take courses when he arrived Tuesday in Los Angeles on a flight from New Zealand, Goldman said. 

Phone calls to Aeroservice Aviation Center seeking comment were not answered Wednesday. 

Orihuela, the FBI spokeswoman, said Saffi was tracked Wednesday as he flew from Los Angeles to Miami International Airport. He was taken into custody at a motel shortly after he arrived. 

Saffi was at Krome Detention Center in Miami-Dade County and is being processed for deportation to New Zealand, Goldman said. 

The Weekend Herald, a newspaper in New Zealand, reported in December that Saffi was employed by Air New Zealand as an engineer and had lived in the country six years. 

They said officials in New Zealand had investigated Saffi after Sept. 11 when they learned he was Saddam’s stepson. No action was taken, the paper said. 

Saffi had declined to discuss his relationship with the Iraqi leader when asked by the paper. The Miami Herald reported that Saffi denied any family tie to the Iraqi leader and denied it to federal agents. 

Saffi’s home telephone in Auckland was repeatedly busy Friday. 

Air New Zealand declined comment, citing privacy concerns. 

Mohammed Saffi is the eldest son of Samira al-Shahbandar, Saddam’s second wife. His father is Nour al-Din Saffi, an aviation engineer and former head of the Iraqi Airways. 

According to well-placed sources in Baghdad and in Iraqi exile circles, Saddam forced Nour al-Din Saffi to divorce al-Shahbandar in the late 1970s before Saddam married her. He has since married again.


Opinion

Editorials

History

Staff
Thursday July 11, 2002

Today’s Highlight in History: 

Fifty years ago, on July 11, 1952, the Republican national convention, meeting in Chicago, nominated Dwight D. Eisenhower for president and Richard M. Nixon for vice president. 

On this date: 

In 1767, John Quincy Adams, the sixth president of the United States, was born in Braintree, Mass. 

In 1804, Vice President Aaron Burr mortally wounded former Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton in a pistol duel near Weehawken, N.J. 

In 1934, President Roosevelt became the first chief executive to travel through the Panama Canal. 

In 1979, the abandoned U.S. space station Skylab made a spectacular return to Earth, burning up in the atmosphere and showering debris over the Indian Ocean and Australia. 

Ten years ago: Undeclared presidential hopeful Ross Perot, addressing the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People convention in Nashville, Tenn., startled and offended his listeners by referring to the predominantly black audience as “you people.” 

Five years ago: President Clinton was cheered by tens of thousands of people in Bucharest, Romania, where he raised hopes for NATO membership.  

One year ago: The Democratic-led Senate voted to bar coal mining and oil and gas drilling on pristine federally protected land in the West, dealing a fresh blow to President Bush’s energy production plans.  

Today’s Birthdays: Jazz musician Kirk Whalum is 44. Singer Suzanne Vega is 43. Rock guitarist Richie Sambora (Bon Jovi) is 43. Actress Debbe Dunning is 36. Actor Michael Rosenbaum is 30.  


History

Staff
Wednesday July 10, 2002

Today’s Highlight in History: 

Forty years ago, on July 10, 1962, the Telstar communications satellite was launched from Cape Canaveral, Fla. 

On this date: 

In 1890, Wyoming became the 44th state. 

In 1940, during World War II, the 114-day Battle of Britain began as Nazi forces began attacking southern England by air. 

In 1943, U.S. and British forces invaded Sicily. 

In 1973, the Bahamas became independent after three centuries of British colonial rule. 

In 1991, Boris N. Yeltsin took the oath of office as the first elected president of the Russian republic. 

Ten years ago: A federal judge in Miami sentenced former Panamanian leader Manuel Noriega to 40 years in prison. A judge later cut Noriega’s sentence by 10 years. 

Five years ago: President Clinton, visiting Poland, told cheering Poles in Warsaw that “never again will your fate be decided by others” following his successful drive to bring Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic into NATO by 1999.  

One year ago: The White House backed off a plan to let religious groups that receive federal money, such as the Salvation Army, ignore local laws that ban discrimination against gays and lesbians.  

Today’s Birthdays: Former NBC and ABC News correspondent David Brinkley is 82. Eunice Kennedy Shriver is 81. Former New York City Mayor David N. Dinkins is 75.


History

Staff
Tuesday July 09, 2002

Today’s Highlight in History: 

On July 8, 1950, Gen. Douglas MacArthur was named commander-in-chief of United Nations forces in Korea. 

On this date: 

In 1663, King Charles II of England granted a charter to Rhode Island. 

