The Week

Charlie, custodian at the Sutter Hotel and seven-year resident there, takes a break in front of the downtown Oakland Hotel. In a building with constant resident turnover, he is the hotel's institutional memory. Photograph by Michael Howerton.
Charlie, custodian at the Sutter Hotel and seven-year resident there, takes a break in front of the downtown Oakland Hotel. In a building with constant resident turnover, he is the hotel's institutional memory. Photograph by Michael Howerton.
 

News

The Comforts of Home at the Sutter Hotel

By Al Winslow
Friday June 29, 2007

You can find a Sutter Hotel in many cities. Go where the last wave of redevelopment has passed through and see what’s left standing. -more-


Berkeley Lab Wins Federal Biofuel Grant

By Richard Brenneman
Friday June 29, 2007

Berkeley’s bid to become the biofuel research capital of academic and corporate America scored another major advance Tuesday, winning funds to start a second lab. -more-


Grand Jury Questions Library Practices

By Judith Scherr
Friday June 29, 2007

An Alameda County Grand Jury report released June 26 on a controversial three-year-old automated check-out system has raised questions about the library’s ability to manage its contracts effectively. -more-


Walters Leaves City College Top Post

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Friday June 29, 2007

Berkeley City College President Judy Walters, who presided over the transition of the downtown community college from its longtime rental quarters to a newly-built Center Street building, has left her position to take up a similar post at Diablo Valley Community College in Pleasant Hill. -more-


Local Safeways Plan to Revamp, Embrace Organics

By Richard Brenneman
Friday June 29, 2007

Though Safeway’s plans for adding housing to its Albany grocery store on Solano Avenue proved a flop with neighbors, the Pleasanton-based grocery chain is still pursuing its plans for a makeover. -more-


Council Repeals Drug City Employee Drug Test Prohibitions

By Judith Scherr
Friday June 29, 2007

At its meeting Tuesday the Berkeley City Council repealed the ordinance that prohibits the city from drug testing employees, approved a $369,000 budget, adding back some social services that had been cut and heard from both citizens and the developer’s representative on the question of a proposed commercial development at College and Ashby avenues. -more-


Sweden Detains Former Berkeley Resident

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Friday June 29, 2007

Ganna Dharmarajah, a former Berkeley resident whose mother still lives here, was arrested by Swedish authorities on Saturday while vacationing in Sweden. She is now being detained at a center for asylum seekers, even though she says she has never sought asylum and is not now doing so. -more-


City Transportation Manager Leaves for Private Sector

By Judith Scherr
Friday June 29, 2007

In a letter addressed to City Manager Phil Kamlarz and emailed to Kamlarz and the press on June 20, five-plus-year transportation manager Peter Hillier tendered his resignation effective July 8. -more-


School Board Approves Measure BB Before Summer Break

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Friday June 29, 2007

The Berkeley Board of Education met for the last time Wednesday before breaking for summer. Board members will be back Aug. 22 for the new school year. -more-


BUSD Responds to Supreme Court Decision on School Race Placement

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Friday June 29, 2007

Minutes after the U.S. Supreme Court voted 5-4 Thursday to limit the consideration of race in school integration plans, Berkeley Unified School District superintendent Michele Lawrence said that she hoped Berkeley public schools would stand the test and become a model for other schools. -more-


Bateman Neighbors Say Crime Is on the Rise

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Friday June 29, 2007

Residents of Berkeley’s Bateman neighborhood are spending a lot of time looking over their shoulders these days. -more-


Early Fire Season Brings Worry to Local Firefighters

By Richard Brenneman
Friday June 29, 2007

As California launches into a dry summer with wildfires raging in both northern and southern California, David Orth wonders if we’re not seeing the start of something far more ominous. -more-


County Medical Center Rejects Union Request to Avoid Layoffs

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Friday June 29, 2007

The Board of Trustees of the Alameda County Medical Center approved a $460 million budget on Tuesday, rejecting requests by union members for a no layoff pledge and to set aside $5 million from increased debt payments to Alameda County to fund staff development and training to help staff transition into new positions. -more-


Legislative Briefs

Friday June 29, 2007

SB67 Vehicle Speed Contests -more-


Berkeley Lab Wins Federal Biofuel Lab

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday June 26, 2007

Berkeley’s bid to become the biofuel research capital of academic and corporate America scored another major advance Tuesday, winning funds to start a second lab major lab. -more-


