The Week

Grace Christie
          National Guard troops stood behind a flag-draped barb wire barrier on Dwight Way in front of Bernard Maybeck’s First Church of Christ Scientist just across Bowditch Street from People’s Park after they were summoned by then Gov. Ronald Reagan to suppress student demonstrations against UC Berkeley’s move to reclaim the park.
Grace Christie National Guard troops stood behind a flag-draped barb wire barrier on Dwight Way in front of Bernard Maybeck’s First Church of Christ Scientist just across Bowditch Street from People’s Park after they were summoned by then Gov. Ronald Reagan to suppress student demonstrations against UC Berkeley’s move to reclaim the park.
 

News

City Council To Tackle Ex Parte Rule Reform

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Tuesday April 20, 2004

A controversial City Council rule that Councilmember Kriss Worthington called the “largest restraint to free speech in Berkeley history” could be history itself shortly after a public hearing at tonight’s (Tuesday, April 20) City Council meeting. -more-


Public Hearings, Budget Cuts on Council Agenda

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Tuesday April 20, 2004

Tonight (Tuesday, April 20) is public hearing night for the Berkeley City Council. Aside from the much-anticipated hearing on ex parte communications (see accompanying story, above), residents will also get a chance to weigh in directly on proposals for the allocation of public housing funds, a new police youth service counselor, higher park fees, a new parking rate plan for the Center Street garage, and the first of several fee hikes targeted at closing the city’s $10 million deficit. -more-


Local Protest Supports UN Strike

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Tuesday April 20, 2004

As Tibetan hunger strikers moved into their sixteenth day in front of the United Nations headquarters in New York, a small group of Bay Area residents turned out Saturday in downtown Berkeley to show their support by staging their own one-day strike. -more-


Neighbors Claim $110,000 in Le Chateau Damages

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Tuesday April 20, 2004

Fed up with what they say is more than 25 years of strewn trash, raucous parties and a plague of vermin, 22 neighbors earlier this month filed small claims court suits totaling $110,000 against Le Chateau, UC Berkeley’s most notorious student housing cooperative. -more-


Students Fear UC May Put More Restrictions on Hearing Rights

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Tuesday April 20, 2004

In the upcoming weeks, UC Berkeley officials will be meeting to finalize changes to the student code of conduct that could prevent students from having legal representatives during on-campus hearings. The potential change in policy leaves many students worried about their due process rights on a campus well-known for civil unrest. -more-


Briefly Noted

By RICHARD BRENNEMAN
Tuesday April 20, 2004

Student commission captures honor -more-


Police Blotter

By RICHARD BRENNEMAN
Tuesday April 20, 2004

Road Rage Leads to Berkeley Shooting -more-


City Will Test Emergency Sirens Thursday

By RICHARD BRENNEMAN
Tuesday April 20, 2004

When the air raid sirens shatter Berkeley’s daytime calm this Thursday and next, don’t worry. It’s only a test. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Tuesday April 20, 2004

TUESDAY, APRIL 20 -more-


MoveOn Bakes On For Kerry

Jakob Schiller
Tuesday April 20, 2004

From Susan Parker: Berkeley Bay Festival Provides Many Forms of Fun

Tuesday April 20, 2004

Recently, after two decades of living in the East Bay, I finally got on a sailboat and cruised out beyond the Berkeley Municipal Pier. My friend Martin had bought a 17-foot dingy complete with two sails and some life jackets. He invited me on his maiden voyage through the jetties of the Berkeley Marina. I was hooked. -more-


City Council Should Scrap Ex Parte Rule

By Antonio Rossmann
Tuesday April 20, 2004

Tonight (April 20) the City Council has the chance to moderate Berkeley’s extreme rule prohibiting any communication between citizens and council members on land-use permitting matters, and bring Berkeley into line with practices that generally prevail throughout California. For many years the council has operated under its self-imposed rule that categorically forbids councilmembers “to discuss with any member of the public the facts of any [land use application] which may probably be the subject of public hearings by the City Council.” -more-


City Should Follow John Kerry’s Lead On Middle Class Taxation

By BARBARA GILBERT and VIKI TAMARADZE
Tuesday April 20, 2004

Unlike the City of Berkeley powers that be, the Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry understands the financial plight of the middle class and is seeking to reduce its tax burden. -more-


Plain Roots

By CAROL DENNEY
Tuesday April 20, 2004

Some of Berkeley’s roots are grand structures built by wealthy people, people with the leisure and capital to chart grand designs through their acreage, and whose praises are sung by architects and historians alike. -more-


Letters to the Editor

Tuesday April 20, 2004

NATIONS AT WAR -more-


Correction

Tuesday April 20, 2004

Due to a production error, a word was omitted from Merrilie Mitchell’s letter (“Mean to the Extreme,” Daily Planet, April 16-19). The sentence should have read “And [Shirley] Dean is honest—amazing— considering our political leaders who ‘speak with forked toungue.’”0 -more-


