The Week

City Council candidate Carlos Estrada is one of several local contenders for public office whose signs have been vandalized.
City Council candidate Carlos Estrada is one of several local contenders for public office whose signs have been vandalized.
 

News

A sign of the times

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet Staff
Tuesday October 29, 2002

It’s almost Halloween and something spooky is happening in Berkeley. With Election Day just a week away, dozens of campaign signs for candidates across the political spectrum have disappeared. -more-


‘Jackass’ is top movie

By David Germain the Associated Press
Tuesday October 29, 2002

LOS ANGELES — “Jackass” has pulled its craziest stunt yet, debuting in first place at the box office. -more-


Tuesday October 29, 2002

Tuesday, Oct. 29 -more-


Giants wonder ’What if?’

By Ben Walker The Associated Press
Tuesday October 29, 2002

ANAHEIM — Barry Bonds probably wanted to cry, too. -more-


Remembering Wellstone’s legacy

Tina Staik Berkeley
Tuesday October 29, 2002

U.S. Sen. Paul Wellstone was a man of honor who worked fearlessly to make a difference in the lives of those corporate America has sought to exploit. His death is a great loss to our country, but his life is proof that American democratic ideals are still very much alive – in spite of decades of corporate media distortions manipulating public opinion in the name of corporate profits. -more-


Lawyers quarrel over evidence at UC hearings

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet Staff
Tuesday October 29, 2002

Lawyers for the University of California and 32 pro-Palestinian student activists sparred in court Monday over student efforts to block the use of UC police videos, police reports and officers’ testimony in university-run student conduct hearings that could result in student expulsion. -more-


Key players may leave Giants

By Janie McCauley The Associated Press
Tuesday October 29, 2002

The mysterious letter

Ruth Michaels Berkeley
Tuesday October 29, 2002

Auditor uncovers easy re-election bid

By Matthew Artz Daily Planet Staff
Tuesday October 29, 2002

For a woman who spends most of her working hours crunching numbers, Ann-Marie Hogan doesn’t have to spend much time handicapping her election prospects. -more-


Fox suspended six games; Christie two for Friday’s Lakers-Kings fight

By Chris Sheridan The Associated Press
Tuesday October 29, 2002

NEW YORK — Rick Fox was suspended for six games, Doug Christie was banished for two, and every member of the Sacramento Kings who left the bench during a fight with the Los Angeles Lakers got off scot-free. -more-


Protecting the waterfront

Norman La Force Berkele
Tuesday October 29, 2002

The Sierra Club San Francisco Bay Chapter, Golden Gate Audubon, and the Citizens for the Eastshore State Park urge a yes vote on Measure N to protect Berkeley's waterfront from massive development. -more-


Judge delays Reddy sentence decision

By Matthew Artz Daily Planet Staff
Tuesday October 29, 2002

A U.S. District Court Judge indefinitely postponed a decision Monday on whether to reduce the sentence of wealthy Berkeley landlord Lakireddy Bali Reddy, who was imprisoned for his role in smuggling Indian girls into the country for sex and cheap labor. -more-


Dean endorsing Weinberg?

Rob Wrenn Berkeley
Tuesday October 29, 2002

n the 7th District City Council race (Daily Planet, Oct. 26-27), Mayor Shirley Dean has discredited herself by endorsing an obviously unqualified 18-year-old candidate. -more-


Student gunman kills three

Tuesday October 29, 2002

TUCSON, Ariz. — A student flunking out of the University of Arizona nursing school shot three of his professors to death Monday, then killed himself as dozens of terrified students rushed to get away. -more-


Legal battle continues to rage over Bonds’ ball

By Chris Togneri Special to the Daily Planet
Tuesday October 29, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO – While most Giants’ fans lamented their team’s heartbreaking loss in Sunday’s seventh and deciding game of the World Series, two others continued their legal battle yesterday over possession of a baseball hit last year by Barry Bonds. -more-


Fans welcome Giants home

Tuesday October 29, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — A homecoming for the San Francisco Giants players and some of their most stalwart fans Monday briefly brought Pacific Bell Park to life one last time this season. -more-


Judge says sound blasts hurts whales

By Karen Gaudette The Associated Press
Tuesday October 29, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — A federal judge has ordered the National Science Foundation and several research institutions to stop mapping the ocean floor along the Gulf of California using intense blasts of sound, saying that practice likely has harmed whales. -more-