In 1776, Col. John Nixon gave the first public reading of the Declaration of Independence, in Philadelphia. 

In 1889, The Wall Street Journal was first published. 

In 1919, President Wilson received a tumultuous welcome in New York City after his return from the Versailles Peace Conference in France. 

In 1947, demolition work began in New York City to make way for the new permanent headquarters of the United Nations. 

In 1975, President Ford announced he would seek the Republican nomination for the presidency in 1976. 

Ten years ago: Russian President Boris Yeltsin met with Group of Seven leaders holding their economic summit in Munich, Germany, where he offered a startling proposal to swap factories, energy resources and other properties for Russian debt. 

Five years ago: The Senate Governmental Affairs Committee opened politically charged hearings into fund-raising abuses, with chairman Fred Thompson accusing China of trying to influence the 1996 U.S. elections. NATO extended membership invitations to Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic. The Mayo Clinic and the government warned the diet-drug combination known as “fen-phen” could cause serious heart and lung damage. 

One year ago: Cable operator Comcast mounted a $41 billion hostile bid to merge with AT&T Broadband. (Although AT&T spurned that offer, the company’s board ultimately agreed to merge the cable unit with Comcast, subject to approval by federal regulators.) Venus Williams won her second consecutive Wimbledon title by beating Belgian Justine Henin.  

Today’s Birthdays: Blues musician Johnnie Johnson is 78. ABC News Chairman Roone Arledge is 71. Actress Kim Darby is 54. Children’s performer Raffi is 54. Actor Kevin Bacon is 44. Rock musician Andy Fletcher (Depeche Mode) is 41. Rock singer Joan Osborne is 40. Writer-producer Rob Burnett (“Ed”) is 40. Actor Corey Parker is 37. Singer Beck is 32.  


Bay Area Briefs

Staff
Monday July 08, 2002

Bruce Lee’s martial arts teacher retires 

 

ALAMEDA — Wally Jay, who was Bruce Lee’s martial arts teacher and a pioneer in the martial art of jujitsu, is retiring. 

Jay taught the late Lee at his Alameda school from 1962 to 1964 when the martial arts star was on the brink of fame. 

“He was good and fast,” said Jay. “He was made for the sport.” 

Lee’s displays of physical might and featherweight acrobatics earned him a cult following when he began starring in thrillers such as 1972’s “Fists of Fury” and 1973’s “Enter the Dragon.” 

But less than a year after his starring debut, he died at 32 from a brain edema. 

Jay, a Honolulu native, who first learn martial arts to fight off bullies became an innovator in jujitsu, a Japanese form of self-defense that employs locks and holds of the hands, fingers and wrists, as well as throws and sweeps. 

Jay, 85, created small-circle jujitsu, an energy-efficient form of jujitsu that combines smaller, more calculated movements that give opponents less room to escape. 

Jay, who is retiring after 45 years of teaching, produced national champions and team winners in three countries earning him the highest respect in the martial arts community. 

For him, the sport is not about is not about using brute force. 

“It’s not about how much you can hurt a person,” said Jay. “It’s how little you can hurt a person and still control them.” 

 

North Bay man held  

for murder 

 

PETALUMA — A Petaluma man was being held on suspicion of murder after allegedly fatally shooting a childhood friend with a gun he said he thought was unloaded. 

Witnesses said Andrew Karl Johansen produced a .45-caliber semiautomatic handgun during a party at his house. He allegedly dry-fired the gun several times while aiming it toward people’s heads. When he allegedly pointed the gun at Justin Pope, 18, and pulled the trigger, it fired a bullet into Pope’s head, said Detective Sgt. Dave Kahl. 

Johansen and most of the other guests fled the house after the shooting. Johansen arrived at the police department several hours later with a friend and turned himself in. 

A search of the friend’s car produced a gun believed to be the one used in the shooting. A later search of Johansen’s home and vehicle found two assault rifles, a semiautomatic assault pistol, approximately $3,000 in cash and around three pounds of marijuana. 

Johansen told police he thought he had unloaded the gun before he began pointing it at people. He could not explain why he was pointing it at others or why it fired when pointed at the victim, Kahl said. 

 

Big gender gap in Marin  

 

NOVATO — Marin County women earn nearly $16,000 a year less than their male counterparts, according to 2000 census data. 

Men earn a median income of $61,282 and more than $100,000 in Belvedere, Kentfield, and Tiburon. Women earn $45,448 countywide. 

In fact, the wealthy county north of San Francisco has the widest pay gap of all the counties in the San Francisco Bay area. 

