The Week

Doug Buckwald, organizer of the Stand Up Berkeley press conference and rally, addresses some 60 supporters and the press Tuesday afternoon, calling on the City Council to reject the university’s offer to settle the city lawsuit on the proposed athletic training facility. Photograph by Judith Scherr.
Doug Buckwald, organizer of the Stand Up Berkeley press conference and rally, addresses some 60 supporters and the press Tuesday afternoon, calling on the City Council to reject the university’s offer to settle the city lawsuit on the proposed athletic training facility. Photograph by Judith Scherr.
 

News

City Rejects UC’s Settlement Offer

By Judith Scherr
Friday September 07, 2007

Saying the university’s “compromise” plan to settle city and community lawsuits over building a new athletic facility next to the football stadium was inadequate, the City Council voted 7-1-1 in closed session Tuesday to turn down a settlement offer and move ahead to trial. -more-


Superintendent Lawrence to Leave BUSD

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Friday September 07, 2007

Michele Lawrence’s golf clubs ride along with her in the back of her silver 2004 Volkswagen station wagon wherever she goes. -more-


Planning Commission Approves Reduction Of Proposed West Berkeley Auto Zone

By Angela Rowen, Special to the Planet
Friday September 07, 2007

The Planning Commission on Wednesday voted to drastically scale back a proposal to rezone parts of West Berkeley to allow car dealerships, appeasing critics who said the plan would displace recycling and building businesses by raising property values in the rezoned areas. -more-


Council Postpones Vote on Contentious Community Benefits District Plan

By Judith Scherr
Friday September 07, 2007

A few Southwest Berkeley residents concerned about a proposed Community Benefits District (CBD)—an area where property owners will be taxed for particular services—called a meeting at the end of August to ask their neighbors what they think of the plan. -more-


DAPAC Addresses Center Street Open Space Plan

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Friday September 07, 2007

Pedestrian pathways, high towers and hotels dominated the Downtown Area Plan Advisory Committee (DAPAC) meeting Tuesday as landscape architects, urban planners and UC Berkeley officials fielded questions from city commissioners and community members about their vision for a better downtown. -more-


Shattuck Hotel Plans to Grow

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Friday September 07, 2007

Parimal “Perry” Patel of Palo Alto-based BPR Properties told DAPAC Monday about a plan to renovate the Shattuck Hotel and expand the building to house 320 rooms, part of which involves the construction of a new tower at the rear end of the historic building. -more-


Hollis Faces New Charge in Willis-Starbuck Murder

Bay City News
Friday September 07, 2007

Christopher Hollis smiled and laughed in court today as prosecutors added another charge in a case in which he faces the prospect of spending the rest of his life in state prison on charges that he murdered his close friend Meleia Willis-Starbuck in Berkeley two years ago. -more-


Children’s Hospital Fails to Resolve Dispute with Supervisors

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Friday September 07, 2007

Officials of Children’s Hospital an-nounced plans this week to rebuild their aging hospital facility in Oakland, but whether the hospital will actually be built inside the city limits, and whether the announcement will settle the hospital’s dispute with the Alameda County Board of Supervisors over a proposed property tax increase ballot initiative, remains to be seen. -more-


Political Action Committee Must File with City of Berkeley

By Judith Scherr
Friday September 07, 2007

Business for Better Government, the Berkeley Chamber of Commerce Political Action Committee, should file its campaign disclosure forms in Berkeley and not with Alameda County as it has done since 2002, an Aug. 15 letter from the state Fair Political Practices Commission says. -more-


New Corporate Owners for Hotel Durant, Berkeley Tower

By Richard Brenneman
Friday September 07, 2007

Two major pieces of Berkeley property have changed hands, the Hotel Durant at 2600 Durant Ave. and the Berkeley Tower, a seven-story office building at 2015 Shattuck Ave. -more-


School Board Welcomes Student Bauce

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Friday September 07, 2007

Berkeley High senior Rio Bauce was sworn in by Alameda County Superior Court Judge John True as the new student school board representative Wednesday. -more-


Contrary to Reports, Wayans’ Deal Still Alive

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Friday September 07, 2007

A spokesperson for the proposed Wayans Brothers Oakland Army Base project says that despite the impression being given in some local media outlets, the Wayans Brothers are “absolutely committed to Oakland” and their Army Base proposal is not dead but is only being modified. -more-


West Gate Closed at Cal Game

By Judith Scherr
Friday September 07, 2007

When the UC Berkeley vs. Tennessee football game concluded Saturday and 72,500 fans poured out of Memorial Stadium, John Brandt of Davis found himself in what he called a “dangerous situation,” with gates on the west side of Memorial Stadium off-limits. -more-