Mural Honors Maudelle Shirek

By Judith Scherr
Tuesday June 26, 2007

From Maudelle Shirek’s roots in the soil of Jefferson, Ark., to the former vice mayor’s seat on the city hall dais, the legacy of the 96-year-old “conscience of the council” and radical civil rights and human rights activist will live in a mural commissioned by the city and created by local artists Daniel Galvez and Mildred Howard. -more-


Preservationists Win Round in Downtown Plan Debate

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday June 26, 2007

The ongoing tensions among factions in the struggle over the Berkeley’s evolving landscape surfaced again last week in a joint meeting of two city panels, but the meeting ended in a lopsided 17-2 vote supporting a proposed chapter spelling out the role to be played by historic preservation in Berkeley’s future downtown for the new plan. It had been drafted by a joint subcommitee composed of members of Berkeley’s Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC) and of the Downtown Area Plan Commission (DAPAC). Members of the full DAPAC then met with the full LPC to discuss the proposal. -more-


UC Biofuel Grant Expected, Contractor Sought For New Lab

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday June 26, 2007

Federal officials will announce today whether or not a coalition of UC Berkeley-affiliated labs will capture a $125 million grant to fund a new biofuel lab. -more-


City Council Discusses Police Drug Testing, Budget

By Judith Scherr
Tuesday June 26, 2007

To protect the community, Berkeley police officers carry guns, drive vehicles at high speeds, arrest suspects and take control of their property, including money and illicit drugs. -more-


Questions on Berkeley Chamber Election Filing Go to State

By Judith Scherr
Tuesday June 26, 2007

The Berkeley Chamber of Commerce’s political action arm, Business for Better Government, files its campaign statements with the County of Alameda rather than the city. -more-


One Year Later, Measure A Still Has No Citizen Oversight

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Tuesday June 26, 2007

More than a year after local voters approved the Peralta Community College District’s Facilities Bond Measure A, authorizing the four-college district to issue some $390 million in bonds, a citizens’ oversight committee required by that measure has yet to organize itself, has yet to meet, and has not yet been fully formed. -more-


Bread Project Mourns Co-Founder Lucie Buchbinder

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Tuesday June 26, 2007

A new class of 15 students began the semester at the Bread Project at the Berkeley Adult School (BAS) Monday. In the first hour, this group of future bakers learned to differentiate between ounces and pounds, a few new vocabulary words for use in the kitchen, and, most importantly, they learned about Lucie Buchbinder. -more-


North Oakland School Reconstruction Gets Under Way

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Tuesday June 26, 2007

The Oakland Unified School District state administrator’s office is reporting this week that political intervention by State Senator Don Perata and State Superintendent Jack O’Connell with the state architect’s office has speeded up approval of construction plans for the partially burned Peralta Elementary School in North Oakland. -more-


Decomposing Body Retrieved from Bay

Bay City News
Tuesday June 26, 2007

A man’s decomposing body was retrieved from the bay near the pier at the Berkeley Marina at 9:30 a.m. Sunday, the Alameda County coroner’s office reported. -more-


Council Remands Cell Phone Towers to ZAB for Second Time

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Tuesday June 26, 2007

Verizon Wireless and Nextel Communication staff will be back at the Berkeley Zoning Adjustments Board (ZAB) meeting Thursday to request a use permit for 11 cell phone antennas atop the UC Storage building at 2721 Shattuck Ave. following a second remand from the Berkeley City Council. -more-


Bus Rapid Transit on Downtown Panel Agenda

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday June 26, 2007

Bus Rapid Transit (BRT), the hottest ticket on the Berkeley transportation horizon, is up for discussion again tonight (Tuesday). -more-


School Board Upgrades School Site Safety Plans

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Tuesday June 26, 2007

The Berkeley Board of Education will be meeting at the Old City Hall at 2134 Martin Luther King Jr. Way, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday to renew contracts and agreements before they break for summer this year. -more-


Opinion

Editorials

Editorial: Taking the Pledge, One More Time

By Becky O’Malley
Friday June 29, 2007

The Saturday Farmers’ Market in Berkeley was awash with politicians, pressing the flesh and hawking their latest products. “Will you take the pledge?” one shouted at me, and I fled. I’ve got many historic associations with taking pledges, none of them good. -more-