Statewide, the census reported median earnings of $40,627 for men and $31,722 for women, a difference of $8,905. 

“The commonplace thinking is that the playing field has been leveled,” said Rachel Allen, spokeswoman for the Marin County and California chapters of the National Organization for Women. “The thinking is that the second wave of the women’s movement fixed everything. We’ve seen a lot of improvement, but there remain many steps to take.” 

Analysts say a number of factors are responsible for the gap, including the median age of workers: The older a woman is, the greater the likelihood her paycheck will be lower than that of her male colleagues. And, with a median age of 41, Marin is graying ahead of the statewide median of 33. 

Nationally, women between ages 16 and 24 earn 91 percent of what their male co-workers take home, according to the U.S. Department of Labor. By contrast, women between ages 55 and 64 bring in only 68.5 percent of what their male counterparts earn. 

Career choice also remains a factor.


History

Staff
Saturday July 06, 2002

Today’s Highlight in History: 

On July 6, 1944, 169 people died in a fire that broke out in the main tent of the Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus in Hartford, Conn. 

On this date: 

In 1535, Sir Thomas More was executed in England for treason. 

In 1885, French scientist Louis Pasteur successfully tested an anti-rabies vaccine on a boy who had been bitten by an infected dog. 

In 1923, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics was formed. 

In 1945, President Truman signed an executive order establishing the Medal of Freedom. 

In 1957, Althea Gibson became the first black tennis player to win a Wimbledon singles title, defeating fellow American Darlene Hard. 

In 1967, the Biafran War erupted. (The war claimed some 600,000 lives.) 

In 1989, the U.S. Army destroyed its last Pershing 1-A missiles at an ammunition plant in Karnack, Texas, under terms of the 1987 Intermediate-range Nuclear Forces Treaty. 

Ten years ago: The Group of Seven industrial nations opened their 18th annual economic summit in Munich, Germany. 

Five years ago: The rover Sojourner rolled down a ramp from the Mars Pathfinder lander onto the Martian landscape to begin inspecting the soil and rocks of the Red Planet. Cuauhtemoc Cardenas captured Mexico City’s mayoral race while Mexico’s ruling party suffered devastating losses in congressional elections. Pete Sampras won his fourth Wimbledon title as he defeated Cedric Pioline of France. 

One year ago: Former FBI agent Robert Hanssen pleaded guilty to 15 criminal counts and agreed to give a full accounting of his spying activities for Moscow. The United States turned over to Japanese authorities an American serviceman accused of rape. Eight-year-old Jessie Arbogast was badly injured in a shark attack off the Florida coast. 

Today’s Birthdays: Former first lady Nancy Reagan is 81. Talk show host Merv Griffin is 77. Actress Janet Leigh is 75. Singer-actress Della Reese is 71. President George W. Bush is 56. Actor-director Sylvester Stallone is 56. Actor Fred Dryer is 56. Country singer Nanci Griffith is 49.


History

Staff
Friday July 05, 2002

Today’s Highlight in History: 

On July 5, 1946, the bikini made its debut during an outdoor fashion show at the Molitor Pool in Paris. 

On this date: 

In 1811, Venezuela became the first South American country to declare independence from Spain. 

In 1830, the French occupied the North African city of Algiers. 

In 1947, Larry Doby signed a contract with the Cleveland Indians, becoming the first black player in the American League. 

In 1948, Britain’s National Health Service Act went into effect, providing government-financed medical and dental care. 

In 1950, Private Kenneth Shadrick of Skin Fork, W.Va., became the first U.S. serviceman to die in the Korean War. 

In 1975, Arthur Ashe became the first black man to win a Wimbledon singles title as he defeated Jimmy Connors. 

Ten years ago: Leaders of the world’s seven richest nations gathered in Munich, Germany, for their 18th annual economic summit. President Bush, en route to the summit, told cheering Poles in Warsaw that “America shares Poland’s dream.” Andre Agassi won his first Grand Slam title, defeating Goran Ivanisevic at Wimbledon. 

Five years ago: NASA scientists brainstormed to fix problems that left Mars Pathfinder’s robot rover stuck aboard the lander. Cambodia’s Second Prime Minister Hun Sen launched a bloody coup that toppled First Prime Minister Norodom Ranariddh. Sixteen-year-old Martina Hingis became the youngest Wimbledom singles champion this century as she beat Jana Novotna in the women’s finals. (Charlotte “Lottie” Dod won in 1887 at age 15.) 