Documents released naming Davis in fund-raising case

By Alexa H. Bluth The Associated Press
Tuesday October 29, 2002

SACRAMENTO — A federal judge ordered the release Monday of documents from a decade-old racketeering case in which a convicted felon implicated Gov. Gray Davis in a bribery scheme in a failed attempt to win a lighter sentence. -more-


Repair fraud examined

By Louise Chu The Associated Press
Tuesday October 29, 2002

Shocked venture capitalists shy away from new risks

By Michael Liedtke The Associated Press
Tuesday October 29, 2002

Stocks fall on profit-taking

By Hope Yen The Associated Press
Tuesday October 29, 2002

NEW YORK — Wall Street pulled back Monday, its second decline in three sessions, as investors succumbed to profit-taking in the absence of significant earnings news. -more-


Report calls for focus on fishing management

By Robert Jablon The Associated Press
Tuesday October 29, 2002

Bush blamed for salmon kill

By Jeff Barnard The Associated Press
Tuesday October 29, 2002

EUREKA — Representatives of coastal fishing communities and Indian tribes on Monday laid the blame for the massive Klamath River salmon kill on low water controlled by the federal government. -more-


To Alaskans, ’environmentalist’ is pejorative, not adjective

By Sean Cockerham The Associated Press
Tuesday October 29, 2002

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Harry Crawford is an ironworker with a deep-fried Southern drawl and pro-union politics. It is difficult to imagine him hugging a tree. -more-


Poll finds opposition to pot

Tuesday October 29, 2002

LAS VEGAS — A poll of likely Nevada voters shows most have made up their minds on two controversial state ballot initiatives, with large margins opposing a measure to legalize marijuana and supporting a ban on gay marriage. -more-




Peace rally draws huge crowd

By Judith Scherr
Monday October 28, 2002

Tens of thousands of protesters filled downtown San Francisco streets Saturday, demanding that President George Bush stop preparations for a war against Iraq. -more-


Campaign signs not always tenants’

Paul Hogarth
Monday October 28, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Veteran mucicians sell new music on television

By David Bauder
Monday October 28, 2002

NEW YORK – For one week this summer, Bruce Springsteen was the biggest star on television. -more-


Calendar

Monday October 28, 2002

Monday, Oct. 28 -more-


Panthers explode for big plays against Albany

By Jared Green
Monday October 28, 2002

The St. Mary’s High football team used big plays on offense and special teams to maul the Albany High Cougars, 43-17, on Saturday, leaving the Panthers as one of just two teams without a loss in Bay Shore Athletic League play. -more-


Judge considers lighter sentence for Reddy today

By Kurtis Alexander
Monday October 28, 2002

Praising Measure M

Dan Rossi
Monday October 28, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Jackson, Beavers run all over Bears

By Andrew Hinkleman
Monday October 28, 2002

CORVALLIS, Ore. – Steven Jackson rushed for a career-high 239 yards and three touchdowns to revive a sputtering offense, helping Oregon State end a three-game losing streak Saturday with a 24-13 victory over California. -more-


UC lecturers likely to reject contract offer

By David Scharfenberg
Monday October 28, 2002

The University of California’s roughly 2,500 lecturers will likely reject a comprehensive contract proposal put forward by the administration earlier this week, union officials said Friday. -more-


College-Ashby intersection needs some work

Robert Compton
Monday October 28, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Cardinal streak broken as Cal men down Stanford

By Dean Caparaz
Monday October 28, 2002

Cal men’s soccer has started a new win streak. -more-


Firefighters staged walkout

By Matthew Artz
Monday October 28, 2002

Berkeley firefighters staged a one-day walkout last February to protest shortcomings in their labor contract, department officials acknowledged Friday. But they maintained that fire stations were fully manned throughout the protest and that the work stoppage never posed a threat to Berkeley residents. -more-


Praising the Planet

Mike Parker
Monday October 28, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Hostage standoff shocks Moscow

By Jim Heintz
Monday October 28, 2002

MOSCOW – A shocked, wary Russia counted its rising toll of dead and steeled itself for new terrorist blows Saturday in its never-ending Chechen war, after commandos striking behind clouds of disabling gas brought a sudden bloody end to a hostage nightmare. -more-


Police investigating Oakland’s 93rd murder

Daily Planet Wire Service
Monday October 28, 2002

The Oakland police reported that a man died after being shot multiple times outside of an Oakland liquor store. -more-


