F. Timothy Martin: Parchester Village neighborhood resident Whitney Dotson gazes out to the bay over Breuner Marsh at Saturday’s North Richmond Shoreline Festival. Dostson has been one of the staunchest supporters of preserving the marsh..
F. Timothy Martin: Parchester Village neighborhood resident Whitney Dotson gazes out to the bay over Breuner Marsh at Saturday’s North Richmond Shoreline Festival. Dostson has been one of the staunchest supporters of preserving the marsh..

Page One

Park District Aims to Save Richmond Marsh By F. TIMOTHY MARTIN Special to the Planet

Tuesday October 18, 2005

Richmond residents opposed to a developer’s plan to build 1,000 residential units at Breuner Marsh are looking to the East Bay Regional Park District (EBRPD) to insist the land be preserved as open space. -more-



West Berkeley Bowl EIR Says Project Won’t Negatively Impact Neighborhood By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Tuesday October 18, 2005

The new Berkeley Bowl planned for the corner of Ninth Street and Heinz Avenue in West Berkeley “would not result in any significant and unavoidable impacts,” according to the conclusion of the massive draft environmental impact report (EIR) prepared by Christopher A. Joseph & Associates, a Petaluma consulting firm. -more-



Political Intrigue Stirs Up Oakland’s District 6 Race By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Tuesday October 18, 2005

Is Peralta Community College District Trustee Marcie Hodge running for the 6th District Oakland City Council seat against incumbent Desley Brooks in next June’s election, and if so, whose idea was it? -more-



Library Contracts With Non-Union Janitorial Firm By MATTHEW ARTZ

Tuesday October 18, 2005

The Berkeley Public Library, already beset with labor-management problems, risked further alienating organized labor this month when it hired a non-union firm to do its janitorial work. -more-



Peralta College Board of Trustees Hires Inspector General to Evaluate District By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR

Tuesday October 18, 2005

In a sign of increased scrutiny over district operations that began last January when four new board members were elected, the Peralta Community College District Board of Trustees has hired an inspector general to report directly to the board on district operations. -more-



Features

Cal Players Give Statements in Willis-Starbuck Shooting By MATTHEW ARTZ

Tuesday October 18, 2005

In the past two weeks, several more Cal football players have given witness statements to investigators in the murder of Meleia Willis-Starbuck, according to John Burris, the attorney for co-defendant Christopher Hollis. -more-


Wednesday Night Program Honors Berkeley’s First Integrated Church By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Tuesday October 18, 2005

To raise funds to renovate Berkeley’s first racially integrated church, the Berkeley Architectural Heritage Association (BAHA) has joined with the South Berkeley Community Church to hold a Wednesday night meeting that will explore the church’s history. -more-


Correction

Tuesday October 18, 2005

The article “Diversity Lacking in Council’s Commission Appointments” in the Oct. 14 issue mistakenly attributed to Councilmember Gordon Wozniak the quoted opinion that Bates’ appointment of only one African-American was “pretty sad, and pretty surprising. For years, the NAACP used to give [former mayor] Shirley Dean a hard time because she only had one African-American appointment. After that, to her credit, she appointed a number of African-Americans, at least as many as four. But now I see that Bates has the same number of African-American appointments as Dean had.” The quote should have been attributed to Councilmember Kriss Worthington.3 -more-


Cindy Sheehan Moves to Berkeley, Joins Call for National Guard Return By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Tuesday October 18, 2005

One of the country’s most famous anti-war activists is now one of Berkeley’s newest residents. -more-


Iceland Finds Noise Solution By MATTHEW ARTZ

Tuesday October 18, 2005

Berkeley Iceland will apparently remain open for business after city officials approved its proposal to quiet the rink’s temporary refrigeration system, which the city feared would disturb neighbors. -more-


Lucretia Edwards, 1916-2005 By TOM BUTT

Tuesday October 18, 2005

Lucretia Edwards, who might best be remembered as the mother of Richmond’s magnificent 3,000-plus acres of shoreline parks, died peacefully at her home on Oct. 12. She was 89 years old. -more-