One year ago: President Bush named veteran prosecutor Robert Mueller to take over the FBI. 

Today’s Birthdays: Singer-musician Robbie Robertson is 58. Julie Nixon Eisenhower is 54. Rock star Huey Lewis is 52.


Columns

Bush celebrates the Fourth with
friendly crowd in West Virginia

By Sandra Sobieraj, The Associated Press
Friday July 05, 2002

RIPLEY, W.Va. – In a small-town square festooned by stars and stripes, President Bush paid little mind to July Fourth terrorism fears while celebrating America’s history and her heroes. 

“We love our country only more when she’s threatened,” he declared on the first Independence Day since last year’s Sept. 11 attacks. 

He recalled another, far more distant moment in American history when the world changed forever — the signing of the Declaration of Independence. 

“From that day in 1776, freedom has had a home and freedom has had a defender,” Bush said. 

Saluting all who serve in the U.S. military, he offered immediate eligibility for citizenship to 15,000 recent immigrants enlisted in the Armed Forces on active duty. 

“These men and women love our country. They show it in their daily devotion to duty,” he said. 

The annual festivities in Ripley, population 3,400, are billed as the nation’s biggest small-town Fourth of July celebration — so neighborly an occasion, in fact, that Bush jokingly offered to hang around afterward and help clean up. 

Even as security concerns canceled Ripley’s annual pancake breakfast and 5K run, the holiday here was set on edge more by politics than the terrorism worries that had police, military and FBI officials out in full force across the nation Thursday. 

In a Norman Rockwell-styled square, massive flags and red-white-and-blue bunting framed the Jackson County Courthouse steps as Bush, his hand on his heart, led the crowd of thousands in reciting the Pledge of Allegiance. They shouted for emphasis, “one nation, UNDER GOD!” — the phrase cited as unconstitutional by a federal appeals panel in San Francisco late last month. 

Bush, who has called the ruling ridiculous, drew a thunderous ovation when he defied the court again on Thursday. 

“The American people, when we pledge our allegiance to the flag, feel renewed respect and love for all it represents. And no authority of government can ever prevent an American from pledging allegiance to this one nation under God,” the president said. 

Bush narrowly won strongly Democratic West Virginia in the 2000 presidential election. 

Just before Bush arrived by helicopter from the Charleston airport, the Rev. Jack Miller of West Ripley Baptist Church got the morning’s program off to a partisan start with his invocation: 

“We have ridiculed the absolute truth of your word in the name of multiculturalism. We have been forced to honor sexual deviance in the name of freedom of expression. We have exploited the system of education in the name of the lottery. We have toyed with the idea of helping human life in the name of medical research. We have killed our unborn children in the name of choice.” 

Ripley spent days polishing the town and Bush felt the hospitality from the moment Marine One touched down: Eighty-one-year-old Mabel Chapman personally mowed several acres of her front lawn to make a landing zone for the president and his five helicopters. He thanked Chapman with a kiss, hug and thick black autograph on the back shoulder of her white t-shirt. 

Bush said a special thanks to those in the military today and yesterday, whose service he called “the highest form of citizenship.” 

The executive order that he signed on Wednesday eliminates the three-year waiting period for citizenship consideration for immigrants serving on active duty during the post-Sept. 11 war on terrorism. 

House Democratic Caucus Chairman Martin Frost of Texas, who has written legislation more broadly easing the path to citizenship for military personnel, welcomed Bush’s announcement as reinforcement of “the valuable service of those who do not share the benefits of citizenship but willingly shoulder the responsiblities necessary to secure those benefits.” 

As Bush left town, the White House announced a decision unlikely to please many West Virginians.


Powell accepts Liberty Medal
for leadership role in war on terrorism

By Maryclaire Dale, The Associated Press
Friday July 05, 2002

Secretary of State
receives honor in Philadelphia
 

 

PHILADELPHIA – Secretary of State Colin L. Powell was awarded the 2002 Philadelphia Liberty Medal on Thursday for his leadership in the war on terrorism, his efforts in the Middle East and his concern for human rights. 

Powell said the ceremony at Independence Hall was proof the nation’s spirit had not been broken since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. 

“The terrorists thought that they could keep us from celebrating the Fourth of July. They were wrong. We are here, and we will remain,” Powell said. 

Powell also asked all Americans to devote more time to public service. 

“Everybody can make the time to serve on a school board, volunteer at a local shelter, mentor a kid who needs someone to care,” he said. 