Work starts on handrail for Golden Gate Bridge

The Associated Press
Monday October 28, 2002

Police Briefs

Matthew Art – Matthew Artz
Monday October 28, 2002

Girls attack martial arts class -more-


Bay Area Briefs

Monday October 28, 2002

Bizarre accident in San Francisco tunnel -more-


S.F. seeks $1.6 billion plumbing fix

By Karen Gaudette
Monday October 28, 2002

HETCH HETCHY RESERVOIR – Just north of Yosemite Valley’s grassy meadows and tumbling waterfalls, another slice of paradise lies submerged beneath more than 100 billion gallons of water. -more-


Former N.Y. police head sworn in as LAPD chief

The Associated Press
Monday October 28, 2002

Audit reveals state agency wasted $2.1 million

The Associated Press
Monday October 28, 2002

SACRAMENTO – A state audit revealed California’s Office of Criminal Justice Planning failed to properly keep track of domestic violence grant recipient’s and evaluate the effectiveness of their programs. -more-


State Briefs

Monday October 28, 2002

Elderly man indicted for concealed knife at LAX -more-



Organic school lunches not as popular as predicted

The Associated Press
Monday October 28, 2002

New project would oust parking

By Matthew Artz
Saturday October 26, 2002

Blocking development

Peter Moore
Saturday October 26, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Shattuck Avenue is Main Street in Berkeley

By Susan Dinkelspiel Cerny
Saturday October 26, 2002

Certain buildings on Shattuck Avenue define the historic character of downtown Berkeley and have changed little over the last 50 years. Old postcards are a wonderful source of historic images and downtown was a favorite subject of postcard publishers. -more-


Cisneros brings Berkeley a reading of “Caramelo”

By Jane Yin
Saturday October 26, 2002

Lala, the main character in Sandra Cisneros’ new novel “Caramelo,” clambers through her life’s journeys, as it twists and turns, like a free-wheeling road trip. Like Lala’s storytelling, the facts in “Caramelo” are based on real people from Cisneros’ life, but the “means for the end” are Cisneros’ own creations. The long-awaited second book from the author of the highly celebrated novel “The House on Mango Street” is a tale about a young girl who adroitly retells the story of her family and illustrates what it is like to be the youngest and only female among her siblings. -more-


Calendar

Saturday October 26, 2002

Saturday, Oct. 26 -more-


Jackets rout Richmond to set up title showdown

By Jared Green
Saturday October 26, 2002

Tell Pinole Valley we’re coming for them!” -more-


City discusses recent rise in hate crimes

By Judith Scherr
Saturday October 26, 2002

Berkeley’s not insulated from the nationwide surge in hate crimes reported since Sept. 11, 2001. And so, the city sponsored a Thursday-evening forum “A Community Dialogue to Prevent Hate Crimes.” -more-


Keeping space weapons at a distance

Vivian Warkentin
Saturday October 26, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


“Idol” holds auditions

The Associated Press
Saturday October 26, 2002

DETROIT — No need to worry. -more-


Washington upsets Bears

Daily Planet Wire Service
Saturday October 26, 2002

SEATTLE – Junior Melissa Bennett assisted on both Washington goals Friday, including Jaime Carstensen’s 75th-minute tally that lifted the 25th-ranked Huskies to a 2-1 upset of No. 7 Cal. -more-


Bitter divide in District 7 race

By David Scharfenberg
Saturday October 26, 2002

Roomates and rentals

Darcy Jojola
Saturday October 26, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Actress hopes to break stereotypes

By Sandra Marquez
Saturday October 26, 2002

LOS ANGELES — Hollywood has long stereotyped Hispanic women as spitfires, bombshells and maids. -more-


Cal (5-3, 2-2 Pac-10) vs. Oregon State (4-3, 0-3 Pac-10)

Jared Green
Saturday October 26, 2002

When Cal has the ball -more-


Mysterious letter raises brows

By David Scharfenberg
Saturday October 26, 2002

City Councilmember Kriss Worthington, up for re-election in November, is denouncing a mysterious letter that accuses him of “siding with anti-Jewish and anti-Israel forces” and calls on Berkeley residents to donate to the campaign of his opponent, UC Berkeley student Micki Weinberg. -more-


Height initiatives in Italy?