Editorial: Enabling Mass Murders in El Cerrito

By Becky O'Malley
Tuesday June 26, 2007

In the last few days we’ve heard about a lot of crime in the area near our South Berkeley office. Our neighborhood association has reported at least three nearby hold-ups in broad daylight, and a frequent correspondent in the adjacent Temescal area has sent us a letter (in this issue) about a frightening unprovoked assault on a pedestrian by a gang of young teens who didn’t even appear to be looking to rob the victim. -more-


Public Comment

Letters to the Editor

Friday June 29, 2007

EMPTY LOT -more-


Commentary: Mayor Should Honor Pledge to Protect University Avenue Neighborhoods

By Regan Richardson
Friday June 29, 2007

In a Nov. 18, 2003 commentary, Mayor Bates and Councilmember Linda Maio made what appeared to be a heartfelt plea for immediate incorporation of the University Avenue Strategic Plan into the zoning ordinance. In light of developments such as the behemoth building proposed for 1950 MLK, affectionately known to some as the Trader Joe’s building, this public promise to champion the UASP principles of protecting Berkeley from inappropriately large development and to maintain the residential character of the neighborhoods definitely bears re-examination. -more-


Commentary: Bus Rapid Transit Will Destroy Telegraph Avenue

By George Oram, Mary Oram, Arlene Giordano, Thomas Cooper, Carol Lipnick and
Friday June 29, 2007

AC Transit proposes to eliminate two auto lanes on Telegraph Avenue and have curbed, restricted, and exclusive fast bus lanes in the middle two lanes for the new BRT service. Their thinking and the environmental impact report do not address the problems this will cause. Telegraph today is attractive, clean, and traffic flows. -more-


Commentary: Berkeley Complicit In Hamas Takeover

By John Gertz
Friday June 29, 2007

At last count, there were 43 separate militias in Gaza, including clan based militias, Fatah splinter groups, criminal gangs, and non-Hamas Islamic groups. It is unclear as of this writing how long it will take Hamas to consolidate its control, and eliminate all possible resistance. But they will. To subdue one clan, they took three female civilian clan members, one a young girl, and executed them summarily as an example. Summary execution has always greeted those accused (no trials necessary in Palestine) of collaboration with Israel. Now collaboration with Fatah has become a capital offense as well. Military control is but one aspect of the story. Gaza is about to descend into a very dark night of the soul. Hamas will gradually monopolize and Islamicize all aspects of life. There have already been innumerable attacks on normal expressions of modernity. Nightclubs and internet cafes have been torched, gays murdered, churches burned (Palestine, which, until recently, was 7 percent Christian Arab, is now only about 2 percent Christian). Women who commit adultery face death by stoning, if their own brothers and fathers do not kill them first. Hundreds of women have already been strangled by their own family members in so-called “honor killings.” Women also face forced genital mutilations, and, of course, they will be required to take up the veil. The education system will become Islamic. Already, Mickey Mouse broadcasts a message of hate on Hamas TV. “Kill the Jew and the crusader” (i.e., Christians), preaches Hamas’ Mickey Mouse, “for they are all pigs and apes.” But this has been going on for years. Hamas’ “summer camps” routinely taught children how to become martyred suicide bombers. Those children have grown up to become the shock troops which made short order of Fatah in Gaza, and may someday soon do the same in the West Bank. -more-


Letters to the Editor

Tuesday June 26, 2007

PRO-MASS TRANSIT, -more-


Commentary: An Unenforceable Contract

By Judith Epstein
Tuesday June 26, 2007

Parking in the Elmwood hangs by a tenuous thread. The proposed retail complex to be housed at the old Wright’s Garage near Ashby and College will have no on-site parking, and the only requirement owner John Gordon must meet is to try to provide parking. He doesn’t even have to try very hard! -more-


Commentary: South Berkeley Cell Phone Antenna Net

By Michael Barglow
Tuesday June 26, 2007

Our community, in particular, South Berkeley, is experiencing a gnawing anxiety about the apparently unstoppable will of Verizon/Nextel to install throughout South Berkeley a cell phone antenna net. This is an expression used in the cell phone industry and now also part of the accepted and incorporated lingo of our city planning department staff. -more-


Commentary: Immigration: What’s Behind the Furor?

