Richard Brenneman: Asa Dodsworth, left, and Bill Trampleasure gathered at the over-the-sidewalk arbor at Dodsworth’s 2185 Acton St. home Thursday to discuss the structure’s impending city-ordered destruction..
Richard Brenneman: Asa Dodsworth, left, and Bill Trampleasure gathered at the over-the-sidewalk arbor at Dodsworth’s 2185 Acton St. home Thursday to discuss the structure’s impending city-ordered destruction..

Page One

City Fines Bring End To Arbor On Acton By RICHARD BRENNNEMAN

Friday June 10, 2005

While many who live near the corner of Acton and Addison streets see it as a neighborhood delight, city officials see it as a code violation. -more-



Library Budget Spares Jobs, Sunday Hours By MATTHEW ARTZ

Friday June 10, 2005

In a move that signals a truce in the library’s six-month labor-management war, the Library Board of Trustees approved Wednesday a $12.8 million budget that would avoid layoffs and open the door to restoring Sunday hours. -more-



Former KPFA Employee Charges Sex Discrimination By MATTHEW ARTZ

Friday June 10, 2005

A former KPFA radio employee has filed a sexual discrimination and harassment suit against the station, charging that she was repeatedly harassed by her male supervisor and that station management refused to respond to her complaints and ultimately fired her when she continued to press her concerns. -more-



School Board Postpones Jefferson Name Change By J DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Friday June 10, 2005

The Jefferson Elementary School name controversy did not end with the decision by Jefferson parents/guardians, school staff, and students to change the school’s name to Sequoia. -more-



Hills Fire Station Over Budget, Behind Schedule By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Friday June 10, 2005

Thirteen years after Berkeley voters approved the Hills Fire Station, the project is within a year of completion, with the final tab estimated at $6.7 million. -more-



Features

Medical Pot Users’ Hopes Dim After Ruling By MATTHEW ARTZ

Friday June 10, 2005

Medical marijuana users have few promising avenues to turn to after Monday’s Supreme Court decision upholding the federal government’s authority to prosecute sick people who use and grow marijuana, according to legal experts and legislative staffers. -more-


County To Consider BUSD Union Contracts By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Friday June 10, 2005

Tentative Berkeley Unified School District contract settlements have been ratified by three school unions, but the agreements must be cleared by the Alameda County Office of Education (ACOE) before going to the BUSD Board of Directors for final approval. -more-


University Senior Housing Construction Set For Fall By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Friday June 10, 2005

Thanks to $12.5 million in tax credits granted by the state this week, construction can begin on an 80-unit low-income senior housing project at 1535 University Ave. -more-


Homeless Woman Wins Back Truck, Dogs By MATTHEW ARTZ

Friday June 10, 2005

The Berkeley homeless woman who last month asked the City Council for help has recovered her pick-up truck and two dogs taken from her in February. -more-


Students Unearth Old Conservatory On UC Campus By STEVEN FINACOM Special to the Planet

Friday June 10, 2005

At the foot of an oak-studded hillside facing Doe Library on the UC Berkeley campus, a team of UC students is hard at work this month unearthing the remains of what was once one of the most prominent and distinctive buildings in the Berkeley landscape. -more-


Editorial Cartoon By JUSTIN DEFREITAS

Friday June 10, 2005

http://www.jfdefreitas.com/index.php?path=/00_Latest%20Workj -more-


Letters to the Editor

Friday June 10, 2005

MALCOLM X SCHOOL -more-


Column: Undercurrents: Mayor’s Sideshow Proposal Takes an Unexpected Turn By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Friday June 10, 2005

If you were able to stay up well into the early morning hours during Tuesday night’s Oakland City Council meeting, you would have come across some interesting things. -more-


Commentary: The UC-City Settlement: An Angry Rebuttal By DEAN METZGER and DAVID WILSON

Friday June 10, 2005

The Bates/Maio/Capitelli/Anderson article of last Friday defending the private settlement between Berkeley and the University of California is profoundly misleading. Instead of opening a “new era of cooperation,” the agreement effectively gives the Regents an effective veto over development in the downtown area. At the same time it gives the city no voice whatsoever in the university’s expansion plans. -more-


Commentary: What’s In A Name? A Modest Proposal For The Library By ERIC KNUDSEN

Staff
Friday June 10, 2005

Librarian. From the Latin librarius: “concerned with books.” -more-


Playing the Short and the Long of It, Un-Scripted By BETSY M. HUNTON Special to the Planet

Friday June 10, 2005

Probably one of the toughest jobs an improvisational theater company has in putting on a show must be figuring up a title. Think about it: Since nobody knows what the actors are going to do on any given night, how on earth do they find a title encouraging people to give it a try? -more-


Arts Calendar

Friday June 10, 2005

FRIDAY, JUNE 10 -more-


Challenge Yourself in the East Bay Regional Parks By MARTA YAMAMOTO Special to the Planet

Friday June 10, 2005

January was the time for resolutions: get outside, exercise, eat better food, reduce stress and get healthy. Half way through the year, your resolutions may remain on paper only. If you’re still waiting for the right motivation, an easy solution may be at hand. -more-


