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Suspect arrested in connection with Grizzly Peak fire

Dan McMenamin
Thursday August 03, 2017 - 04:59:00 PM

Oakland police on Wednesday arrested a suspect who allegedly brandished a gun after a collision on Grizzly Peak Boulevard on Wednesday morning near where a fire was reported hours later. 

Investigators are not saying whether the case is believed to be connected to the fire, but University of Berkeley police spokeswoman Sgt. Sabrina Reich said today that the fire is being considered as a possible arson. 

The collision was reported around 8 a.m. Wednesday about a third of a mile west of Grizzly Peak Boulevard's intersection with Fish Ranch Road, according to police. 

Officers learned that three vehicles were involved in the crash and one fled the scene. After the collision, the driver of the hit-and-run vehicle had brandished a firearm at one of the other vehicles, then got back in their car and fled, police said. 

No one in the collision was injured and the scene was cleared. 

Then at about 11 a.m., officers received a report that the suspect had returned to the scene. They responded and the suspect was not there, but officers went further west on Grizzly Peak Boulevard and found the unoccupied suspect vehicle and learned the suspect had fled toward the University of California at Berkeley campus. 

Around 1:30 p.m., UC Berkeley police advised that they had arrested the suspect on campus. His name is not yet being released. 

In between then, at about 1:05 p.m., the blaze was reported at Grizzly Peak Boulevard and South Park Drive. The fire has burned 20 acres and was 50 percent contained as of midday today. 

Reich said today that investigators are waiting on a final determination of cause from Cal Fire and the Oakland Fire Department. A briefing is scheduled for late this afternoon to provide an update on the blaze. 

Anyone with information about the case is encouraged to call the Oakland police felony assault section at (510) 238-3426. 

DanMcMenamin0417p08/03/17


Oakland dispatcher says Grizzly Peak fire is out

Alex Kekauoha/Jeff Shuttleworth (BCN)
Thursday August 03, 2017 - 12:29:00 PM

The vegetation fire that broke out Wednesday afternoon near Grizzly Peak Boulevard in the East Bay Hills is out, according to an Oakland Fire Department dispatcher. 

At 6 a.m. the dispatcher said the fire was extinguished and burned 20 acres. 

The fire was first reported Wednesday at 1:05 p.m. near Grizzly Peak Boulevard and South Park Drive. No injuries were reported, fire officials said. 

About half of the fire was within Oakland city limits and the other half was on land owned by the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, fire officials said. 

About 150 to 200 firefighters from nine fire agencies battled the blaze, including 75 firefighters from Cal Fire. Grizzly Peak Boulevard remains closed between South Park Drive and Centennial Drive and the cause of the fire is under investigation, according to fire officials.


Victim robbed at gunpoint near UC Berkeley campus on Tuesday

Alex Kekauoha (BCN)
Thursday August 03, 2017 - 05:01:00 PM

A male victim was robbed at gunpoint Tuesday night near the University of California at Berkeley campus, police said. 

According to police, the victim was sitting on a bench at a bus stop at the intersection of Dana Street and Durant Avenue around 10 p.m. when a male suspect approached him. 

The suspect, who was armed with a handgun, robbed the victim of his cellphone, police said. 

The suspect was last seen running to a waiting vehicle that fled south on Dana Street, police said. 

Police arrived and searched the area but did not find the suspect or the vehicle. 

The victim was not harmed and there is no description of the suspect immediately available, police said. 

Anyone with information about the case is asked to contact Berkeley police at (510) 981-5900.


Crews cutting down trees in fire zone

Dan McMenamin (BCN)
Thursday August 03, 2017 - 12:27:00 PM

Tree-felling crews are at the scene of the 20-acre fire in the East Bay hills today to bring down trees that pose danger to firefighters battling the blaze in steep terrain, an Oakland fire spokesman said. 

The fire, which was first reported at 1:05 p.m. Wednesday near Grizzly Peak Boulevard and South Park Drive, is 50 percent contained as of late this morning. 

About half of the fire is within Oakland city limits and the other half is on land owned by the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, fire officials said. 

Crews are working in "steep, challenging terrain" with large trees serving as fuel sources for flames, Oakland Fire Engineer Charleton Lightfoot said. 

"If the integrity of a tree has been compromised, the overall goal this morning is to remove those potential hazards," Lightfoot said. 

He said the goal by the end of the day is to have 100 percent containment and move to the "mop-up" phase of the fire. 

One Cal Fire firefighter suffered minor injuries after falling about 50 feet down steep terrain while battling the blaze, Lightfoot said. No other injuries have been reported. 

Grizzly Peak Boulevard will be closed between Centennial and South Park drives until at least 8 p.m. today, he said. 

Fire department officials are advising people to avoid the area to allow crews to access the area of the fire without any trouble.


Updated: Berkeley Hills fire now 20 acres

Jeff Shuttleworth (BCN)
Wednesday August 02, 2017 - 06:46:00 PM

A 20-acre vegetation fire in the East Bay hills is about 20 percent contained, but firefighters don't yet know when it will be completely extinguished, according to Alameda County Fire officials. 

About half of the fire is within the Oakland city limits in the hills, and the other half is on land owned by Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Oakland fire Battalion Chief Melinda Drayton said. 

The northeast section of the fire area is giving firefighters the most trouble because of the heavy vegetation and number of trees there, she said. 

About 150 to 200 firefighters from 9 fire agencies battling the blaze, including 75 firefighters with Cal Fire, according to Drayton.  

Firefighters will remain at the scene throughout the night and all day Thursday if necessary. 

Drayton said weather conditions for firefighters are expected to improve tonight because fog is forecasted to roll in around sunset and relative humidity will rise. 

The blaze was initially reported at 1:05 p.m. near Grizzly Peak Boulevard and South Park Drive. 

No injuries have been reported and structures are being threatened, Drayton said. 

The cause of the blaze has not yet been determined. 

Some roads in the area remain closed, including parts of Grizzly Peak Boulevard. 

Earlier in the day, University of California at Berkeley police recommended that employees evacuate from the Lawrence Hall of Science and two other nearby facilities. 

In addition, the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory at 1 Cyclotron Road, which is also off Centennial Road, advised its employees to leave work early because of the fire, lab spokesman Jon Weiner said. 

According to Drayton, about 100 children who were at two camps on East Bay Regional Park District land were voluntarily evacuated by the district because smoke was entering their campgrounds.


Updated: Berkeley Hills fire causes evacuations at LHS, Space Sciences, MSRI, LBNL

Jeff Shuttleworth (BCN)
Wednesday August 02, 2017 - 04:42:00 PM

A vegetation fire in the East Bay hills has caused University of California at Berkeley police to recommend that employees evacuate from the Lawrence Hall of Science and two other nearby facilities.

UC police advised people to leave the Hall of Science, which is located at 1 Centennial Drive, as well as the Space Sciences Laboratory at 7 Gauss Way and the Mathematical Sciences Research Institute at 17 Gauss Way, which are both near Centennial Drive.

In addition, the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory at 1 Cyclotron Road, which is also off Centennial Road, advised its employees to leave work early because of the fire, lab spokesman Jon Weiner said.

Moraga-Orinda Fire District Fire Chief Stephen Healy and UC Berkeley police said the fire, which was reported at about 1:05 p.m. today, is in the area of Grizzly Peak Boulevard and South Park Drive, while Oakland Fire Battalion Chief Melinda Drayton said the fire is in the area of Grizzly Peak Boulevard and Fish Ranch Road in Oakland.

Healy said in a briefing at the scene around 4 p.m. that the fire is no longer growing in size and is partially contained, but crews are having trouble putting out flames within the boundary of the blaze because of large trees and bushes adding fuel to the fire.

Drayton said no structures are in danger and no one has been injured. 

Healy said firefighters from Oakland, Berkeley, the East Bay Regional Park District, Cal Fire, Moraga-Orinda and El Cerrito are battling the fire. 