Aran Kaufer
Saturday October 26, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


UC Merced underway

By Jim Wasserman
Saturday October 26, 2002

MERCED — On a remote foothills site marked by seven years of determination and controversy, Gov. Gray Davis inaugurated a 10th University of California campus Friday. -more-


Beasley honored for fighting the good fight

By Brian Kluepfel
Saturday October 26, 2002

Bill Beasley has had guns drawn on him twice: once by the Los Angeles Police Department and once by the Ku Klux Klan. But in four decades of civil rights activism, antiwar protests and gay pride celebrations, Beasley has never backed down in his fight for justice and basic human rights. -more-


Police Briefs

by Matthew Artz
Saturday October 26, 2002

Pedestrian safety sting -more-


Oakland’s murder count hits 92 victims this year

Saturday October 26, 2002

OAKLAND — A spokesman for the Oakland Police Department Friday identified a man police say was shot Thursday night as he sat in his car, bringing the city's homicide tally to 92 victims this year. -more-


Bay Area Briefs

Saturday October 26, 2002

Bad news for grape growers -more-


State Briefs

Saturday October 26, 2002

Suit filed against state -more-


Environmental group wants farms regulated

The Associated Press
Saturday October 26, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — An environmental group has filed papers in a federal court here to intervene in the California Farm Bureau Federation’s most recent suit against the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to extend the exemption of farms from air quality regulations. -more-


Family, bid farewell to killed transgender teen

By Michelle Locke
Saturday October 26, 2002

NEWARK — To family members, Eddie “Gwen” Araujo was a struggling but beloved teenager whose killing, allegedly committed in a fit of homophobic rage, is a private sorrow. -more-


Court nullifies laws banning ATM charges

By David Kravets
Saturday October 26, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — A federal appeals court on Friday overturned laws in San Francisco and Santa Monica that ban certain ATM fees charged by banks. -more-


Regulators check executive’s link to wind farms

By John Heilprin
Saturday October 26, 2002

WASHINGTON — Government investigators said Friday they want to find out whether a former Enron Corp. executive improperly hid the company’s stake in three California wind power farms. -more-


Former New York police commissioner sworn in as LAPD’s 54th chief

The Associated Press
Saturday October 26, 2002

LOS ANGELES — William J. Bratton was sworn in Friday as the city’s new police chief, with a mandate to reform the corruption-tinged department and a goal of eliminating graffiti and minor offenses as a way of preventing more serious crimes. -more-


Bail denied for suspect

Daily Planet Wire Service
Saturday October 26, 2002

OAKLAND — An Alameda County Superior Court judge ordered Friday that a man charged with murdering his wife, former San Jose Mercury News photographer Lucille Houston, be held without bail. -more-


UC students demand clean energy

By David Scharfenberg
Friday October 25, 2002

UC Berkeley students, joined by Mayor Shirley Dean, called for a significant investment in “clean energy” and “green building” techniques throughout the nine-campus University of California system Thursday. -more-


Eat your greens

S. Corcos
Friday October 25, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Magical kingdom lacks enchantment

By John Angell Grant
Friday October 25, 2002

Calendar

Friday October 25, 2002

Friday, Oct. 25 -more-


Berkeley girls win another one

By Jared Green
Friday October 25, 2002

The Berkeley High girls volleyball team continued their dominance of league competition on Thursday, giving up just six points while beating De Anza High, 15-1, 15-3, 15-2. -more-


Music industry targets campus file-sharing

By David Scharfenberg
Friday October 25, 2002

The music and recording industries sent out letters this month asking 2,300 colleges and universities around the country, including UC Berkeley, to clamp down on students sharing copyright-protected songs and movies over the Internet. -more-


Pedestrian safety revisted

Tom Brown
Friday October 25, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Diary excerpts show Nirvana star felt tortured by stomach disease, drug use

By Nekesa Mumbi Moody
Friday October 25, 2002

NEW YORK — Kurt Cobain regretted using heroin to ease the pain of a stomach ailment but could not bring himself to stop, and talked of shooting himself, according to excerpts from the late Nirvana star’s diaries. -more-


BHS coach Johnson to get bird’s-eye view

By Jared Green
Friday October 25, 2002

Ex-Pentagon official skeptical about war policy

By Daniel Freed
Friday October 25, 2002

In 1971, Pentagon official Daniel Ellsberg risked his career, his reputation and his freedom to make public what has become known as the Pentagon Papers – 7,000 pages of top-secret documents outlining America’s untold and often nefarious involvement in the Vietnam War. -more-