Election Section

Berkeley This Week

Friday June 10, 2005

FRIDAY, JUNE 10 -more-


Editorial

Guest Editorial: BUSD Must Act to Save Warm Pool By DONA SPRING

Friday June 10, 2005

EDITOR’S NOTE: Councilmember Dona Spring has contributed the guest editorial below, which she also sent as a letter to the Berkeley School Board. Keeping a warm water pool available for Berkeley citizens was a major project of the late Fred Lupke, a valued participant in reviving the Berkeley Daily Planet two years ago, so we are happy to have the opportunity to concur with the concerns expressed by Councilmember Spring. We would also like to remind Berkeley citizens that all of us, students and non-students, are just an accident away from disability. When I experienced a painful and lingering knee injury a few years ago, swimming at the Warm Water Pool was the way I finally recovered, after conventional medical therapy hadn’t worked very well. We need to preserve and maintain this valuable city resource for everyone, not allow it to vanish because of the school district’s careless maintenance. -more-


Back Stories

Opinion

Editorials

Guest Editorial: BUSD Must Act to Save Warm Pool By DONA SPRING 06-10-2005

Editorial: How Oxford Plans:Lessons for Berkeley By BECKY O'MALLEY 06-07-2005

News

City Fines Bring End To Arbor On Acton By RICHARD BRENNNEMAN 06-10-2005

Library Budget Spares Jobs, Sunday Hours By MATTHEW ARTZ 06-10-2005

Former KPFA Employee Charges Sex Discrimination By MATTHEW ARTZ 06-10-2005

School Board Postpones Jefferson Name Change By J DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR 06-10-2005

Hills Fire Station Over Budget, Behind Schedule By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 06-10-2005

Medical Pot Users’ Hopes Dim After Ruling By MATTHEW ARTZ 06-10-2005

County To Consider BUSD Union Contracts By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR 06-10-2005

University Senior Housing Construction Set For Fall By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 06-10-2005

Homeless Woman Wins Back Truck, Dogs By MATTHEW ARTZ 06-10-2005

Students Unearth Old Conservatory On UC Campus By STEVEN FINACOM Special to the Planet 06-10-2005

Editorial Cartoon By JUSTIN DEFREITAS 06-10-2005

Letters to the Editor 06-10-2005

Column: Undercurrents: Mayor’s Sideshow Proposal Takes an Unexpected Turn By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR 06-10-2005

Commentary: The UC-City Settlement: An Angry Rebuttal By DEAN METZGER and DAVID WILSON 06-10-2005

Commentary: What’s In A Name? A Modest Proposal For The Library By ERIC KNUDSEN Staff 06-10-2005

Playing the Short and the Long of It, Un-Scripted By BETSY M. HUNTON Special to the Planet 06-10-2005

Arts Calendar 06-10-2005

Challenge Yourself in the East Bay Regional Parks By MARTA YAMAMOTO Special to the Planet 06-10-2005

Berkeley This Week 06-10-2005

Berkeley’s Synagogue Building Boom By MATTHEW ARTZ 06-07-2005

Brower Center Over Budget, Seeks Grant For Contaminated Sites By MATTHEW ARTZ 06-07-2005

Supreme Court Rules Against Protection for Medical Pot By MATTHEW ARTZ 06-07-2005

BUSD Settles Berkeley High Discrimination Expulsion Suit By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR 06-07-2005

Patient Shifts, Contract Spark Alta Bates Protest By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 06-07-2005

BUSD Board to Consider Set of Proposed Budget Cuts By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR 06-07-2005

Mayor Promises Help for West Campus Neighbors By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 06-07-2005

ZAB Considers Additions To Landmark on Adeline By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 06-07-2005

Back to the Drawing Board For the European Union By PAOLO PONTONIERE Pacific News Service 06-07-2005

Corrections 06-07-2005

Letters to the Editor 06-07-2005

Column: A There There, a Story Where: Deep Throat in Manhattan By SUSAN PARKER 06-07-2005

Police Blotter By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 06-07-2005

Fire Department Log By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 06-07-2005

Commentary: Perception is Reality: The New Berkeley By BONNIE HUGHES 06-07-2005

Commentary: Mudflat Sculpture:Art to Remember By DOROTHY BRYANT 06-07-2005

Commentary: ZAB Ratifies Right to Pave By ROBERT LAURISTON 06-07-2005

Commentary: Why the Emmett Till Murder Case Still Matters By EARL OFARI HUTCHINSON Pacific News Service 06-07-2005

Reflections on the Making of La Peña By FERNANDO A. TORRESSpecial to the Planet 06-07-2005

La Peña Hosts Anniversary Bash By BETSY M. HUNTON Special to the Planet 06-07-2005

A Triangle of Love and Jealousy Play Out in ‘Honour’ By KEN BULLOCK Special to the Planet 06-07-2005

Mozart Festival Opens with Preview at El Cerrito Garden Party By IRA STEINGROOT Special to the Planet 06-07-2005

Arts Calendar 06-07-2005

Following the Efficient Migration Mechanism of Oak Trees By RON SULLIVAN Special to the Planet 06-07-2005

Berkeley This Week 06-07-2005