University of California at Berkeley police said a number of roads east of the main campus have been closed due to the fire. 

UC police said Grizzly Peak Boulevard is closed between Centennial Drive and South Park Drive and other roads in the area may be closed as needed. 

They advised the public to avoid the area to allow crews to respond to the fire. 

UC police also said the university's Botanical Garden at 200 Centennial Drive has closed for the day. 

UC police said earlier today that power to the university's campus would have to be shut down because PG&E would require that transformers be shut down. 

But UC police spokeswoman Sgt. Sabrina Reich said at 4 p.m. that at this point power doesn't have to be shut down after all.


Berkeley Hills fire partly contained

Jeff Shuttleworth (BCN)
Wednesday August 02, 2017 - 02:25:00 PM

A two-alarm vegetation fire in the East Bay hills is still burning but has been partially contained, Moraga-Orinda Fire District Fire Chief Stephen Healy said.

Healy said the fire, which was reported at about 1:05 p.m., is burning on 5 to 6 acres in the vicinity of Grizzly Peak Boulevard and South Park Drive in Contra Costa County and on land owned by the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.

However, Oakland Fire Battalion Chief Melinda Drayton said the fire is in the area of Grizzly Peak Boulevard and Fish Ranch Road in Oakland.

Drayton said no structures are in danger, there haven't been any evacuations and no one has been injured. 

Healy said firefighters from Oakland, Berkeley, the East Bay Regional Park District, Cal Fire, Moraga-Orinda and El Cerrito are battling the fire. 

University of California at Berkeley police said a number of roads east of the main campus have been closed because of the fire, which it said is located north of South Park Drive and east of Grizzly Peak Boulevard . UC police said Grizzly Peak Boulevard is closed between Centennial Drive and South Park Drive and other roads in the area may be closed as needed. 

They advised the public to avoid the area to allow crews to respond to the fire. 

UC police also said the university's Botanical Garden at 200 Centennial Drive has closed for the day. 

In addition, UC police said that because of the fire, PG&E is requiring transformers to be shut down as soon as possible and power has been lost across the campus. 

Police advised people at the university to shut down all electronic devices by 2:40 p.m. and not to use elevators until power is restored.


Flash: Fire in Berkeley Hills

Bay City News
Wednesday August 02, 2017 - 02:08:00 PM

There's a grass fire on Grizzly Peak.

Firefighters from several agencies are battling a two-alarm grass fire in the vicinity of Grizzly Peak Boulevard and Fish Ranch Road this afternoon, an Oakland Fire Department dispatcher said.

The blaze was reported at about 1:05 p.m., the dispatcher said.

No other details were immediately available.



Watch a live stream video on KCBS.:


Berkeley water main break closes stree

Bay City News
Wednesday August 02, 2017 - 02:24:00 PM

A water main break in North Berkeley this morning will leave 30 customers without water service until late this afternoon, an East Bay Municipal Utility District spokeswoman said. 

The break was reported about 8 a.m. to a 4-inch cast iron pipe on a one-block section of Francisco Street between Shattuck Avenue and Milvia Street that was installed back in 1905, EBMUD spokeswoman Tracie Morales said. 

That block of Francisco Street is closed to traffic, Morales said. Crews were repairing the water main this morning and it's expected  

that they won't finish their repairs until late this afternoon, according to Morales.


People's Park robbery

Keith Burbank (BCN)
Sunday July 30, 2017 - 03:01:00 PM

A person who tried to rob and stab another person this morning at People's Park in Berkeley is at large, police said.  

At 7:58 a.m. a person with a cellphone was in the park when another person approached him, tried to take his cellphone and threatened him with a knife.  

The suspect lunged at the victim with the knife and missed. Police said the victim held onto his phone and the suspect then punched him twice in the face.  

The suspect then ran west away from the park. Police said they searched the area and could not find the suspect. 

The victim suffered a cut to his face but refused medical care.  

Police are describing the suspect as a black man in his 30s or 40s, 5 feet 7 inches tall with a thin build and short black hair.  

The suspect was wearing a long-sleeve black shirt and black pants and was carrying a pair of red and blue shoes.


The Latest Unregulated Compliance Tool

Carol Denney
Friday July 28, 2017 - 12:55:00 PM

The earliest descriptions of pepper spray and tasers' utility as a useful police tool implied, erroneously, that they would safely and immediately render suspects docile and compliant. When subsequent studies proved that both pepper spray and tasers not only did not produce uniform effects on people, but were lethal for an unidentifiable ratio of the public, the search for a compliance tool by weapons manufacturers interested in the lucrative police market went on.

Tuesday, July 25th, 2017, around 3:00 pm in the afternoon, a group of us working at Expressions Art Gallery suddenly heard very loud screaming. We walked outside to the north east corner of Ashby and Shattuck near the bank and saw several police officers surrounding and forcing a blond, white man face down on the sidewalk. As he screamed, already handcuffed, the officers bound him in some kind of leg restraints, and then forced him into a kind of white hood which they put over his head. He kept screaming while they completely bound him in restraints in full view of the public, which took a lot of struggle and time. He kept asking for help.

We don't know what took place before the screaming. But it had been a very peaceful, sunny afternoon at the Gallery and on the part of Ashby where we were working. We checked with the bank on the corner after at least four police cars and five or six police officers took the man away, and there had been no disturbance there.  

We were all very shaken up. The Expressions Gallery director and I watched along with several bystanders. We saw two badges, an officer Rodriquez, and an Officer Martinez, but didn't get any additional badge names or the name of the victim. All of us felt the restraints were making the situation much worse for everyone.  

After the man was picked up and put in the police car the officers laughed together, and one of them, an Asian officer, excitedly claimed that the man had "tried to bite" him, which was not apparent to any of us. It was chilling that they seemed to have no awareness of how frightening the application of restraints was for the man they had forced to the sidewalk as well as for all of us who were watching.  

We don't know who he was, or if the man who was restrained needed any witnesses. It was all we could think to do to watch in horror. The officers claimed they could not tell us what had happened, and while there might be privacy constraints, it seemed absurd that no information whatsoever was offered in the light of the use of the strange hood and the restraints. There seemed to be no awareness among the officers of the severe personal humiliation for the man in restraints, and the horror for us as bystanders left to wonder, as the police cars sped away, what in the world would warrant such treatment. It is frightening to think that if one cries out in anguish or fear as one is arrested, this restraint system might become routine. 

We had trouble the rest of the day getting the incident out of our minds. We can't imagine that this is necessary. The Expressions Gallery is the loveliest place to wander through, full of ideas, excitement, and color. The gallery has poetry readings, classes for adults, events for children, and art openings with live music and a feeling of lively neighborhood and professional exchange. That afternoon it was robbed of its unique sense of peace and exploration, and none of us can understand why.  

There is currently no policy in Berkeley governing the use of what is apparently called a "spit hood" and the accompanying restraints, unless the wording following is clear to you:  

General Order H-06. #2 states: "It shall be the policy of this Department to handcuff or otherwise effectively restrain all arrested persons (excluding infraction citations where no transport is necessary), or detainees as reasonably necessary, to protect the lives and safety of officers, the public, and the person arrested."  

The General Order continues with #3:  

Use of a full or partial body restraint systems (e.g., the WRAP, ankle restraint systems, ambulance gurney with five - point straps, etc.) (i) While initial use of handcuffs behind the back and hands-on control techniques may be necessary for officer safety, if circumstances dictate greater care should be taken during transportation, supplemental restraint devices and/or alternative transportation options should be considered. (b) In deciding whether restraint of a person’s hands behind his/her back will aggravate a physical disability, injury, or obvious state of pregnancy, the officer should consider the totality of circumstances, including: (1) Observable signs of disability (e.g., partial paralysis, convulsive seizure activity, medic alert ID, disabled person placard, etc.); (2) Statements of the person or others regarding the person’s condition; and,(3) Indications the person is at significant risk of positional asphyxiation (ref. Training Bulletin #234).[1]  

A spokesperson from Safe Restraints, the manufacturer, described the system as "very comfortable" and "magical" in terms of its utility in quickly and safely restraining combative, threatening individuals, adding that the system was designed "only for situations where there is a danger to the suspect, to individuals, or to officers." The WRAP restraint was first deployed in 1996, and has been used by Berkeley police for about ten years.  