Council cloudy about height initiative

Harold Boyer
Friday October 25, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Whitney Museum unveils collection

By David Minthorn
Friday October 25, 2002

NEW YORK — The Whitney Museum has unveiled its new $200 million collection of works from Jasper Johns, Robert Rauschenberg, Roy Lichtenstein, Andy Warhol and other American masters of postwar modernism at pivotal moments in their careers. -more-


Bombs away! Giants bludgeon Angels

By Ben Walker
Friday October 25, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO – Teased and taunted for tiptoeing around Barry Bonds, the Anaheim Angels decided to challenge him. -more-


Homeless program rides on ballot measure

By Matthew Artz
Friday October 25, 2002

BART director decries height limits

Roy Nakadegawa
Friday October 25, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


CBS may delay sniper-themed episode because of shootings

The Associated Press
Friday October 25, 2002

Sports This Week

Friday October 25, 2002

Friday -more-


Bush praises law community for capturing sniper suspects

By Ron Fournier
Friday October 25, 2002

Fire controlled at UC Berkeley

Daily Planet Wire Service
Friday October 25, 2002

UC offers organic foods information

Daily Planet Wire Service
Friday October 25, 2002

DAVIS — Farmers and consumers with questions about the national organic food standards adopted on Monday can find answers through a University of California program. -more-


Oakland’s count at 91

Daily Planet Wire Service
Friday October 25, 2002

Police Briefs

Friday October 25, 2002

Commercial burglary -more-


One of three suspects pleads innocent in murder

Daily Planet Wire Service
Friday October 25, 2002

Experts question use of Pelosi’s PACs

By Mark Sherman
Friday October 25, 2002

WASHINGTON — Rep. Nancy Pelosi, D-San Francisco, has raised and distributed tens of thousands of additional dollars to congressional candidates using a practice that campaign finance experts say could skirt federal limits. -more-


Bay Area Briefs

Friday October 25, 2002

Stanford psychologist -more-


State Briefs

Friday October 25, 2002

Settlement reached with parents and fraternity -more-


Davis maintains fund-raising lead

By Alexa H. Bluth
Friday October 25, 2002

SACRAMENTO — Democratic Gov. Gray Davis had $12 million on hand as of Oct. 19 for the closing days of his re-election bid — 10 times as much as Republican challenger Bill Simon, according to campaign reports submitted Thursday. -more-


GOP candidate seeking ’balance’

The Associated Press
Friday October 25, 2002

Mystery in condor’s death

The Associated Press
Friday October 25, 2002

No winners yet in Ford compromise

By David Kravets
Friday October 25, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — One year ago, attorneys emerged from a California judge’s chambers and announced a historic, pro-consumer settlement of a lawsuit accusing Ford of producing millions of defective vehicles prone to stalling. -more-


California regulators fine Qwest $20 million

The Associated Press
Friday October 25, 2002

Stocks fall on profit-taking

By Hope Yen
Friday October 25, 2002

NEW YORK — Profit-takers rushed back to Wall Street Thursday as disappointing news from International Paper and Duke Energy stirred fears that stocks won’t hold gains from their two-week surge. The Dow Jones industrials slid more than 170 points. -more-


News of the Weird

Friday October 25, 2002

Postal carrier caught dumping mail -more-


30 days to write the fairly dreadful American novel

By Michelle Locke
Friday October 25, 2002

State commissioners no-shows in major vote

By Laura Wides
Friday October 25, 2002

LOS ANGELES — It was one of the most important decisions for the California Fish and Game Commission in 10 years. Yet President Mike Flores and Commissioner James Kellog weren’t there. -more-


Son of Britain’s top judicial officer guilty

By Chelsea J. Carter
Friday October 25, 2002

NEWPORT BEACH — The son of Britain’s top judicial officer was sentenced Thursday to 16 months in state prison after pleading guilty to stalking the boyfriend of a woman he met in a tanning salon. -more-


Hospital refuses to let nurses return to work

The Associated Press
Friday October 25, 2002

LONG BEACH — Nurses who staged a one-day strike at Long Beach Memorial Medical Center were barred from the hospital Thursday and replaced for five days by contract workers. -more-


UC makes new offer to lecturers

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet Staff
Thursday October 24, 2002