Berkeley High Football Season Begins

By Al Winslow
Friday September 07, 2007

Berkeley High School football practice was noisy and chaotic. The field was shared with the woman’s field hockey team, a jogger circling the perimeter and random groups of children throwing footballs. -more-


Berkeley Historical Society Walking Tours Start Saturday

Friday September 07, 2007

By Steven Finacom -more-


Berkeley Continues Suit Against UC Facility Plans

Judith Scherr
Tuesday September 04, 2007

The city will pursue its lawsuit against the University of California. -more-


Council to Consider City-UC Settlement Behind Closed Doors

By Judith Scherr
Tuesday September 04, 2007

A closed-door Berkeley City Council session set for 5 p.m. today (Tuesday) could freeze the public out of the process and result in a deficient compromise settlement of the December 2006 City of Berkeley v. University of California lawsuit, Councilmembers Dona Spring and Kriss Worthington say. -more-


Test Scores Carry Mixed Messages for Local Schools

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Tuesday September 04, 2007

It was a decidedly mixed message for Oakland and Berkeley schools in the heavily anticipated Academic Performance Index scores released by the California Department of Education at mid-day Friday, with BUSD schools dropping 5 points overall (752 to 747) from 2006 to 2007, and OUSD schools gaining 7 points (651 to 658). -more-


County Overrules BUSD on Six Transfer Students

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Tuesday September 04, 2007

Six new out-of-district students will be able to transfer to the Berkeley public schools this school year since the Alameda County Board of Education overturned the Berkeley Unified School District’s (BUSD) decision to deny them the transfers. -more-


Greens Say Kavanagh Should Resign If Not a Berkeley Resident

By Judith Scherr
Tuesday September 04, 2007

Berkeley Rent Board Member Chris Kavanagh should “step down immediately” if he is not a legal resident of Berkeley, said a statement issued Friday by the Berkeley Green Party. -more-


New Port Security Law Bars Ex-Cons, Undocumented

By Viji Sundaram, New America Media
Tuesday September 04, 2007

For nearly six years after he got out of prison in 2000, 40-year-old Ernie Johnson kept coming up empty whenever he applied for a job. Even as he checked the “yes” box on job application forms that asked whether he had ever been convicted of a felony, he knew his chance of landing a job was slim to none. -more-


John Stansfield

By Linda Rosenand Berkeley Historical Society Volunteers
Tuesday September 04, 2007

Volunteer extraordinaire John Stansfield passed away on Aug. 18 at the age of 79 from complications of pneumonia. He was the man to whom visitors and reporters alike would turn for answers at the Berkeley History Center. His enthusiasm about Berkeley’s history was absolutely contagious. -more-


New Director for Education Foundation

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Tuesday September 04, 2007

Molly Fraker will join the Berkeley Public Education Foundation today (Tuesday) as its new executive director. -more-


Landmarks Commission Agenda

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Tuesday September 04, 2007

The Berkeley Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC) will meet Thursday at a new time and with a new secretary. -more-


Assembly Passes Sideshow Bill Renewal

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Tuesday September 04, 2007

With support from two key East Bay representatives, State Senate President Don Perata’s SB67 sideshow 30-day car confiscation legislation easily passed the state assembly on a 74-0 vote last week. -more-


Opinion

Editorials

Editorial: Don’t Settle For Less Than a Complete EIR

By Becky O'Malley
Friday September 07, 2007

A number of citizens, including some who live in District 5, have forwarded to us Councilmember Laurie Capitelli’s thoughtful explanation of why he voted to reject UC’s proposed settlement of the city’s lawsuit on the EIR for the gym/office building proposed adjacent to Memorial Stadium. He makes several good points, obvious ones that can’t be reiterated too often. -more-


Public Comment

Letters to the Editor

Friday September 07, 2007

A WONDERFUL EXPERIENCE -more-


Commentary: The Myth of Cooperation

By Sharon Hudson
Friday September 07, 2007

On Tuesday, Sept. 4, I attended the public comment before the City Council on the university’s proposed Memorial Stadium athletic center and other interrelated projects. Opponents of the university project outnumbered supporters by two or three to one. But the repeated misuse of the word “cooperation” by supporters of the UC project during that event compels me to comment. -more-


Commentary: Berkeley’s Public Comment Struggle

By Jim Fisher, Gene Bernardi and Jane Welford
Friday September 07, 2007

For over two years, SuperBOLD and the First Amendment Project have been working towards a more democratic public comment procedure in Berkeley. In April 2006 the First Amendment Project threatened a lawsuit if the city did not discontinue the use of a lottery for choosing speakers at public meetings. The lottery denied some persons willing to speak the right to do so. It also resulted in some agenda items not being addressed by the public. -more-