The origin of this restraint system, according to writer Maddy Simpson of the science-based website Modern Notion[2], is in the psychiatric wards of mental hospitals in the form of "wet sheet packs." Simpson states, "The Wrap, a design by a company called Safe Restraints Inc., has a few separate pieces that clip together to hold the prisoner. An ankle wrap keeps the prisoner from kicking, a blanket-like leg wrap tightens around the prisoners legs and a chest harness tightens around their chest. After all the parts are properly put on, the chest harness is attached with a chain to a piece on the legs, locking the captive in the sitting position." 

Simpson's article continues, "Originally a branch of hydrotherapy, wet sheet packs were sheets dipped in varying temperatures of water and wrapped around the patient tightly. The thought behind the treatment was to exclude all air from the inside of the pack, so that a patient’s body would sweat out colds. The therapy also aided in the treatment of rheumatism. But, the wet packs were being used as mechanical restraints just as common as they were used for therapy. The wet pack was so commonly used as restraint that in 1873, they were defined no longer as a therapy, but as a form of restraint, and lost popularity thereafter." 

Safe Restraints, Inc. makes the same claim originally used about pepper spray and tasers, that the WRAP is easy to apply, safe to use, and creates immediate compliance. But that isn't what those of us watching on Ashby Avenue saw on July 25th. We saw a prolonged, exhausting struggle for all parties, humiliating and debilitating treatment of a captive as yet not convicted of any crime. Whether or not this exotic restraint system is necessary is, according to the Berkeley Police Department's current guidelines, a matter determined by ambiguous decisions of the officer or officers at the scene using words like "reasonably necessary" and determinations of positional asphyxiation which most physicians agree cannot be determined solely by observable physical features. There appears to be no mention of the hoods, or any set of restrictions for their application.  

The additional effect for those of us who are workers, neighbors, and passers-by simply observing what happened was chilling. We have no idea what in the world would constitute appropriate use of a restraint system which requires a fifteen minute physical struggle by at least four officers who seemed to regard the application of the WRAP restrain in and of itself a significant victory when they were done. The application of the hood rendered the captive completely anonymous, a hooded figure such as one might see in photographs of Guantanamo. 

According to Simpson, "The company’s website boasts “no deaths or injuries in 19 years of use,” but in 2005, a similar device caused a man to asphyxiate and die even with paramedics on the scene. Risks from the wrap are due to the over-tightening of the pieces, causing breathing distress"  

Simpson refers to the use of WRAP restraints as "an ethical dilemma both in the law enforcement and medical worlds." Berkeley citizens and others whose police departments have adopted this restraint method need to note that this frightening, debilitating, and humiliating technique deadens not just police officers but onlookers as well to the inhumanity of approaching often confused, frightened people with the concept that any noncompliant behavior may qualify a person suspected of a crime to being tripped to the sidewalk and wrapped completely in restraints which can inhibit breathing. The use of this technique was not debated at the Berkeley City Council, or put before voters. It was eased into use on the same false premise as pepper spray and the taser, which found ready welcome in many police departments before their potential lethality was finally admitted by manufacturers.  

Police departments interested in using WRAP restraints, or the next new compliance tool rolling out of manufacturers' warehouses, should be required to publically discuss their use and utility to the people they serve. It seemed clear to those of us standing on Ashby Avenue observing the use of a WRAP restraint, that little could justify such treatment, and worse, that the police seemed to think no justification was required. A police department with a proven history of racially discriminatory stops, such as the Berkeley police, should never be allowed to use controversial new and sometimes lethal techniques without much more clarity about how, and upon whom, they can be used.  

It is easy for the Police Department to use manufacturers' claims about effectiveness and safety until the medical communities', coroners' statistics, and lawsuits catch up. But especially a city with the Police Review Commission, such as Berkeley, needs some way to make sure the community served by its police force is being consulted about how it is being policed before having to witness the brutalization of another human being. 


 

[1] City of Berkeley website, Police Department general orders. 

[2] The History of Body Wrappings for Restraint, Maddy Simpson, October 2, 2015 

 


Press Release: Visualizing sea-level rise

Sally Douglas Arce
Thursday July 27, 2017 - 02:49:00 PM

Join Citizens for East Shore Parks to demonstrate where the “new” shoreline will be

Saturday, July 29 from 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.

Citizens for East Shore Parks (CESP), a non-profit organization, presents a sea-level rise outdoor display and speakers from 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. on Saturday, July 29 at the entrance to McLaughlin Eastshore State Park, University Ave. and Frontage Rd. (west of I80), Berkeley. This is across from the Seabreeze Market. Maps, showing the submerged Berkeley streets, landmarks, and regions, will be on hand. Then, from 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. we will hold blue banners to show where our new shoreline will be with a two-meter sea rise, projected by scientists to take place by the year 2100 or sooner. CESP invites the public to join in holding light blue fabric sea rise panels along the 2-meter mark. The panels, each 10 feet in length by 5 feet high, will form a continuous visual banner, some 300 feet long, showing how the shoreline will move inland, submerging whole neighborhoods, thousands of acres of habitat, miles of freeway, the Oakland airport, and the land around the Oakland Coliseum by the year 2100 or sooner. Volunteers will hold the two ends of each fabric panel. 

Robert Cheasty, CESP Executive Director; Jeremy Lowe, Ph.D., Senior Environmental Scientist at San Francisco Estuary Institute; and others (see below) will speak beginning at 9:30 a.m. In addition, large graphic maps will be on display to show how sea-level rise will impact the entire Bay Area and, in particular, West Berkeley. 

"Addressing the threat of sea-level rise is a critical task for communities around San Francisco Bay,” says Doris Sloan, retired professor, Department of Earth & Planetary Science, U.C. Berkeley and who has served on the boards of Save the Bay and CESP. 

In West Berkeley, with a two-meter sea-level rise, much of the shoreline will be lost. The meadow in McLaughlin Eastshore State Park will be underwater. Aquatic Park would be flooded and parts of University Avenue west of Highway I-80 will be submerged. The DoubleTree on Marina Blvd. and the Berkeley Yacht Club will be underwater, according to scientists’ projections. 

With a 2-meter sea-level rise, the water will not cross Interstate 80 where it is elevated, but it will breach the freeway north and south of Berkeley. But, with the worst case projections of 10.5 feet of sea rise (projected by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) to take place by 2100 or sooner, the water intrusion would be even more severe. (From Rising Seas of California – An Update on Sea-Level Rise Science, April 2017, p. 35) 

According to a U.S. Geologic Service press release posted online on Jan. 24, 2017, salt marshes worldwide are being lost to sea-level rise, erosion, and land use changes. These marshes protect the coast against storms and erosion, filter pollution, and provide habitat for fish and shellfish, the researchers said. (From: https://www.usgs.gov/news/new-technique-quickly-predicts-salt-marsh-vulnerability

“The debate about climate change has shifted to how to preserve and protect,” Cheasty says. “Now is the time to work on solutions to preserve our treasured shorelines and shoreline parks. Our view is local, but protecting coastal neighborhoods and habitat is a nationwide problem that may cost trillions unless we start acting now. There are solutions.” 

CESP is working to build a coalition of community leaders, scientists, elected officials, and environmentalists to raise awareness and to obtain funding for solutions. CESP calls on friends to carry this message – VISUALIZING SEA RISE – home to their communities and stage similar events and to join the coalition to bring the problems of Climate Change to the front burner in local, state, and national government.” 