City Council Tackles Condo, Soft Story Ordinances By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Tuesday October 18, 2005

The City Council will take up soft story buildings tonight (Tuesday), an amendment to the city’s condominium conversion ordinance and a host of other measures ranging from approving the budgets of local Business Improvement Districts to a renewal of the city’s needle exchange program. -more-


Police Blotter

Tuesday October 18, 2005

There’s no police blotter today because Berkeley Police spokesperson Officer Joe Okies is on vacation through the end of October and his temporary replacement didn’t return calls by deadline Monday.. -more-


Fire Department Log By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Tuesday October 18, 2005

Summer dust, first rain trigger power outages -more-


Editorial Cartoon By JUSTIN DEFREITAS

Tuesday October 18, 2005

To view Justin DeFreitas’ latest editorial cartoon, please visit www.jfdefreitas.com To search for previous cartoons by date of publication, click on the Daily Planet Archive.

-more-


Letters to the Editor

Tuesday October 18, 2005

UC PARKING -more-


Let There Be Music (And Art, Too) By Phila Rogers Special to the Planet

Tuesday October 18, 2005

A Lively Collection Awaits at the Berkeley Public Library -more-


Column: The View From Here: Meleia Willis-Starbuck and the Sociology of Sports By P.M. Price

Tuesday October 18, 2005

I hadn’t planned to write another column about Meleia Willis-Starbuck so soon but things change and this is about more than Meleia. No sooner did I write my last column saying I hoped that John Burris, her accused murderer’s attorney, wasn’t attempting to lay the foundation for blaming Meleia for her own death with his statement that Christopher Hollis’ bringing of the gun to the scene of the crime was an example of his being “too dependable,” than Burris was quoted that same week stating that he knew that Meleia asked Hollis to “bring the heat.” -more-


Election Section

Column: The Things They Carry By SUSAN PARKER

Tuesday October 18, 2005

My dad has been asked by the widow of his best friend in the Army to contribute to a memory book about her deceased husband. Specifically, the widow has requested tales of heroism and valor during my father and her husband’s stint in the Army Air Corps, 1944 to 1945. -more-


Commentary: Mayor Dellums Won’t Reverse Free-Fall of Black Politicians By Earl Ofari Hutchinson Pacific News Service

Tuesday October 18, 2005

First there was Green Party candidate, Audie Bock. In 1999 she stunned political experts and beat long-term black Oakland Mayor Elihu Harris for an assembly seat in a special election in Oakland. -more-


Commentary: Preserving the Bevatron Makes Environmental And Historic Sense By Mark McDonald

Tuesday October 18, 2005

The Berkeley City Council is scheduled to discuss the potential benefits to several communities of not demolishing the Bevatron, a retired nuclear accelerator, and recommend instead that it be preserved as a historical landmark and education facility. As the council has no actual authority in this matter, this would be a recommendation only and most likely would be ignored by the Department of Energy, which runs Lawrence Berkeley National Lab (LBNL). -more-


Commentary: It’s Not Too Late to Pull the Plug On the Library’s RFID Boondoggle By GENE BERNARDI

Tuesday October 18, 2005

On June 24, 2004 the City of Berkeley, a Charter City, entered into a contract with Checkpoint Systems Inc., New Jersey, to “deliver, install and make operational the Intelligent Library System (radio frequency identification technology) at the Berkeley Public Library...” for $643,000. -more-


Commentary: Avian Flu, Katrina and 9/11: Planning for Disaster Response By KEN STANTON

Tuesday October 18, 2005

The recent discussions on planning for an avian flu pandemic highlight a critical problem in disaster planning—our inability to predict the future. Even if, as with Hurricane Katrina and the 9/11 terrorist attack, a few people may have anticipated and forewarned of potential disaster, these events appeared to have a low probability of occurring in the near future. As a result, few people in public policy-making positions were prepared to spend the time, money and political capital necessary to prepare for them. So how do we plan for an appropriate disaster response without wasting limited resources chasing after every potential disaster? -more-