The University of California made a comprehensive contract proposal to its roughly 1,600 lecturers Wednesday in an aggressive bid to end a 2 1/2-year-old labor dispute over job security, wages and arbitration procedures. -more-


Problems with rent control

Leon Mayeri Berkeley
Thursday October 24, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Keeping up with Jones at Zellerbach

By Robert Hall Special to the Daily Planet
Thursday October 24, 2002

Cal Performances is a Bay Area treasure. Last year it presented, among other riches, Yo-Yo Ma and Mikhail Baryshnikov, and this season it offers Mark Morris and Merce Cunningham, the Abbey Theater and Robert Lepage, the Kronos Quartet and Sarah Chang, Pat Metheney and Dianne Reeves. Pretty impressive, and that’s not half of a list that comprises talent from Argentina, Senegal and Africa. -more-


Defensive line leading the charge for Bears

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Thursday October 24, 2002

Ever see a pride of lions go after a downed gazelle? How about sharks in a feeding frenzy? Try watching the Cal defensive line go after a quarterback. -more-


Incumbent faces tough opposition

By Matthew Artz Daily Planet Staff
Thursday October 24, 2002

Police, sewers, infrastructure. These may not be the issues that Berkeley residents care to ponder over coffee, but these are the issues candidates are bringing to the forefront of the 4th District City Council race. -more-


San Pablo Avenue and height limits

Daniele Spellman Berkeley
Thursday October 24, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Film features parolees

Daily Planet Wire Service
Thursday October 24, 2002

OAKLAND — With perspiration glistening on his forehead, Ron Owens is pacing in front of a class full of recently paroled men and women, describing how he adopted the “hip, slick and cool” persona when he was 13. -more-


Giants even World Series up at two

By Ben Walker The Associated Press
Thursday October 24, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Just in the nick of time, the San Francisco Giants solved the Kid. -more-


Safer strolls hang on Measure L

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet Staff
Thursday October 24, 2002

On Election Day, Berkeley voters will have a chance to make a $10 million investment in pedestrian safety. But some say the investment would be a waste of taxpayer dollars. -more-


Fear of height (limits)

Sally B. Woodbridge Berkeley
Thursday October 24, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


MTV plans November debut for ’The Osbournes’

The Associated Press
Thursday October 24, 2002

LOS ANGELES — The Ozzy Osbourne clan will return to MTV in November with the second season of their hit reality show, the music network announced Tuesday. -more-


Residents gather to address hate crimes

By Matthew Artz Daily Planet Staff
Thursday October 24, 2002

Faced with an unprecedented rise in hate crimes, city officials are trying to stem the tide of intolerance. This evening, the city will sponsor its first ever community forum to address the alarming problem. -more-


Questioning Caldicott

David Rowland Berkeley
Thursday October 24, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Armed Chechens storm Moscow theater, take hundreds hostage

By Jim Heintz The Associated Press
Thursday October 24, 2002

MOSCOW — About 50 armed Chechen rebels stormed a crowded theater in a daring assault, took hundreds of theatergoers hostage and threatened early Thursday to shoot their captives and blow up the building if Russian security forces attacked. -more-


Berkeley honors officers

Thursday October 24, 2002

The Berkeley Police Department awarded medals to seven officers Wednesday who demonstrated bravery in the line of duty. -more-


Police looking for video

Daily Planet Wire Service
Thursday October 24, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — The San Francisco Police Department says it is working with several other agencies in a search for surveillance video of a man who responsible for a trans-bay hit-and-run spree that claimed the life of a woman and critically injured a bicyclist. -more-


Regulators to decide who gets stuck with bill

By Karen Gaudette The Associated Press
Thursday October 24, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — California politicians are hoping the stunning admission by a top Enron trader that the energy giant manipulated power markets will help the state’s plea for $9 billion in refunds. -more-


BART station closed after bomb threat

Daily Planet Wire Service
Thursday October 24, 2002

EL CERRITO — The El Cerrito del Norte BART station at 6400 Cutting Blvd. was closed following a bomb threat, a BART spokeswoman said Wednesday morning. -more-


Prosecutor expects no more arrests in Newark transgender killing

Daily Planet Wire Service
Thursday October 24, 2002

NEWARK — An Alameda County prosecutor said Wednesday that he doesn't anticipate any more arrests in the slaying earlier this month of a 17-year-old Newark boy who sometimes passed as a girl. -more-