 

Practical Solutions – Starting Now 

Researchers at Baylands Ecosystem Habitat Goals Project, led by the State Coastal Conservancy, recommend strategies for functioning, dynamic baylands: 

• Restore complete baylands systems – Factor in the interconnected habitat types and what sustains them. Provide wildlife with refuges during high-water events. Provide for a way for the baylands to move landward as sea levels rise. 

• Restore tidal flows to strategic areas and manage sediment to establish tidal marsh ecosystems. Tidal marshes re-established now provide ongoing habitat benefits and buffers against sea-level rise as it accelerates. 

• Plan ahead. Create regional policies for the shore that anticipate change over time, using projections of sea-level rise. Plan for shifts in habitats, and plan to help them function well. 

• Regional coordination – Create a resilient shoreline and one open to the public. New buildings should be restricted from the shoreline. Ensure that the regulating agencies work with the stakeholders. 

 

"Sea levels are projected to increase rapidly in the middle decades of this century, with the National Research Council projecting a likely regional sea-level rise for San Francisco Bay of 0.6 to 1.1 feet and a maximum of about 1.9 feet by 2050,” says Jeremy Lowe, Senior Environmental Scientist, Resilient Landscapes Program, San Francisco Estuary Institute. “If we do not significantly limit or reduce global emissions by 2100, the likely regional sea-level rise for San Francisco Bay is projected to be 1.6 to 3.4 feet with a maximum of about 6.9 feet.” 

 

Event location: 

Speakers will address the group at the main entry to McLaughlin Eastshore State Park on the northwest corner of University Ave. and Frontage Road. Look for a large wood entrance sign for the park (The sign includes a carving of a snowy egret). When the speakers conclude, event participants will carry the horizontal fabric panels and pennants to mark where the new shoreline will be with 2-meter sea rise – basically right near the entrance of the Park at the Berkeley Meadow and University Avenue. 

 

Visit www.resilientshoreline.org for more information. 

 

What: Visualizing Sea-level Rise 

When: 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Sat. July 29 

Where: University Ave. and Frontage Rd., Berkeley (across from the Seabreeze 

Market) 

Who: Speakers from 9:30 – 10 a.m. include Robert Cheasty, CESP Executive 

Director; Shirley Dean, CESP Board President; Jeremy Lowe, Senior 

Environmental Scientist, Resilient Landscapes Program, San Francisco 

Estuary Institute; Jacquelyn McCormick, Senior Advisor to Berkeley Mayor 

Jesse Arreguín 

 

10 – 11:30 a.m. participants will carry the fabric panels to the 2-meter sea- 

level rise mark 

Cost: Free 

Info: cespmanager@eastshorepark.org or 510-524-5000 

For info about upcoming Visualizing Sea-level Rise events, visit https://eastshorepark.org/ 

 

About Citizens for East Shore Parks 

Founded in 1985, CESP is a 501(c) 3 nonprofit organization created to establish east bay shoreline parks out of landfills and property previously used commercially. Environmentalists from the Citizens for the Albany Shoreline, Emeryville Shoreline Committee, Golden Gate Audubon Society, Save the Bay, and the Sierra Club banded together to form the CESP. Other like-minded environmentalists quickly joined, as did elected and appointed officials who shared the vision of a shoreline park. They fought off shoreline development proposals in Albany, Berkeley, Emeryville, Oakland, and Richmond. Together this dedicated group, and the large community of thousands of voters and supporters, willed the Eastshore State Park into existence (8.5 miles of shoreline park from Oakland up through Emeryville, Berkeley, Albany and into Richmond - later renamed the McLaughlin Eastshore State Park) in one of our nation's most densely populated urban regions. The mission of CESP is to create a necklace of shoreline parks from the Carquinez Strait to San Jose. 

 

Sponsors and Endorsers of Visualizing Sea-level Rise 

The Sierra Club; Golden Gate Audubon Society; Oro Loma Sanitary District; California Native Plant Society; The City of Berkeley; Citizens Committee to Complete the Refuge; the Mayors of Albany, Berkeley, Emeryville, El Cerrito, Hayward, Richmond, San Pablo, Hercules; GROUNDWORKS Office, Contra Costa County Supervisor John Gioia, Alameda County Supervisor Keith Carson, Assemblymember Tony Thurmond, State Senator Nancy Skinner 

 

 

 

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Shooting at Berkeley Marina sends one to hospital

Keith Burbank (BCN)
Saturday July 29, 2017 - 01:09:00 PM

A shooting early this morning at the Berkeley Marina sent a person to a hospital with gunshot wounds, a police lieutenant said. 

At about 3:40 a.m., police were called and told of some loud noises occurring near the marina at 201 University Ave., Lt. Joe Okies said. 

Police arrived and found a victim with gunshot wounds. The victim was taken to Highland Hospital in Oakland with injuries not considered life-threatening.  

Okies said police also found a vehicle in the water near the Berkeley Pier. The vehicle was towed.  

Officers searched the area and found shell casings and other evidence.  

One person of interest in the shooting was detained. That person was arrested on unrelated offenses.  

Anyone with information about the shooting is asked to call the Police Department's non-emergency line at (510) 981-5900.


Ruth Michaels
1924-2017

Claire Michaels
Thursday July 27, 2017 - 02:22:00 PM

Ruth was born in Vienna, Austria, on August 22, 1924. Her family was part of the Viennese Jewish community, an educated, cultured, politically active community that produced some of the great Jewish intellectual and political figures of the 19th and early 20th century, and was also a center for the Zionist movement to establish a Jewish state in Israel.

Ruth’s father, Rudolf, was a lawyer who loved education and, without much family support, was able to pursue university and a law degree. Rudolf was raised speaking German, but as an adult he began to study Yiddish. Ruth grew up hearing her parents speaking both German and Yiddish in the home, and she too became fluent in both languages. There were often guests and visitors associated with Zionist politics and the Yiddish Theater who he represented in his law practice staying at Ruth’s home. She went with her father to political rallies, perhaps contributing to her lifelong interest in political causes and political activism. 

Ruth’s mother, Rosa was born in Vilna, a city in Poland, speaking Yiddish as her first language. Despite being an only child, Ruth and her mother spent summers in Vilna where her extended family lived in a compound of homes around a single courtyard, and she got to play with her cousins and enjoy the closeness of an extended family who shared each other’s lives and knew each other’s business. 

As the Nazis came to power in Germany, life became increasingly hard. Ruth’s father Rudolf saw what was coming and was able to make plans for his family to leave. The Jewish community in America was sponsoring families of Jewish community leaders in Europe and Ruth’s family was sponsored by a professor in Chicago who was part of the Yiddish Institute for Jewish Research (YIVO.) Still, there were great dangers, as the Nazis were already rounding up Jewish men in Ruth’s neighborhood. Ruth tells a story of how on one occasion her family’s safety was secured because the family was under quarantine due to Ruth contracting Scarlet Fever while the Jewish men in the neighborhood were being rounded up by the Nazis. Tragically, Ruth’s entire Vilna extended family perished in the Holocaust. Her experience of the Holocaust stayed with her through her life and impacted her desire to protest and stand up to injustice. In recent years she attended the Holocaust Survivors Group at Jewish Family Services. She and two other Holocaust group members traveled to the Holocaust Museum’s 10th year anniversary as 

representatives of the group. Their experience was the subject of a documentary film called “Bashert: Reflections on the Holocaust.” She also sang in a Yiddish choir at the Berkeley Jewish Community Center. 

After arriving in the U.S. at age 14, Ruth’s family settled in New York, living in the Washington Heights, where they shared an apartment with Ruth’s uncle and aunt, also refugees. Her teenage friends in New York were a group of other German and Austrian Jewish immigrants who belonged to Habonim, the youth movement of the Labor Zionist Organization. Ruth’s mother had been sick at the time the family immigrated. Soon after arriving in the U.S. she was diagnosed with breast cancer, and she died when Ruth was 16. 