Powell, 65, rose from humble beginnings in Harlem to become the nation’s first black chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in 1989. He directed Operation Desert Storm in the Persian Gulf in 1991. 

He chaired a volunteer organization and wrote a best-selling autobiography before being sworn in as Secretary of State on Jan. 20, 2001. 

Philadelphia Mayor John F. Street called Powell “a warrior for peace, a warrior for justice. 

“Colin Powell is driven by a conviction that the world must be cleansed of hatred and restored to dignity,” Street said. 

The Liberty Medal was established in 1988 to honor individuals or organizations whose actions represent the founding principles of the United States. Past recipients include former President Jimmy Carter, former Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres and U.S. Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall. 

The Liberty Medal is administered by Greater Philadelphia First, a regional business and civic organization, and comes with a $100,000 prize.


Briefs

Staff
Friday July 05, 2002

Amy Grant to headline  

New York State Fair 

 

SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The New York State Fair has completed its 2002 grandstand concert lineup with the addition of Christian music singer Amy Grant. 

Grant, who recently released “Legacy ... Hymns & Faith,” will perform on Aug. 24, it was announced Thursday. The return-to-roots album marks the 25th anniversary of the 41-year-old singer’s career, and precedes a new album, “Simple Things,” aimed at the pop market, which is due out in September. 

Other entertainers scheduled to perform include Kenny Chesney, Phil Vassar, Alicia Keys, the Baha Men, Peter Frampton, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Alabama, Toby Keith and Brooks & Dunn. The fair will run Aug. 22-Sept. 2. 

 

Austin closes up  

 

popular hole in the wall 

AUSTIN, Texas — The Hole in the Wall, a nightclub near the University of Texas campus that was a fixture in Austin’s live music scene, has closed after 28 years. 

The Hole in the Wall shut down Sunday after a last night of business that turned into a party for regulars, musicians and newcomers. 

The club’s lease expired at the end of June, and the building is for sale for $972,000. Renting month to month was an option, but the bar’s liquor license was up for renewal in August. 

“The combination makes it difficult,” said co-owner Debbie Rombach. 

Over the past month, some prominent musicians revisited the Hole for a fund-raising festival, donating their take to help the bar pay its debts, which mostly includes back payroll taxes. The concert series, called 30 Days in the Hole, aimed to raise more than $15,000. 

The profits barely made a dent in the debt, Rombach said. 

She said she might reopen the Hole in another location if she can find a place where the rent isn’t too high. 

The Hole opened in 1974 as a neighborhood bar. Early on it was largely supported by the video arcade in the back room. From the first year, it was a music spot. 

Nanci Griffith played there in 1974, earning $15 a night, along with tips and drinks. Steve Earle, John Reed and Charlie Sexton have left their musical footprints there. 

 

Sony’s country  

catalog to grow  

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Sony/ATV Music Publishing will buy the oldest and one of the richest song catalogs in country music from Gaylord Entertainment for $157 million. 

Acuff-Rose Music Publishing, founded by country singer Roy Acuff and songwriter Fred Rose in 1942, includes classics such as “Oh Pretty Woman,” “Bye Bye Love,” “Your Cheatin’ Heart” and “Tennessee Waltz.” Songwriters who once wrote for the company include Hank Williams Sr., Don Gibson and Felice and Boudleaux Bryant. 

Sony/ATV Music Publishing already owns a vast catalog including songs by the Beatles, Willie Nelson, Stevie Nicks, Pearl Jam and Babyface. Michael Jackson is a partner in the publishing company, which has administrative headquarters in Nashville. 

“We have been entrusted with a real treasure,” said Paul Russell, chairman of Sony/ATV Music Publishing. “Our first priority will be to maintain the integrity and quality of the Acuff-Rose catalog while raising its profile with new generations of performers.” 

The deal, which must be approved by federal antitrust regulators, is expected to close in August.


Two series
focus on kids
in hospitals

Staff
Friday July 05, 2002

By Lindsey Tanner 

The Associated Press 

 

CHICAGO — Visiting children’s hospitals is enough to affect even the most stoic: terminally ill youngsters brightly smile from their beds, babies the size of fists cling to life-giving machines, parents who dread the worst discover the promise of modern medicine. 

PBS captures the heartbreak and hope of the nation’s 250 pediatric hospitals in a six-part series starting July 9 (check local listings) that focuses on Chicago’s Children’s Memorial Hospital. 

A top teaching hospital, Children’s features real-life dramas typical of hospitals devoted solely to youngsters. 