Letters to the Editor

Tuesday September 04, 2007

MISVIEWING -more-


Commentary: School Board Raises Field Use Fees 300%

By Doug Fielding
Tuesday September 04, 2007

On Wednesday, Aug. 22, the Berkeley School Board voted to charge youth groups “only” $35 per hour to use the new field at East Campus. This is “only” 300 percent higher than what these groups currently pay to use other grass fields in Berkeley. To put this in perspective, if BHS baseball and softball teams were required to pay this same amount for the City of Berkeley fields that they use it would cost about $300-$400 per player per season, just for field costs. This would be on top of the expenses for uniforms, equipment, umpires, coaches, etc. -more-


Commentary: The Cost of Textbooks

By David Kamola
Tuesday September 04, 2007

I am a student at Berkeley City College and am quite distressed at the cost of books, especially the ones sold in the schools own bookstore, and one policy in particular which I feel is totally unfair: the buy-back and return policy. As students, we have seen the results of state budget cuts with fewer classes, the increase in fees and the painfully high cost of our textbooks, no teaching supplies and more, but to be ripped off by our own school is terrible. First, if I buy let’s say a $100 book and return it, still wrapped four days later the bookstore will pay me only $50 for it, then turn around and sell it again for $100 to the next unsuspecting student. That has got to be criminal, but what’s worse is returning your old textbooks. -more-


Commentary: Lies, Oil and Television

By Jack Bragen
Tuesday September 04, 2007

Columns

Column: Dispatches from the Edge: Israeli Settlements and a Scramble for the Arctic

By Conn Hallinan
Friday September 07, 2007

Did Israel know that its settlement policies in the occupied West Bank and Gaza were illegal? Yes, according to a senior legal official who warned the Labor government of Prime Minister Levi Eshkol in September 1967, “that civilian settlement in the administered territories contravenes the explicit provisions of the Fourth Geneva Convention.” -more-


Undercurrents: The Long Arm of the Sideshow Vehicle Tow Bill

By By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Friday September 07, 2007

State Sen. Don Perata’s SB67 sideshow vehicle tow bill passed in the Senate this week with no dissenting votes, not surprisingly, and now goes to the desk of Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger for consideration. It will not be surprising if Mr. Schwarzenegger signs it and thus propels it back into law, but it will be sad if he does. Fluidly, easily, without so much as a whimper of complaint from the usual civil liberties lobbies, California lops off a branch of the tree of Constitutional protections—the right of a citizen to due process before the seizure of property. But since the sideshows are so unpopular and the sideshow participants voiceless and unrepresented, we hardly think it matters, and wonder why this columnist—alone amongst all other sources—continues to make a fuss about it. -more-


East Bay Then and Now: Simone Marengo Gave Berkeley Macaroni

By Daniella Thompson
Friday September 07, 2007

A hundred years ago, a sizable population of refugees from the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and fire made the East Bay its permanent home. Among the new arrivals were many Italian families, a good number of whom settled in West Berkeley. -more-


The Pot Party Continues: Drinking and Thriving, Part I

By Ron Sullivan
Friday September 07, 2007

Watering plants in containers is both easier and harder than it seems. Everyone has a vice about this, generally a tendency to either overwater or underwater. (If your tendency either way is impossible to reform, you might consider underwater plants. Go on over to Albany Aquarium on San Pablo Avenue just north of Solano and have a look at some nicely planted tanks first.) -more-


About the House: Through a Glass Sharply

By Matt Cantor
Friday September 07, 2007

Everybody has a little internal list of least favorite ways to die. Some of these are rational, but mostly they’re derived from some fantasy, childhood experience or errant datum we’ve chanced upon. Perhaps we were children and heard an awful story. Maybe we encountered saw someone killed in a movie—lots of those, aren’t there?! Perhaps it was simply a story related by a friend. Regardless of the source we all have these. -more-


Column: Dispatches from the Edge: Iraq and Vietnam

By Bob Burnett
Tuesday September 04, 2007

Since the invasion of Iraq, in March of 2003, George W. Bush’s rationale for the occupation has continually shifted. On Aug. 22, the White House once again changed its criterion for success. As disturbing as this is, what’s more disturbing is the new justification: keep Iraq from becoming another Vietnam. -more-