Ruth entered the New York public high school not speaking any English. She told a story of not realizing until the end of the school year that the teacher was writing the daily homework assignments on the blackboard. Because she knew European history and learned quickly, she was skipped two grades and graduated high school at age 16. 

Alfred Michaels was one of Ruth’s group of high school friends. Alfred had also escaped from the Nazis. He had grown up in Hamburg, Germany. In 1938, the day after Kristallnacht, when the Nazis attacked Jewish businesses en masse, smashing their windows, his family secured a ticket for him on an ocean liner, and sent him, on his own, to America. Ruth and Alfred were married by the Justice of the Peace, with Ruth’s father and her best girlfriend as witnesses. She remembered with a bit of humor how her girlfriend was better dressed than she was, and the justice of the peace mistook her girlfriend for the bride. 

As a teenager, Ruth dreamed of becoming a pioneer settler of Israel. She claimed to have decided to study botany because she thought it was the closest thing to studying farming. Ruth continued her education after City College in New York, getting her Masters Degree at MIT in Boston. 

In 1949 the State of Israel was declared and after, Israel won its War of Independence. In 1950, now pregnant, Ruth and Alfred went to Israel, possibly to settle there. They lived on a Kibbutz, an agricultural, collective community with socialist ideals. Her son, Yoram (later Gerald/Jerry), was born in April, 1950. 

In 1952 the family came back to New York to an apartment in Kew Gardens in Queens. Ronnie was born in 1953. In 1956, with help from Ruth’s father, Ruth and Alfred bought a home in New City, New York, one of the earliest New York suburbs. Ruth was very close to her father, Rudolf, who visited each weekend, taking a bus from the Washington Heights to be with her and his grandchildren. Through their involvement in Jewish organizations, like the American Jewish Congress, they participated in some of the activities of the civil rights movement. As a family, Al, Ruth, Jerry and Ronnie acted as a test case at a swimming lake to prove that an African American family was being illegally denied entry. 

Ruth went back to work and then to continue her education and earn her Ph.D from Columbia University when her younger son was 8 years old. In 1962 Al took a job in Detroit working for Histadrut, the Israeli labor union, and the family followed in 1963. Ruth was hired at a research laboratory at Wayne State University where she made some close international friends. Ruth and Al were very active in the Labor Zionist Movement in Detroit and their children participated in the Zionist youth organization, Habonim. 

In 1968, Al and Ruth adopted Sandy, who was born and lived in Korea for her first 11 years before joining the family. Sandy learned English and became a student at the Friends School of Detroit. 

Ruth and Al divorced in 1977, and Ruth lived in Ann Arbor for a few years, near the University of Michigan where both her sons attended. Sandy and Ruth also lived together in Ann Arbor. In Ann Arbor, Ruth met Craig Wilder, who had been a minister and army chaplain. She also began spending a few months each year in Berkeley, California, and eventually moved there full time in around 1987. She and Craig married in California. As a result of dealing with Craig’s mental health issues, Ruth also became active in the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) and other grass roots mental health organizations. 

After Craig’s death in 1989, Ruth remained very active with feminist organizations, progressive political organizations, and Wiccan spiritual organizations. She had a large circle of friends. In 1988 Ruth’s son Jerry and his family moved to the Bay Area and settled just a 15 minute drive away. Ruth played a large 


part in all of her grandchildren’s lives, visiting Rafi in Ronnie’s home in Boston and David in Sandy’s home in Las Vegas. Ruth traveled to Guatemala for several years and sponsored a child there who she stayed in touch with as she became a young woman. Ruth came out as a lesbian and had several long term relationships with women, including her last relationship with Julie Craig. She wrote many of her life stories through her participation in the Mother Tongue Feminist Theater Collective. She stood with Women in Black at their weekly protests of Israel’s occupation of the Palestinian territories. She lived on Virginia Street near campus in North Berkeley for about 20 years and then for about 10 years she lived at Strawberry Creek Lodge a self-run senior resident community where she was active in committees and wrote articles for the newsletter on health and politics. Ruth created community and chosen family throughout her life, from an Israeli student she took in to her home in Detroit to her housekeeper in Berkeley, both of whom became lifelong friends. She celebrated her major birthdays with her children, grandchildren, and friends. In her last years living independently, she received care and companionship in her home from Karen Flowers, and she spent her last year at the Reutlinger Community in Danville. 

Ruth remained the matriarch of her family until her death. 

She is survived by her sons Jerry and Ronnie, their wives Carrie and Kathy, her daughter Sandra, her grandchildren Claire, Julia, David, and Rafi, and her great grandchild Daan.


Opinion

Editorials

Who will speak for Berkeley (and the East Bay) in Sacramento?

Becky O'Malley
Sunday July 30, 2017 - 01:01:00 PM

UPDATE, 8-4-15. It's summer and the Berkeley City Council is on its long vacation, so I might not get around to a new editorial this week, and some of our regulars are also away. Stay in touch--some new pieces are in, and more on the way. And also, click "more" if you haven't read the previous editorial.  


“All politics is local.”

That’s a truism or perhaps a cliché often attributed to one-time Speaker of the House Tip O’Neill, but it probably predates him. With today’s instant updates from social media, it’s desperately hard not to be distracted by the Washington circus, but stuff is happening at the state and local levels whether we notice it or not.

Local outrages are not so easy to miss. Around here last week in certain segments of the online opinionate there’s been justifiable outrage about the fact that Berkeley has no public toilets which are open 24/7, which is hard on people who have no homes and therefore no private toilets.

Citizen efforts to provide a portable toilet for the very civilized encampment of otherwise homeless people next to BART on Adeline Street have been stalled for much too long in a typical Kafkesque bureaucratic nightmare with Berkeley officials. Maybe next week they’ll get lucky, but meanwhile we owe a big vote of thanks to Sweet Adeline bakery for graciously sharing their facilities with needy residents.

This struggle has sucked up a lot of energy from the loosely defined Friends of Adeline, who have been trying to prevent gentrification by speculators who’d like to use all the available development sites in their neighborhood to construct market rate extravaganzas instead of low-cost housing. But it’s hard to completely forget about what’s been happening when the resultant buildings loom ever larger and definitely uglier in what used to be the viewshed for south central Berkeley. (Case in point: Parker Place. Huge, vacuous, pricey and vacant.)

It’s easy, however, to miss why this change is happening.

It’s all being orchestrated at levels outside local. One level of outsider manipulation manifests itself actually and symbolically as “Plan Bay Area”. In a sentence or two, that’s a scheme which purports to be the solution for the very real shortage of housing for the many who aren’t paid enough, those employed on the fringes of the boom created by technical corporations, to compete with employees and principals of such lucrative enterprises for Bay Area housing.

Advocates of this religion believe foolishly in the simplistic high-school Econ 1 model of market optimization: They think that building lots of expensive apartments on transit lines in already dense cities will keep techies out of their cars and out of the suburbs.

I’m going to choose not to reiterate the logical challenges to that theory here, because I’ve done it all too often elsewhere. However, what it means, bottom line, is that development interests have taken control of regional planning, and the tune they’re calling is “Build, Baby, Build”.

You might reasonably hope that someone we’ve sent to the state level (where there’s a Democratic governor and a Dem supermajority) would be watching out for local interests. That’s one reason State Assemblymember Tony Thurmond was elected with big Berkeley backing, because his opponent was funded by corporate clients. But now many here who worked hard for him are disappointed to learn that he wants to become State Superintendent of Public Instruction instead sticking with the Assembly. Oh well…

Meanwhile, the Governor and his corporate-Dem buddies are backing a horrendous assortment of bills designed to strip local governments of most of their current control over what kind of edifices are built in their towns.