Arts: SF Jazz Festival Offers Star Performers in Elegant Venues By IRA STEINGROOT Special to the Planet

Tuesday October 18, 2005

The 23rd annual San Francisco Jazz Festival begins this Thursday and continues for another 42 events through Dec. 10. This is the most concentrated amount of great jazz available in the Bay Area all year. -more-


Arts: Lively, Playful Excursion Into Obscure Shakespeare By KEN BULLOCK Special to the Planet

Tuesday October 18, 2005

The African-American Shakespeare Company is providing the opportunity to see one of the more obscure ventures of the Bard, Two Noble Kinsmen, at the African-American Art & Culture Complex, on Fulton Street in San Francisco, through this weekend. -more-


Arts: Berkeley Artist Seeks Reconciliation In Story of Jazz Pianist Grandmother By RICHARD BRENNEMAN

Staff
Tuesday October 18, 2005

Sometimes the greatest mysteries are closest to home. Just ask Kent Brown, a Berkeley man who’s embarking on a quest to learn about his grandmother. -more-


Arts Calendar

Tuesday October 18, 2005

TUESDAY, OCT. 18 -more-


Tracking the Migration of Warblers By JOE EATON Special to the Planet

Tuesday October 18, 2005

All through September, I’ve been seeing warblers in the backyard: not the yellow-rumps that spend the winter, but migrants of other species stopping over during their southbound flight—yellow warblers running the gamut from bright to drab, orange-crowns, a female Townsend’s, at least one Wilson’s. -more-


Editorial

Editorial: Watching the Scooter ‘n’ Judy Show By BECKY O'MALLEY

Tuesday October 18, 2005

Topic A among the chattering classes on Sunday was the curious case of Judith (we all call her Judy now) Miller. People we talked to (five or six regular New York Times news consumers, intelligent, well-educated, on top of things) had all read the two pieces in the Times, one by other reporters and the other by Judy herself, and they uniformly reported themselves to be more confused than ever. It’s less and less clear (1) what she thought she was doing, (2) why she went to jail, and (3) what “The Times” wearing all its various departmental hats (news, editorial, publisher) thought it was doing. -more-


Columns

Berkeley This Week

Tuesday October 18, 2005

TUESDAY, OCT. 18 -more-


Back Stories

Opinion

Editorials

Editorial: Watching the Scooter ‘n’ Judy Show By BECKY O'MALLEY 10-18-2005

Editorial When a Fella Needs a Friend: The Real Reason Bush Chose Miers By BECKY O'MALLEY 10-14-2005

News

Park District Aims to Save Richmond Marsh By F. TIMOTHY MARTIN Special to the Planet 10-18-2005

West Berkeley Bowl EIR Says Project Won’t Negatively Impact Neighborhood By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 10-18-2005

Political Intrigue Stirs Up Oakland’s District 6 Race By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR 10-18-2005

Library Contracts With Non-Union Janitorial Firm By MATTHEW ARTZ 10-18-2005

Peralta College Board of Trustees Hires Inspector General to Evaluate District By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR 10-18-2005

Cal Players Give Statements in Willis-Starbuck Shooting By MATTHEW ARTZ 10-18-2005

Wednesday Night Program Honors Berkeley’s First Integrated Church By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 10-18-2005

Correction 10-18-2005

Cindy Sheehan Moves to Berkeley, Joins Call for National Guard Return By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 10-18-2005

Iceland Finds Noise Solution By MATTHEW ARTZ 10-18-2005

Lucretia Edwards, 1916-2005 By TOM BUTT 10-18-2005

City Council Tackles Condo, Soft Story Ordinances By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 10-18-2005

Police Blotter 10-18-2005

Fire Department Log By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 10-18-2005

Editorial Cartoon By JUSTIN DEFREITAS 10-18-2005

Letters to the Editor 10-18-2005

Let There Be Music (And Art, Too) By Phila Rogers Special to the Planet 10-18-2005