Wild Neighbors: Reptilian Diet Secrets: Starving Snakes for Science

By Joe Eaton
Tuesday September 04, 2007

Although you wouldn’t expect a book about metabolic ecology to be a page-turner, I found John Whitfield’s recent In the Beat of a Heart: Life, Energy, and the Unity of Nature engrossing. Whitfield, a British science journalist, explains how metabolism relates to size, volume, and surface area. Along the way, he looks at why bats outlive mice, whether humans are allotted a fixed number of heartbeats in their lifetime (astronaut Neil Armstrong said that if that was true, he was damned if he was going to waste any of his jogging), and the tragic fate of Tusko the elephant. -more-


Arts & Events

Arts Calendar

Friday September 07, 2007

FRIDAY, SEPT. 7 -more-


Around the East Bay

Friday September 07, 2007

NADA LEWIS PLAYS -more-


The Theater: A Panoply of Strange Customers at the Rep

By Ken Bullock, Special to the Planet
Friday September 07, 2007

Under a suspended crocodile in the parlor of a country home which resembles a ship’s salon, with walls covered in primitive masks and scimitars, a female servant (Lynne Soffer as Nurse Guinness) is sympathizing with a newly arrived, ungreeted—perhaps forgotten--guest: “Since she’s forgotten all about it, it will be a pleasant surprise for her to see you!” -more-


Cal Performances Rush Tickets Available

Friday September 07, 2007

Cal Performances has started a rush ticket program for community members. For select performances, Cal Performances offers UC Berkeley student, faculty and staff, senior and community rush tickets. Rush tickets are announced two hours prior to a performance and are available in person only at the ticket office beginning one hour before the performance; quantities may be limited. Rush ticket sales are limited to one ticket per person; all sales are cash only. Rush ticket prices are $10 for UC Berkeley students; $15 for UC Berkeley faculty and staff (UCB ID required) and seniors age 65 or older; and $20 for all other community members. Information is available at 642-9988 (press 2 for the rush hotline) two hours prior to a performance only. -more-


East Bay Then and Now: Simone Marengo Gave Berkeley Macaroni

By Daniella Thompson
Friday September 07, 2007

A hundred years ago, a sizable population of refugees from the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and fire made the East Bay its permanent home. Among the new arrivals were many Italian families, a good number of whom settled in West Berkeley. -more-


The Pot Party Continues: Drinking and Thriving, Part I

By Ron Sullivan
Friday September 07, 2007

Watering plants in containers is both easier and harder than it seems. Everyone has a vice about this, generally a tendency to either overwater or underwater. (If your tendency either way is impossible to reform, you might consider underwater plants. Go on over to Albany Aquarium on San Pablo Avenue just north of Solano and have a look at some nicely planted tanks first.) -more-


About the House: Through a Glass Sharply

By Matt Cantor
Friday September 07, 2007

Everybody has a little internal list of least favorite ways to die. Some of these are rational, but mostly they’re derived from some fantasy, childhood experience or errant datum we’ve chanced upon. Perhaps we were children and heard an awful story. Maybe we encountered saw someone killed in a movie—lots of those, aren’t there?! Perhaps it was simply a story related by a friend. Regardless of the source we all have these. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Friday September 07, 2007

FRIDAY, SEPT. 7 -more-


Arts Calendar

Tuesday September 04, 2007

TUESDAY, SEPT. 4 -more-


Cajun, Zydeco Band Returns for Another Stroll

By Ken Bullock, Special to the Planet
Tuesday September 04, 2007

At the top of the hill for the Solano Stroll, C.Z. and the Bon Vivants will be pumping out Zydeco and Cajun music for listening and dancing. It’s the third time the popular group will do the Stroll, and as fiddler Catherine Matovich said, “It’s been more fun every time—and nicer up there at the top. People can dance, then go into Andronico’s for something to drink, to keep from passing out!” -more-


‘The Shadow Box’ at Masquers Playhouse in Pt. Richmond

By Ken Bullock, Special to the Planet
Tuesday September 04, 2007

The only way to beat this thing ... is to leave nothing behind, nothing unsaid, nothing undone—use it all up! (But I’m scared to death!)” -more-


Wild Neighbors: Reptilian Diet Secrets: Starving Snakes for Science

By Joe Eaton
Tuesday September 04, 2007

Although you wouldn’t expect a book about metabolic ecology to be a page-turner, I found John Whitfield’s recent In the Beat of a Heart: Life, Energy, and the Unity of Nature engrossing. Whitfield, a British science journalist, explains how metabolism relates to size, volume, and surface area. Along the way, he looks at why bats outlive mice, whether humans are allotted a fixed number of heartbeats in their lifetime (astronaut Neil Armstrong said that if that was true, he was damned if he was going to waste any of his jogging), and the tragic fate of Tusko the elephant. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Tuesday September 04, 2007

TUESDAY, SEPT. 4 -more-