The Bloody Beginnings of People’s Park

By RICHARD BRENNEMAN
Tuesday April 20, 2004

A recently-revealed account of the founding of People’s Park, the south-of-campus former political battleground which celebrates its 35th birthday today as the archetype of ‘60s radicalism, alleges that it actually came into being not as an anti-war or free-space protest but because two lovers wanted a place to carry on their secret tryst. -more-


The Rep’s ‘Irma Vep’ Is More Than Just a Drag

By BETSY HUNTON Special to the Planet
Tuesday April 20, 2004

It seems a little unfair that so many reviewers and their ilk have blown the best joke of them all in Berkeley Repertory Theatre’s hilarious new production The Mystery of Irma Vep. -more-


Arts Calendar

Tuesday April 20, 2004

TUESDAY, APRIL 20 -more-


A Woodpecker Who Never Met His Namesake

By JOE EATON Special to the Planet
Tuesday April 20, 2004

Is it just me, or are there more Nuttall’s woodpeckers in the Berkeley flatlands than there used to be? Maybe I’d just been missing them—my battered copy of Joseph Grinnell and Margaret Wythe’s Directory to the Bird-Life of the San Francisco Bay Region, published in 1927, lists the species as resident in Berkeley. But there was a time when most of the woodpeckers I saw here were downies, and spotting a Nuttall’s was a rare event. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Tuesday April 20, 2004

TUESDAY, APRIL 20 -more-


Mayor Gives Speeches For Paying Customers

By MATTHEW ARTZ and J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR
Friday April 16, 2004

The state of the City of Berkeley this year has been reflected in Mayor Tom Bates’ multiple State of the City addresses. The general public must pay for what they used to expect as free public services, or else wait around and pick up the leavings at a later time. -more-


Claremont Workers Fired Over Union

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Friday April 16, 2004

In one of its last acts as manager of the recently-sold Claremont Hotel and Resort, former Claremont owner KSL Resorts has fired two workers whose charges of unfair labor practices against the resort were upheld by the National Labor Relations Board. -more-


Local Art Space Gets Harder To Find

By RICHARD BRENNEMAN
Friday April 16, 2004

Despite the city’s bohemian reputation, artists don’t have an easy time in Berkeley—especially when it comes to finding spaces to create, perform and display their works—and many fear the city may be losing its one sure creative haven. -more-


Shotgun Players Find New Home In Ashby District

By RICHARD BRENNEMAN
Friday April 16, 2004

After 12 years of playing the theatrical equivalent of musical chairs, Managing Director Patrick Dooley and his acclaimed Shotgun Players solved their performance space needs the old-fashioned way—the purchase of the Transparent Theater by a generous patron, who turned around and leased it to the theater company. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Friday April 16, 2004

FRIDAY, APRIL 16 -more-


Police Blotter

By RICHARD BRENNEMAN
Friday April 16, 2004

Berkeley police seek serial groper -more-


Weekend Bake Sales For Kerry Dot East Bay

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Friday April 16, 2004

Berkeley residents better stock up on milk because, as part of the world’s largest bake sale event, the city will be over-run this weekend with cookies and brownies. And no, it’s not a Guinness Book of Records attempt, but rather another innovative campaign action by MoveOn.org to support the presidential candidacy of Democratic hopeful John Kerry. -more-


East Bay Bake Sales

Friday April 16, 2004

Friday, April 16 -more-


UC Berkeley Releases Development Plan

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday April 16, 2004

A draft UC Berkeley Long Range Development Plan (LRDP) and Environmental Impact Report (EIR) projecting 18 percent growth in academic building space, 30 percent growth in student housing, and 18 percent growth in parking was released by the university this week. The documents, when implemented in final form, are expected to direct future development on the campus and in surrounding Berkeley neighborhoods for the next fifteen years. -more-


Student’s Death Caused by Heart Ailment

Friday April 16, 2004

Nic Rotolo, the Berkeley High Junior who collapsed and died on a San Jose ice rink during a hockey game last February, died from an irregular heartbeat, according to an amended death certificate released by the Santa Clara County Coroners Office Tuesday. Rotolo’s heart problem was most likely caused by a past viral infection, myocarditis, said Diana Hunter, a spokeswoman for the coroners office. -more-


BUSD Signs Pact With Classified Staff

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday April 16, 2004

The Board of Education unanimously approved a new contract for its classified employees Wednesday, ending a three-year battle over wages and health benefits. -more-


98th Anniversary of the Shakiest Day in U.S History

By STEVE FINACOM Special to the Planet
Friday April 16, 2004

If this Sunday is a typical one in Berkeley, most residents will still be asleep around dawn. It will be quiet enough to hear the bells of the Campanile ringing across town. Berkeleyans will begin to rise and start their weekend routines—breakfast or brunch, church perhaps, or yoga, a morning walk or jog, a ruffle through the daily newspaper, an early start to garden work or studying or an excursion out of town, or perhaps just a morning spent relaxing in bed. -more-