You knew that, right? Numero Uno at the moment, sponsored by former San Francisco supervisor Scott Wiener, is SB35.

And of course, local control of planning is not the only issue that counts, but it’s the one most likely to create contention among Democrats, so it could be the one that makes up your mind when you decide which assembly candidate to back. 

State Senator Nancy Skinner, with many corporate contributors, is hand-in-glove with the Weiner/Brown scheme, which leaves our next assembly member, whoever he or she might be, as the only possible alternative. 

That marvel of social engineering, a top-two primary election, will be held on June 5, 2018, and the general election will be held on November 6, 2018. The filing deadline is March 9, 2018 for major party candidates, and for write-in candidates May 22. 

That’s less than a year away, folks, so they’re off and running. 

What makes it tricky is that most voters think that big elections are held every four years, and in November. But with the top-two system, in a district where just about everyone claims to be some kind of a Democrat, the real excitement is in June, every two years. And our very own Fifteenth Assembly District is a prime prize in that race. 

Which is why just about everyone in the district is talking about running. At last count, let’s see, in no particular order, I’ve heard talk of: 

Andy Katz, Ben Bartlett, Buffy Wicks, Dan Kalb, Judy Appel, Diane Martinez, Jean Quan and Jovanka Beckles, with apologies to anyone I’ve forgotten. 

Last week I was invited to the Wellstone Democratic Club’s annual picnic, and it gave me a unique opportunity to get a brief first look at four of them, who showed up eager to court the favors of members of the most powerful progressive Democratic club in the east bay. 

It was a picnic, not an interview or a panel discussion, when I didn’t really have a chance to quiz the candidates, so I decided to shortcut the process by just asking on the fly what they thought of SB35. And no, I didn’t tell them it was off the record, but I’m sure they didn’t reveal anything they wouldn’t have said to anyone at the picnic. 

You might wonder what SB35 is. For an opinionated take-down, see Alarming housing bill heading for approval, by Peter Cohen and Fernando Marti, San Franciso affordable housing activists. They describe it thus: 

“Known as the ‘By-Right Development’ bill, Senate Bill 35 would eliminate the role of the community and the local commission or city council in the approvals of ‘infill’ real estate development projects.” 

That would include almost all of A.D. 15. No more public hearings for you, Berkeley, Oakland, Richmond! 

For my quick and dirty litmus test, I started with one of the two women that I’d never met. First up was Jovanka Beckles, a Richmond city council member elected on the Richmond Progressive Alliance slate. She’s obviously smart, verbal, outspoken, strikingly attractive, African-American. full of good ideas and already endorsed by several people I respect, including Bernie Sanders. 

But she didn’t recognize the SB35 bill number. However, when I told her what I thought it entails, she didn’t like the concept, because she worries about Richmond being the next opportunity site for gentrification which would squeeze out current brown-skinned residents. 

Next on my list were Andy Katz and Dan Kalb, not strikingly dissimilar. Both are White men of a certain age. Andy might be in his mid-30s, Dan maybe in his 40s. 

Both come across as earnest, wonky and well-informed. Dan is on the Oakland City Council, Andy on the East Bay Municipal Utilities District board. 

The main difference might be in temperament. Andy, whom I’ve know slightly for years, seems cautious—he was reluctant to volunteer a final opinion on SB35, saying he hadn’t yet read the most recent amendments. Dan, on the other hand, quickly characterized SB35 as bad, but then hedged a bit by saying he hadn’t read the amendments either. 

Either one would probably make a fine assemblymember, not flashy but competent. 

Finally, I talked to Buffy Wicks. I’m ashamed to admit that I identified her at the picnic because someone told me she was the only person there who looked like her name was Buffy. And she does: a perky 40ish blonde White woman. I asked her about SB35, and with no hesitation she said she supports it, as well as the whole package of the other corporate developer-backed bills. 

Uh-oh. We didn’t talk much more. 

After the picnic, I looked her up online, and got an eye-opening look at her back story. She’s clearly a national professional political operative, with friends in all the right places. A Politico piece about her was aptly headlined BUFFY WICKS Jumps into Ebay Race, a 

In fact, what she’s doing is usually called parachuting in, and with a golden parachute at that. It’s rumored that her war chest is already in the hundreds of thousands, with a million or more anticipated. She’s only lived here for a little over a year and has held no previous elected office anywhere, but she’s wired. 

From her campaign website: “Buffy is proud to have been an architect of President Obama’s 2008 and 2012 campaigns. She is credited with innovating Obama’s grassroots organizing model – from right here in Oakland.” 

Unfortunately perhaps, I happen to be reading Steve Phillips’ best-selling Brown is the New White, which advances the thesis that emphasizing demographics with a coalition of non-Whites and their White allies, was the winning strategy for Obama. 

In a chapter provocatively entitled Fewer Smart-Ass White Boys, under the equally provocative sub-head MYTH 2: BRILLIANT WHITE CAMPAIGN STRATEGISTS GOT OBAMA ELECTED, he says that “The voters of color who provided the margin of difference in 2008 and 2012 didn’t cast their vote for a historic candidacy because the White hands of tech-savvy whiz kids typed fancy code on computer keyboards. They were carrying on the legacy of hundreds of years of struggle.” 

Maybe he was referring to people like Wicks, maybe not, but he’s got a point. Since his book came out last fall, he’s had a couple of good op-eds in the New York Times suggesting that the official Democratic party should concentrate on mobilizing its natural allies among the non-White voters instead of trying to win back the mythical working class White men who voted for Trump. Sadly, the DCCC’s recent announcement of “A Better Deal” in a backwoods Virginia town seems to indicate that they haven’t yet gotten the memo. How does Wicks stand on this spectrum, I wonder? 

Next, I accepted an invitation signed by former Berkeley Mayor Gus Newport, former Berkeley councilmember Ying Lee, Friends of Adeline organizer Margy Wilkinson and others to a meet-and-greet with Jovanka Beckles in a storefront child care center on Adeline. At the event I recognized some key long-time activists in the East Bay African-American community. 

Let’s just end this by saying that my second look at Beckles was even more impressive than my first. She opened herself up to a round of questions from each and every one of the 30 or so attendees, and gave quick on-target answers on a lot of hard topics, including the Sacramento trend to take environmental controls away from local governments. 

At the moment, I might be old-school, but I think I’d prefer an assembly member with substantial local experience. I know I’d prefer that another person of color replace Tony Thurmond, in a state where we have all too few African-Americans in state office. And also, how about a woman, another under-represented group in Sacramento? 

With these criteria in mind, Beckles looks pretty good right now, but I’d like to have the same close look at the cast of thousands who aspire to take this seat before deciding which to support, so I’m awaiting invitations from the other candidates. As academics angling for the next grant often say, “Further research necessary”. 

 

 

 


The Editor's Back Fence


Columns

DISPATCHES FROM THE EDGE: Middle East Chaos

Conn Hallinan
Friday July 28, 2017 - 02:41:00 PM

The splintering of the powerful Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) into warring camps—with Qatar, supported by Turkey and Iran, on one side, and Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates (UAE), supported by Egypt, on the other—has less to do with disagreements over foreign policy and religion than with internal political and economic developments in the Middle East. The ostensible rationale the GCC gave on June 4 for breaking relations with Qatar and placing the tiny country under a blockade is that Doha is aiding “terrorist’ organizations. The real reasons are considerably more complex, particularly among the major players. 

Middle East journalist Patrick Cockburn once described the Syrian civil war as a three-dimensional chess game with five players and no rules. In the case of the Qatar crisis, the players have doubled and abandoned the symmetry of the chessboard for “Go,” Mahjong, and Bridge. 

Tensions among members of the GCC are longstanding. In the case of Qatar, they date back to 1995, when the father of the current ruler, Emir Tamin Al Thani, shoved his own father out of power. According Simon Henderson to of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, Saudi Arabia and the UAE “regarded the family coup as a dangerous precedent to Gulf ruling families” and tried to organize a counter coup. The coup was exposed, however, and called off. 