By Marc Sapir
Tuesday June 26, 2007

The supporters of closed borders and deportations are not a fringe minority. Millions—including a majority of “liberal” elected officials like our California senators—favor the policy of walling off the United States at the Southern border. I visited the border last month. I talked with a few of the people deported from the Sonora desert of Arizona. I saw the bottoms of their feet torn to shreds after walking day and night in the desert sun and sand, and heard of beatings and humiliation at the hands of the private militarized Wackenhut company under contract with Homeland Security. Eight people were known to have died in the desert during four days I was there. One of the men we talked with was a San Francisco chef who had had to return home to the Yucatan for family affairs. Another was a peasant woman from Morelos the soles of whose feet I had to cut off because they were just dead separated skin. She cannot survive in Mexico because U.S. imports have financially ruined Mexico’s peasant agricultural base. Is this the kind of investment that letter writer Robert Gable believes will help get the Mexican economy back on its feet—the dumping of subsidized surplus US corn and other commodities on the Mexican market under NAFTA? -more-


Columns

Column: Undercurrents: Mincing Words About Oakland Development

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Friday June 29, 2007

An attentive and knowledgeable reader has pointed out that in my June 15 column on Oakland Mayor Ron Dellums (“Mayor Dellums Isn’t What’s Wrong With Oakland”), I incorrectly reported that at the new mayor’s direction, the city’s Community and Economic Development Agency (CEDA) has “put a moratorium on conversion of Oakland's dwindling industrial-zoned parcels to mixed-use.” Though close, that’s not what actually happened. -more-


East Bay Then and Now: Immigrants’ Sons Established Local Tanning Industry

By Daniella Thompson
Friday June 29, 2007

The history of Bay Area industry parallels that of immigration. In the East Bay, the economy was largely built by first- and second-generation immigrants who had settled in the West, bringing with them specialized skills from points east, often Europe. -more-


Garden Variety: Sales, Temptations and a Crisis of Conscience

By Ron Sullivan
Friday June 29, 2007

I see the inimitable Annie’s Annuals is having a sale. Some of the stuff the two Anni(e)s are offering are rarities in the plant trade, in the area, maybe anywhere. Once again I’ll have to wrestle with my conscience. -more-


About the House: How to Say ‘I Love You’

By Matt Cantor
Friday June 29, 2007

I was with a very charming couple today. He was French and she was American. They were very different and both very smart and we had a great time looking at an incredible place that needed … like … nothing. Well, not much. -more-


Column: The Public Eye: Welcome to Animal Farm

By Zelda Bronstein
Tuesday June 26, 2007

Just outside the City Council chamber in the Maudelle Shirek Building (formerly Old City Hall) stands a large table. When the council is meeting, that’s where you can find copies of its agenda. Last Tuesday evening, you could find something else there as well: copies of a two-sided sheet entitled “City of Berkeley/Welcome to Your Council Meeting.” -more-


Column: The Public Eye: What Obama Needs to Win the Nomination

By Bob Burnett
Tuesday June 26, 2007

In the sixth month of the campaign for the 2008 Democratic presidential nomination, the race has narrowed to New York Senator Hillary Clinton and Illinois Senator Barack Obama. The latest Gallup Poll shows Obama and Clinton in a statistical dead heat, with John Edwards a distant fourth, behind Al Gore—an undeclared candidate. Public perception of Clinton and Obama is strikingly different: Hillary has much higher unfavorable ratings than does Barack. Obama and Clinton are very different people; which one of them carries the day, at the Denver Democratic convention in August of 2008, will hinge on which campaign is best able to utilize the unique strengths of their candidate. -more-


Wild Neighbors: When One Bird’s Nest is Another’s Home Depot

By Joe Eaton
Tuesday June 26, 2007

It began with a phone call: Jean Moss, a Berkeley reader, had an odd nest that had fallen from a Cecile Bruner rosebush. She suspected it was some kind of hummingbird nest, because she had seen a female hummer hanging around it acting territorial. But what she described sounded more like a bushtit nest, bag-shaped with a small entrance hole near the top. Curious, I arranged to stop by and take a look at it. -more-


Arts & Events

Arts Calendar

Friday June 29, 2007

FRIDAY, JUNE 29 -more-


Around the East Bay

Friday June 29, 2007

FAIRYTALES AND OTHER STORIES -more-


Wang Gangfeng Photos of China at Alta Galleria

By Robert McDonald, Special to the Planet
Friday June 29, 2007

A dense and dazzling, vertically and horizontally rectilinear installation of color photographs by contemporary Chinese artist Wang Gangfeng awaits visitors at the entrance to Alta Galleria in Berkeley (2980 College, Suite #4, near Ashby Avenue). The show closes July 10. -more-