Viewers will see a wisecracking baldheaded 11-year-old girl with devastating brain tumors get teary-eyed because she can’t ride her bicycle anymore. They’ll visit the emergency room where a wide-eyed, curly-haired toddler is examined because of purplish spots and bruises on his back and legs. 

They may feel almost like intruders when the boy’s anguished mother breaks into tears as a grim-faced doctor tells her the diagnosis is probably leukemia. And they’ll see a witty 11-year-old boy with a failing transplanted liver tell his mother plaintively during hospital tests, “I want to get out of here.” 

The PBS program isn’t the only summer series dealing with the sometimes hard-to-stomach subject of real kids feeling real pain — ABC plans a four-part series on Wednesdays in August, filmed at Arkansas Children’s Hospital in Little Rock. 

Producers, who hope to ride the wave of enormously popular reality-based shows, say children’s hospitals are a natural setting for compelling television. They feature “all these sorts of tragedies and passions and triumphs and all of those big things you get in drama ... or theater or in literature,” said Anna Davies, a co-producer of the Chicago series. 

“You don’t want to make people feel utterly depressed, but you also don’t want to protect them from difficult issues. If you get the balance right — and I think we have — you come away feeling, ’Wow!”’ Davies said. “You want it to stay with people for as long as possible.”


Will the bad business news of the past month offer hope to struggling CNBC?

By David Bauder, The Associated Press
Friday July 05, 2002

NEW YORK – Nearly buried in the bad financial news of the past week was the glimmer of hope it offered to struggling CNBC. 

On June 26, the day after CNBC’s David Faber first reported about WorldCom Inc. inflating earnings by hiding nearly $4 billion in expenses, the cable network had 29 percent more viewers than on a typical day this year. 

After a nearly unrelenting two-year run of bad news following the bursting of the Internet bubble, CNBC will seize on even that small reason for optimism. 

“I do think we’re going through a historic period right now where American investors are going to have to engage in the complexities of the financial markets,” said Pamela Thomas-Graham, CNBC’s chief executive. 

And, she hopes, engage in CNBC again. 

The cable network has fallen far from its peak, when it averaged 418,000 viewers during the day in March 2000. For a few months, more people watched CNBC during the day than watched CNN. 

CNBC earned not only high ratings, but a cultural buzz. Watching CNBC’s ticker to see how your investments were doing during the boom years was a fad, the late rock singer Joey Ramone even writing a song about it entitled “Maria Bartiromo,” after his favorite CNBC reporter. 

“We were the great story of the late ’90s and everyone wanted to get involved,” Faber said. “It was good news and it’s a lot easier to watch good news.” 

The network’s ratings fell with the stock market. During the first half of this year, CNBC’s average viewership of 232,000 was 23 percent lower than it was the year earlier, according to Nielsen Media Research. 

Fewer people are investing in stocks market now and, with the market doing poorly, even fewer want to hear about it every day, said Jack Wakshlag, a ratings analyst for the Turner television networks. 

At the same time, viewers turned to cable news networks after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, at the expense of CNBC. Fox News Channel averaged 643,000 viewers a day during the first half of the year and CNN had 525,000. 

CNBC will focus heavily on the corporate scandals as they unfold, Thomas-Graham said. The network announced this week it had hired former Securities and Exchange Commission member Laura Unger as a commentator. 

The WorldCom story, not necessarily the insider trading accusations against Martha Stewart, seemed to resound first with CNBC viewers. 

The two top-rated cable business shows, Neil Cavuto’s “Your World” on Fox News Channel and Lou Dobbs’ “Moneyline” on CNN, also saw modest increases in viewership on June 26. CNN’s financial news Web site had a 30 percent increase in traffic that day. 

CNBC has long complained that Nielsen Media Research doesn’t accurately measure its audience. Since Nielsen measures only in-home use, it doesn’t count people watching the network at the workplace or gym. 

That doesn’t stop network executives from checking the numbers carefully, however. They are keeping their fingers crossed that, unlike during the past two years, viewers will want to know more about the bad financial news. 

“We run the risk, as the market does, of if people give up, people stop watching,” Faber said. 

Along with the hiring of Unger, CNBC is converting its nightly prime-time lineup primarily to business programming for the first time ever. That’s partly out of necessity — it has no non-business star like Geraldo Rivera anymore — and out of design to sharpen the network’s focus, Thomas-Graham said. 

Brian Williams’ one-hour newscast will be moving from MSNBC to CNBC exclusively starting July 15. The first third of Williams’ show will be about general news, with the rest largely concentrating on business, she said.