Riyadh is demanding that Qatar sever relations with Iran—an improbable outcome given that the two countries share a natural gas field in the Persian Gulf—and end Doha’s cozy ties to the Muslim Brotherhood. Indeed, if there is any entity in the Middle East that the Saudis hate—and fear—more than Iran, it is the Brotherhood. Riyadh was instrumental in the 2013 overthrow of the Brotherhood government in Egypt and has allied itself with the Israelis to marginalize Hamas, the Palestinian version of the Brotherhood that dominates Gaza. 

But fault lines in the GCC do not run only between Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Qatar. Oman, at the Gulf’s mouth, has always marched to its own drummer, maintaining close ties with Saudi Arabia’s regional nemesis, Iran, and refusing to go along with Riyadh’s war against the Houthi in Yemen. Kuwait has also balked at Saudi dominance of the GCC, has refused to join the blockade against Doha, and is trying to play mediator in the current crisis. 

The siege of Qatar was launched shortly after Donald Trump’s visit to Saudi Arabia, when the Saudi’s put on a show for the U.S. President that was over the top even by the monarchy’s standards. Wooed with massive billboards and garish sword dances, Trump soaked up the Saudi’s view of the Middle East, attacked Iran as a supporter of terrorism and apparently green-lighted the blockade of Qatar. He even tried to take credit for it. 

Saudi Arabia, backed by Bahrain, Egypt, and the UAE, along with a cast of minor players, made 13 demands on Doha that it could only meet by abandoning its sovereignty. They range from the impossible—end all contacts with Iran—to the improbable—close the Turkish base—to the unlikely—dismantle the popular and lucrative media giant, Al Jazeera. The “terrorists” Doha is accused of supporting are the Brotherhood, which the Saudi’s and the Egyptians consider a terrorist organization, an opinion not shared by the U.S. or the European Union. 

On the surface this is about Sunni Saudi Arabia vs. Shiite Iran, but while religious differences do play an important role in recruiting and motivating some of the players, this is not a battle over a schism in Islam. Most importantly, it is not about “terrorism,” since many of the countries involved are up to their elbows in supporting extremist organizations. Indeed, Saudi Arabia’s reactionary Wahhabi interpretation of Islam is the root ideology for groups like the Islamic State (IS) and al-Qaeda, and all the parties are backing a variety of extremists in Syria and Libya’s civil wars. 

The attack on Qatar is part of Saudi Arabia’s aggressive new foreign policy that is being led by Crown Prince and Defense Minister Mohammad bin Salman. Since being declared “monarch-in-waiting” by King Salman Al Saud, Mohammed has launched a disastrous war in Yemen that has killed more than 10,000 civilians, sparked a country-wide cholera epidemic, and drains at least $700 million a month from Saudi Arabia’s treasury. Given the depressed price for oil and a growing population—70 percent of which is under 30 and much of it unemployed—it is not a cost the monarchy can continue sustain, especially with the Saudi economy falling into recession.  

Underlying the Saudi’s new-found aggression is fear. First, fear that the kind of Islamic governance modeled by the Muslim Brotherhood poses a threat to the absolutism of the Gulf monarchs. Fear that Iran’s nuclear pact with the U.S., the EU and the UN is allowing Tehran to break out of its economic isolation and turn itself into a rival power center in the Middle East. And fear that anything but a united front by the GCC—led by Riyadh—will encourage the House of Saud’s internal and external critics. 

So far, the attempt to blockade Qatar has been more an annoyance than a serious threat to Doha. Turkey and Iran are pouring supplies into Qatar, and the Turks are deploying up to 1,000 troops at a base near the capital. There are also some 10,000 U.S. troops at Qatar’s Al Udeid Airfield, Washington’s largest base in the Middle East and one central to the war on the Islamic State in Syria and Iraq. Any invasion aimed at overthrowing the Qatar regime risks a clash with Turkey and the U.S.  

While Egypt is part of the anti-Qatari alliance—the Egyptians are angry at Doha for not supporting Cairo’s side in the Libyan civil war, and the Egyptian regime also hates the Brotherhood—it is hardly an enthusiastic ally. Saudi Arabia keeps Egypt’s economy afloat, and so long as the Riyadh keeps writing checks, Cairo is on board. But Egypt is keeping the Yemen war at arm’s length—it flat out refused to contribute troops and is not comfortable with Saudi Arabia’s version of Islam. Cairo is currently in a nasty fight with its own Wahhabist-inspired extremists. Egypt also maintains diplomatic relations with Iran. 

Besides the UAE, the other Saud allies don’t count for much in this fight. Sudan will send troops—if Riyadh pays for them—but not very many. Bahrain is on board, but only because the Saudi and UAE armies are sitting on local Shiite opposition. Yemen and Libya are part of the anti-Qatar alliance, but both are essentially failed states. And while the Maldives is a nice place to vacation, it doesn’t have a lot of weight to throw around.  

On the other hand, long-time Saudi ally Pakistan has made it clear it is not part of this blockade, nor will it break with Qatar or downgrade relations with Iran. When Riyadh asked for Pakistan troops in Yemen, the national parliament voted unanimously to have nothing to do with Riyadh’s jihad on the poorest country in the Middle East. 

The largely Muslim nations of Malaysia and Indonesia are also maintaining relations with Qatar, and Saudi ally Morocco offered to send food to Doha. In brief, it is not clear who is more isolated here. 

While President Trump supports the Saudis, his Defense Department and State Department are working to resolve the crisis. U.S. Sec. of State Rex Tillerson just finished a trip to the Gulf in an effort to end the blockade, and the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee is threatening to hold up arms sales to Riyadh unless the dispute is resolved. The latter is no minor threat. Saudi Arabia would have serious difficulties carrying out the war in Yemen without U.S. weaponry.  

And the reverse of the coin? 

Doha’s allies have a variety of agendas, not all of which mesh. 

Iran has correct, but hardly warm, relations with Qatar. Both countries need to cooperate to exploit the South Pars gas field, and Tehran appreciated that Doha was always a reluctant member of the anti-Iran coalition, telling the U.S. it could not use Qatari bases to attack Iran.  

Iran is certainly interested in anything that divides the GCC. The Iranians would also like Qatar to invest in upgrading Iran’s energy industry and maybe cutting them in on the $177 billion in construction projects that Doha is lining up in preparation for hosting the 2022 World Cup Games. Also, some 30,000 Iranians live in Qatar. 

Figuring out Turkey these days can reduce one to reading tea leaves.  

On one hand, Ankara’s support for Qatar seems obvious. Qatar backs the Brotherhood, and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s Justice and Development Party is a Turkish variety of the Brotherhood, albeit one focused more on power than ideology. Erdogan was a strong supporter of the Egyptian Brotherhood and relations between Cairo and Ankara went into the deep freeze when Egypt’s military overthrew the Islamist organization.  

Qatar is also an important source of finances for Ankara, whose fragile economy needs every bit of help it can get. Turkey’s large construction industry would like to land some of the multi-billion construction contracts the World Cup games will generate. Turkish construction projects in Qatar already amount to $13.7 billion. 

On the other hand, Turkey is also trying to woo Saudi Arabia and other Gulf monarchies for their investments. Erdogan even joined in the GCC’s attacks on Iran last spring, accusing Tehran of “Persian nationalist expansion,” a comment that distressed Turkey’s business community. As the sanctions on Iran ease, Turkish firms see that country’s big, well-educated population as a potential gold mine. 

The Turkish President has since turned down the anti-Iran rhetoric, and Ankara and Tehran have been consulting over the Qatar crisis. The first supportive phone call Erdogan took during the attempted coup last year was from Qatar’s emir, and the prickly Turkish President has not forgotten that some other GCC members were silent for several days. Erdogan recently suggested that the UAE had a hand in the coup. 