Committees examine cancer link

By Colleen Valles The Associated Press
Thursday October 24, 2002

Bay Area Briefs

Thursday October 24, 2002

Woman saw red dot on -more-


Fishing in Channel Islands banned

By Laura Wides The Associated Press
Thursday October 24, 2002

SANTA BARBARA — A state commission decided Wednesday to create one of the nation’s largest marine reserves by banning fishing in areas around the Channel Islands. -more-


State breaks up large recycling fraud ring

The Associated Press
Thursday October 24, 2002

SACRAMENTO — Fourteen people were arrested in one of the nation’s largest recycling fraud cases for allegedly swindling millions of dollars from California’s recycling program by transporting discarded bottles and cans from outside the state and redeeming them in Los Angeles. -more-


Shipping companies say pace of work slow at the docks

By Justin Pritchard The Associated Press
Thursday October 24, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — West Coast dockworkers deliberately are slowing the pace of work in response to a bitter labor dispute, according to documents shipping companies have filed with the Department of Justice. -more-


Stocks continue upswing

By Hope Yen The Associated Press
Thursday October 24, 2002

NEW YORK — Wall Street managed a modest advance Wednesday, rising for a fourth time in five days as investors weighed a mixed economic assessment from the Federal Reserve against disappointing earnings from Eli Lilly. -more-


Court upholds award

By David Kravets The Associated Press
Thursday October 24, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — The California Supreme Court on Wednesday let stand a $290 million personal injury jury award levied against the Ford Motor Co. stemming from a Bronco rollover accident in 1993. -more-


Sports fields may lie in measure J

By Matthew Artz Daily Planet Staff
Wednesday October 23, 2002

Nobody for governor

Dave Linn Berkeley
Wednesday October 23, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


Angels take one from the Giants, move to 2-1

By Ben Walker The Associated Press
Wednesday October 23, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Pac Bell Park was pumped. -more-


Rent increases banned in 2003

By Matthew Artz Daily Planet Staff
Wednesday October 23, 2002

Good news for tenants. There will be no rent hikes next year. -more-


Violence against transgender people

Eric Hamako Berkeley
Wednesday October 23, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


No cause determined in football player’s death

The Associated Press
Wednesday October 23, 2002

MARTINEZ — An autopsy has not been able to determine what caused a 19-year-old Diablo Valley College football player to collapse and die during practice in August. -more-


Pollster says Simon camp must change

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet Staff
Wednesday October 23, 2002

The chief pollster for Republican gubernatorial candidate Bill Simon said the campaign should focus more on Simon’s agenda and less on attacking Gov. Gray Davis, during an appearance at UC Berkeley Tuesday. -more-


Right turn on Telegraph

Pam Speich Berkeley
Wednesday October 23, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


San Jose keeps Nabokov in goal

By Greg Beacham The Associated Press
Wednesday October 23, 2002

SAN JOSE — Goalie Evgeni Nabokov agreed to a two-year, $7.15 million contract with the San Jose Sharks on Tuesday, ending his holdout after five games. -more-


Bus driver slain in Maryland; police say they were warned

By David Dishneau The Associated Press
Wednesday October 23, 2002

ROCKVILLE, Md. — A bus driver was shot to death Tuesday as he was about to set out on his morning route in what authorities fear was the 13th attack by the Washington-area sniper. Police also revealed a chilling warning found at a weekend shooting scene: “Your children are not safe anywhere at any time.” -more-


Light signals on Telegraph

Karl Reeh President, LeConte Neighborhood Association
Wednesday October 23, 2002

To the Editor: -more-


School mentoring program struggles for survival

By David Scharfenberg Daily Planet Staff
Wednesday October 23, 2002

An award-winning mentoring service at Emerson Elementary School faces an uncertain future after the state cut funding for the program in September. -more-


Oakland police request help

Daily Planet Wire Service
Wednesday October 23, 2002

Biotech advocate meets with opposition in Sacramento

By Paul Elias The Associated Press
Wednesday October 23, 2002

SACRAMENTO — Leonard Gianessi, who has been barnstorming across the country promoting the benefits of genetically modified crops, was met Tuesday by protesters who complained the technology is not completely understood and, at a minimum, will ruin organic farmers. -more-


Another suspect at large in murder

Daily Planet Wire Service
Wednesday October 23, 2002

NEWARK — Newark police said today they are looking for a fourth person in connection with the slaying of a 17-year-old boy who sometimes passed as a girl. -more-