UC, Bay Area Events Commemorate 1906 Quake

Friday April 16, 2004

• The marquee earthquake-related event takes place Wednesday, April 21 on the UC campus. The Seismological Laboratory sponsors the annual Lawson Lecture, featuring a distinguished speaker on issues of earthquakes and society. -more-


UnderCurrents: Leaving the Apples at the Bottom of the Bowl

J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR
Friday April 16, 2004

Ray Bradbury once wrote a story about a man who entered a home, hung around a while, visiting, and then killed the fellow who lived there. On his way out, the man took out a rag and wiped the places where he thought his fingers might have touched. Each time he was ready to leave, he thought of a new place to wipe where he might have left traces of his identity. And then, it occurred to him that he might not have sufficiently wiped each place, and so he went back to rewipe. The police caught him there some hours later, the house spotless and sparkling, the murderer still mindlessly polishing. He had even polished the wax apples at the bottom of the bowl on the kitchen table. -more-


University Ave. Zoning Moves Closer Amid Controversy

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday April 16, 2004

The Planning Commission took a baby step Wednesday towards capping the size of future developments on University Avenue. -more-


Letters to the Editor

Friday April 16, 2004

SOUTHSIDE ASSAULTS -more-


United States Must Not Shape Iraq’s Reconstruction

By VICKI COSGROVE and MATTHEW HALLINAN
Friday April 16, 2004

As Democratic activists and friends of Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi, we read with dismay a statement imputed to her calling for more troops to bring stability to Iraq. We strongly disagree. The U.S. is sinking into a quagmire in Iraq. We cannot get out of this quagmire by going deeper into it. That reasoning led to our debacle in Vietnam. As in Vietnam, a U.S. administration has underestimated the power of nationalism. In a country where a people feel their sovereignty is being violated, greater intervention by a foreign occupier only deepens hostility and national resistance. -more-


Center Street: A Walkable Town Square

By WENDY ALFSEN
Friday April 16, 2004

In front of the proposed hotel, museum and conference center in the heart of Downtown Berkeley, Center Street—from Oxford to Shattuck—could be closed to motor vehicle traffic and redesigned as a pedestrian street. Imagine an entire block without the noise generated by cars, trucks and buses. A well-designed plaza could be created with benches and other street furniture. Trees could be planted to provide shade and additional landscaping could be added to naturalize the open space. -more-


UC Berkeley’s ‘Cal Day’ Offers Many Treats

By STEVE FINACOM Special to the Planet
Friday April 16, 2004

This Saturday on the UC campus bells will ring, bands will play, dancers will dance, football players will scrimmage and choruses will sing. In building after building, faculty, students, and staff will throw open the doors of laboratories, classrooms, libraries, museums, and lecture halls. It’s Cal Day, the annual campus open house for the community. -more-


Country Joe McDonald Revives Anti-War Anthem

By RICHARD BRENNEMAN
Friday April 16, 2004

Born on New Years Day 1942 in Washington D.C. to a Jewish mother and a Presbyterian minister father and named after Soviet leader Josef Stalin, Berkeley’s Country Joe McDonald went on to star at two of the seminal musical events of the ‘60s—the 1968 Monterey Pop Festival and, a year later, Woodstock. -more-


Arts Calendar

Friday April 16, 2004

FRIDAY, APRIL 16 -more-


Cucumbers: A Treat That Predates Agriculture

By SHIRLEY BARKER Special to the Planet
Friday April 16, 2004

EDITOR’S NOTE: This article by Shirley Barker is the first of what we hope will be an ongoing series of articles from local gardeners writing about their own gardens. We thought readers would like to see her in her garden. She’s originally from England “with a touch of Irish,” she says. She comes from a long line of gardeners and farmers, and says she learned about gardening at her mother’s knee. -more-


Cucumbers in Cream Sauce.

Friday April 16, 2004

Cucumbers in Cream Sauce. -more-


Opinion

Editorials

Editorial: Hydra-Headed Hamas

Becky O’Malley
Tuesday April 20, 2004

The ancient Greeks told stories about the history of the world as they knew it which are still a useful way to predict what will happen to humans in the modern world. Hercules, half man and half god, was one of the central figures in Greek mythology. Like Superman in the 20th century, he dedicated his career to stamping out evil wherever he found it. One of the labors, or heroic tasks, of Hercules was killing the legendary Hydra. -more-


Editorial: Sense and Non-sense

Becky O'Malley
Friday April 16, 2004

It’s often hard, when it comes time to write editorials, to decide what readers are most interested in thinking about. Editorial departments in many newspapers seem to believe that their job is to tell readers what to think. In Berkeley, and particularly at the Berkeley Daily Planet, that’s definitely not our job. Our readers can make up their own minds, thank you. What we hope to do is to point out what’s going on, in case someone’s missing something, so that readers know when it’s their duty to form opinions on important topics of the day. -more-