Moving Pictures: Shifting Alliances and Realities in Von Trier’s ‘Boss of It All’

By Justin DeFreitas
Friday June 29, 2007

Lars von Trier’s The Boss of It All, opening this weekend at Shattuck Cinemas, is something of a departure for the Danish director. He has returned to Denmark and the Danish language to produce, for the first time, a comedy, and a rather light-hearted comedy at that. No politics, no commentary, no overarching cinematic code of ideals to weigh down his creation—just a clever idea, a witty script and a talented cast. -more-


Guare’s ‘Bosoms and Neglect’ at Aurora

By Ken Bullock, Special to the Planet
Friday June 29, 2007

With a clap of thunder, a lightning fla sh illuminates an enormous shadowy figure, behind gauze, before a window. A man hastily enters, pulling away that curtain, revealing a much smaller female form standing in the window casement, with greenbacks safety-pinned to the lace curtain that frames the window. -more-


East Bay Then and Now: Immigrants’ Sons Established Local Tanning Industry

By Daniella Thompson
Friday June 29, 2007

The history of Bay Area industry parallels that of immigration. In the East Bay, the economy was largely built by first- and second-generation immigrants who had settled in the West, bringing with them specialized skills from points east, often Europe. -more-


Garden Variety: Sales, Temptations and a Crisis of Conscience

By Ron Sullivan
Friday June 29, 2007

I see the inimitable Annie’s Annuals is having a sale. Some of the stuff the two Anni(e)s are offering are rarities in the plant trade, in the area, maybe anywhere. Once again I’ll have to wrestle with my conscience. -more-


About the House: How to Say ‘I Love You’

By Matt Cantor
Friday June 29, 2007

I was with a very charming couple today. He was French and she was American. They were very different and both very smart and we had a great time looking at an incredible place that needed … like … nothing. Well, not much. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Friday June 29, 2007

FRIDAY, JUNE 29 -more-


Arts Calendar

Tuesday June 26, 2007

TUESDAY, JUNE 26 -more-


Around the East Bay

Tuesday June 26, 2007

O’KEEFE’S TAKE ON WALT WHITMAN’S ‘SONG OF MYSELF’ -more-


The Theater: Masquers Present ‘Ring Round the Moon’

By Ken Bullock, Special to the Planet
Tuesday June 26, 2007

“If a working man can’t kill himself on a Sunday morning, we may as well have the Revolution at once!” Witty, barbed lines like these are almost thrown away in Jean Anouilh’s Ring Round the Moon, as brilliantly translated by Christopher Fry, and charmingly produced at the Masquers Playhouse in Point Richmond. -more-


The Theater: ‘Bird in the Hand’ at Berkeley City Club

By Ken Bullock, Special to the Planet
Tuesday June 26, 2007

There’s a row of owls glaring down at the audience in the theater at the Berkeley City Club. And the program for Bird in the Hand, Anne Galjour’s new play, directed by Ellen Sebastian Chang for Central Works, lists the various parts played by the four players (including Ms. Galjour), as well as the bird calls they perform during the course of the action. -more-


Books: Hildegarde Flanner and the Great Berkeley Fire of 1923

By Phil McArdle
Tuesday June 26, 2007

Hildegarde Flanner’s Wildfire: Berkeley, 1923 is a clear-eyed description of a natural disaster seen at close quarters; and, for Berkeleyans, an unforgettable picture of nature’s fury turned against us in our own homes. After reading it, even the greenest greenhorns will understand the dreadful power of wildfire and how rapidly it can consume a neighborhood. -more-


Wild Neighbors: When One Bird’s Nest is Another’s Home Depot

By Joe Eaton
Tuesday June 26, 2007

It began with a phone call: Jean Moss, a Berkeley reader, had an odd nest that had fallen from a Cecile Bruner rosebush. She suspected it was some kind of hummingbird nest, because she had seen a female hummer hanging around it acting territorial. But what she described sounded more like a bushtit nest, bag-shaped with a small entrance hole near the top. Curious, I arranged to stop by and take a look at it. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Tuesday June 26, 2007

TUESDAY, JUNE 26 -more-


Open Call for Essays

Tuesday June 26, 2007

Healthy Living -more-