Column: The View From Here: Meleia Willis-Starbuck and the Sociology of Sports By P.M. Price 10-18-2005

Column: The Things They Carry By SUSAN PARKER 10-18-2005

Commentary: Mayor Dellums Won’t Reverse Free-Fall of Black Politicians By Earl Ofari Hutchinson Pacific News Service 10-18-2005

Commentary: Preserving the Bevatron Makes Environmental And Historic Sense By Mark McDonald 10-18-2005

Commentary: It’s Not Too Late to Pull the Plug On the Library’s RFID Boondoggle By GENE BERNARDI 10-18-2005

Commentary: Avian Flu, Katrina and 9/11: Planning for Disaster Response By KEN STANTON 10-18-2005

Arts: SF Jazz Festival Offers Star Performers in Elegant Venues By IRA STEINGROOT Special to the Planet 10-18-2005

Arts: Lively, Playful Excursion Into Obscure Shakespeare By KEN BULLOCK Special to the Planet 10-18-2005

Arts: Berkeley Artist Seeks Reconciliation In Story of Jazz Pianist Grandmother By RICHARD BRENNEMAN Staff 10-18-2005

Arts Calendar 10-18-2005

Tracking the Migration of Warblers By JOE EATON Special to the Planet 10-18-2005

Albany Waterfront Shopping Mall Plans Unveiled By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 10-14-2005

Albany Council Will Oversee Mall Development By F. Timothy Martin Special to the Planet 10-14-2005

South Berkeley Drug House Case Lands in Small Claims Court By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR 10-14-2005

UC Berkeley Teams Up With Yahoo in Downtown Lab By MATTHEW ARTZ 10-14-2005

Dept. of Alcohol Beverage Control Eyes Berkeley Honda Tailgate Parties By MATTHEW ARTZ 10-14-2005

Diversity Lacking in Council’s Commmission Appointments By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR 10-14-2005

Sunday Gala Heralds Arrival of a Unique Theatrical Vision By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 10-14-2005

Scoping Meeting for West Berkeley Project Rescheduled By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 10-14-2005

The ‘Classroom Dash’ By Rio BauceSpecial to the Planet 10-14-2005

Editorial Cartoon By JUSTIN DEFREITAS 10-14-2005

Letters to the Editor 10-14-2005

Police Blotter By RICHARD BRENNEMAN 10-14-2005

News Analysis: Miers Case Foreshadows Rise of Theocratic State By RICHARD RODRIGUEZPacific News Service 10-14-2005

Column: The Public Eye: President Bush Plays by His Own Rules By Bob Burnett 10-14-2005

First Person: Going Home: Diary of a Palestinian American By JAMAL DAJANIPacific News Service 10-14-2005

Column: Dispatches FromThe Edge Shifting Alliances Among India, Iran and the U.S. By Conn Hallinan 10-14-2005

Column: Undercurrents: The Long History of Exploiting Black Entertainers J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR 10-14-2005

Commentary: Berkeley’s Freeway Sports Fields By L A WOOD 10-14-2005

Commentary: Derby Field Will Cost $4.5 Million By JOHN SELAWSKY 10-14-2005

Commentary: Data Supports West Berkeley Discussion By NEIL MAYER 10-14-2005

Arts: Jordi Savall Revives Little-Known Composers By IRA STEINGROOT Special to the Planet 10-14-2005

Arts: Jack Marshall’s Memoir Explores His Jewish-Arabic Roots By KEN BULLOCK Special to the Planet 10-14-2005

Arts: Sousa in Song: A Musical Biography at the Freight By KEN BULLOCKSpecial to the Planet 10-14-2005

Arts Calendar 10-14-2005

Having Fun is No Challenge at Alameda’s Crown Beach By MARTA YAMAMOTO Special to the Planet 10-14-2005

Berkeley This Week 10-14-2005

Columns

Berkeley This Week 10-18-2005