Laboratory, employees plead innocent

Daily Planet Wire Service
Wednesday October 23, 2002

OAKLAND — A Hayward chemical supply company and seven individuals have pleaded innocent in federal court in Oakland to charges of conspiring to sell $11 million worth of freon to make methamphetamine. -more-


Bay Area Briefs

Wednesday October 23, 2002

Wrong ballots sent to voters -more-


Environmental groups sue EPA over pollution

By Brian Melley The Associated Press
Wednesday October 23, 2002

FRESNO — Environmentalists sued the federal government Tuesday to force it to clean up air pollution in the San Joaquin Valley after a decade of neglect. -more-


Joe Lieberman discusses policy in S.F.

By Colleen Valles The Associated Press
Wednesday October 23, 2002

SAN FRANCISCO — Sen. Joe Lieberman called again Tuesday for the federal government to adopt an economic stimulus package, while he criticized President Bush’s handling of the economy. -more-


Navy man recalls harrowing fall

The Associated Press
Wednesday October 23, 2002

SAN DIEGO — A Navy sailor says he feels lucky to have survived an aircraft carrier accident that left him floating in the frigid Pacific Ocean for more than seven hours. -more-


Sacramento authorities probe pyramid scheme

By Jennifer Coleman The Associated Press
Wednesday October 23, 2002

SACRAMENTO — They met in beauty salons and suburban homes with the guests — all invitation only — coming for the promise of helping their community while making a huge profit for themselves. -more-


Stocks fall sharply Tuesday

By Amy Baldwin The Associated Press
Wednesday October 23, 2002

NEW YORK — Still skeptical about the stock market’s long-term potential, investors cashed in some gains from two weeks of rallies Tuesday, sending prices lower. Disappointing earnings from Kimberly-Clark, Wyeth and Texas Instruments also prompted some selling. -more-


Sierra vintners unlikely winemakers

By Kathleen Stebbins The Associated Press
Wednesday October 23, 2002

SoCal gets mixed grades on environment

By Robert Jablon The Associated Press
Wednesday October 23, 2002

LOS ANGELES — Southern California got mixed grades in a new study on protecting the environment, ranking high in recycling but nearly failing in use of treated wastewater. -more-


Judge gives family until Nov. 5 to get out of foreclosure

The Associated Press
Wednesday October 23, 2002

SANTA ANA — A Superior Court judge gave a Yorba Linda family until Nov. 5 to get their $650,000 home out of foreclosure, a house they nearly lost when they came up $51.56 short on a monthly mortgage payment. -more-


Leader says lawmakers will sue to kill Proposition 51

By Steve Lawrence The Associated Press
Wednesday October 23, 2002

SACRAMENTO — Armed with an opinion from the Legislature’s attorney, Senate leader John Burton said Tuesday that Proposition 51 is unconstitutional and that lawmakers will ask a court to overturn it if it’s approved by voters. -more-


Lawyer: Steve Garvey believed in diet ad claims

The Associated Press
Wednesday October 23, 2002

LOS ANGELES — Former baseball star Steve Garvey did not know that he was making false claims when he said people could use a weight-loss product and eat “forbidden foods” such as buttered biscuits and ribs, his lawyer said Tuesday. -more-


Opinion

Editorials

Crime slightly up in Bay Area

Tuesday October 29, 2002

Aroner gets high marks from watchdog group

Daily Planet Wire Service
Monday October 28, 2002

Two Bay Area legislators received high marks from an environmental watchdog group that handed out report cards last week. -more-



Sniper suspect lived in Pinole

By Colleen Valles
Friday October 25, 2002

PINOLE — The former sister-in-law of one of the suspects arrested in connection with the sniper shootings in the Washington, D.C. area expressed sympathy for the victims and their families. -more-


Schools open as police confirm sniper’s 10th fatality

By Allen G. Breed The Associated Press
Thursday October 24, 2002

KENSINGTON — The search for the sniper stalking the suburbs of the nation’s capital stretched across the country Wednesday as FBI agents converged on a home in Tacoma, Wash., with metal detectors and chain saws. -more-


Are more police Oakland’s answer?

By Michelle Locke The Associated Press
Wednesday October 23, 2002

OAKLAND — Critics of a ballot initiative authorizing 100 new police officers to fight Oakland’s rising murder rate are slamming the plan as a misguided and costly approach. -more-