Is this personal for Turkey’s president? No, but Erdogan is the Middle East leader who most resembles Donald Trump: he shoots from the hip and holds grudges. The difference is that he is far smarter and better informed than the U.S. President and knows when to cut his losses.  

His apology to the Russians after shooting down one of their fighter-bombers is a case in point. Erdogan first threatened Moscow with war, but eventually trotted off to St. Petersburg, hat in hand, to make nice with Russian President Vladimir Putin. And after hinting that the Americans were behind the 2016 coup, he recently met with Tillerson in Istanbul to smooth things out. Turkey recognizes that it will need Moscow and Washington to settle the war in Syria.  

The Russians have been carefully neutral, consulted with Turkey and Iran, and have called on all parties to peacefully resolve their differences.  

There is not likely to be a quick end to the Qatar crisis, because Saudi Arabia keeps doubling down on one disastrous foreign policy decision after another, including breaking up the Arab world’s only viable economic bloc. But there are developments in the region that may eventually force Riyadh to back off.  

The Syrian War looks like it is headed for a solution, although the outcome is anything but certain. The Yemen War has reached crisis proportions—the UN describes it as the number one human emergency on the globe—and pressure is growing for the U.S. and Britain to wind down their support for the Saudi alliance. And Iran is slowly but steadily reclaiming its role as a leading force in the Middle East and Central Asia.  

There is much that could go wrong. There could be a disastrous war with Iran, currently being pushed by Saudi Arabia, Israel and neo-conservatives in the U.S. and Russia, the U.S. and Turkey could fall out over Syria. The Middle East is an easy place to get into trouble. But if there are dangers, so too are there possibilities, and from those springs hope. 

 


Conn Hallinan can be read at dispatchesfromtheedgeblog.wordpress.com and middleempireseries.wordpress.com 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



THE PUBLIC EYE: Trump: Bring Back the Fifties

Bob Burnett
Friday July 28, 2017 - 02:26:00 PM

In March of 2016, presidential candidate Donald Trump was asked: "Your slogan is 'Make America Great Again,' When was America actually great?" Trump responded that America was last great in the late forties and the fifties. Sorry Donald; I remember that period and it wasn't great.Trump explained that after World War II: "We were not pushed around, we were respected by everybody... we were pretty much doing what we had to do." Most Trump voters agree with this sentiment , but their response is influenced by when they were born -- for example, Trump supporters born in the sixties think the eighties were great. 

As to be expected, Trump's recollection of the fifties is way off. He recalls, "We were not pushed around, we were respected by everybody..." But this was the era of the Cold War with Russia (U.S.S.R.). Trump conveniently forgets the "Iron Curtain" and the threat of nuclear war. (Many of us, who lived through that period, remember "duck and cover" exercises where students prepared for a Russian nuclear attack.) The fifties era was dominated by anti-communist rhetoric. There was a "Red scare" led by anti-communist zealots such as Senator Joseph McCarthy. 

Now Trump wants to normalize relations with Russia and replace the Cold War, in the public consciousness, with the threat of a global war with terrorists. Trump has combined this dangerous image with his vision of an invasion by undocumented immigrants; Trump's obsession with building a wall along the southern border stems in large part from his obsession with these immigrants. Thus Trump would replace the "Red scare" of the fifties with a new "brown scare." 

Trump recalls the fifties as a period where, "we were pretty much doing what we had to do." He's ignoring the fact that a huge portion of the world -- the USSR and mainland China -- was "off limits" to Americans. Nonetheless, during the fifties US corporations dominated trade in "the free world." (We came out of World War II with a robust economy whereas the economies of most of our allies had been decimated by the war.) It's understandable that Trump, and his supporters, long for a simpler time when the US economy ran the world and and American companies dominated trade. Realistically, that time is long gone. We now live in a much different, global economy. 

One way to interpret Trump's comments, "We were not pushed around, we were respected by everybody," is that he is referring to the United States. Another way to interpret this remark is that he is referring to white folks, white men in particular. Indeed, the fifties represents the zenith of what UC professor George Lakoff has described as the "strict father" morality: "In the strict father family, father knows best. He knows right from wrong and has the ultimate authority to make sure his children and his spouse do what he says... This reasoning shows up in conservative politics in which the poor are seen as lazy and undeserving, and the rich as deserving their wealth." In many regards, from a cultural standpoint, the fifties was the last decade where white men reigned supreme. 

Obviously, Trump ignores the fact that the late forties and early fifties witnessed a resurgence of white supremacy -- which had been somewhat muted during the war years. After the end of World War II, "Jim Crow" laws were strictly enforced in most parts of the country and many people of color were forced to use segregated facilities. (The initial battle against segregation began in 1955 with the Montgomery bus boycott and culminated in the 1964 Civil Rights Act.) In general, the late forties and early fifties was a period of unfettered racism and sexism. (Until the Trump era, this was the last period where hate and bigotry were considered politically correct.) 

So, when Trump says he want to "Make America Great Again," he's calling for a return to the mentality of the fifties. In terms of foreign policy, he wants America to be the top dog, to once again be the world's policeman. And in terms of domestic policy, he's calling for a return to the era of white supremacy, to the period where straight protestant white males ruled American cultural life. Trump is calling for an end to "political correctness" and, indeed, for an end to everyday decency. 

Trump doesn't actually want to "Make America Great Again," his intention is to "Make America Hate Again." 

 


Bob Burnett is a Berkeley writer and activist. He can be reached at bburnett@sonic.net or @BobWBurnett 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


ON MENTAL ILLNESS: "Attainment" Supported by Treatment

Jack Bragen
Thursday July 27, 2017 - 02:22:00 PM

A rationale of some who become noncompliant with mental health treatment is the idea that we could fix our mental illness with "enlightenment." That would be a Buddhist type of enlightenment, or, for some, it might be prayer of a Christian type—or, it might be piousness of some other religious practice.  

My experience has been that it never hurts to learn more about how my mind works. For more than thirty years, I have done a massive amount of cognitive work, based partly on Buddhist concepts, and based on observing my mind.  

That said, I have found that there is no amount of meditation I can do that fixes the "hardware" problem that my brain has. While mindfulness can help with some of my symptoms and can also help in dealing with meditation side effects, trying to go without medication, if I tried that, would continue to be foolish, and a disaster.  

There is definitely a great role that meditation can fulfill in the life of a mentally ill person. It can help in the acceptance of the reality of being mentally ill. It can help tremendously in the absurd life situations that come with being mentally ill in society. These include the fact of living in poverty due to being unable to work, being at the mercy of government authorities, being shunned by those who are prejudiced against mentally ill people; and getting up in the morning to face another day.  

Many people have self-esteem issues related to mental illness. The common belief is that we are somehow "less" if we are mentally ill and if we have to take psychiatric medication to survive. Being unable to work, (albeit many mentally ill people actually are able to work) is yet another blow to self-esteem.  

Meditation allows me to dis-identify with the idea of having an "imperfection."  

Medication and therapy are necessary, despite all of the work I have done to make my mind better. You could see treatment as the foundation upon which meditation is constructed. If the brain is continuously generating erroneous data, meaning delusions and hallucinations, or, if the mind is unwilling to come out of clinical depression or mania, there is no point in trying to fix it with cognitive techniques, mindfulness, or meditation--the brain just isn't working.  

Should we practice meditation? I would give an emphatic yes. Should we continue to comply with treatment? Absolutely, yes. Meds don't usually block meditation. Generally, medicating the brain is what makes meditation possible, because the brain is working somewhat normally and isn't taken over by symptoms.  

Meditation can help us rid ourselves of behavior problems that continue to nag us despite being in treatment. By learning from mistakes, and learning how we can free ourselves of false needs, it makes it far easier to produce better behavior.  

Meditation, mindfulness, cognitive therapy and/or prayer, are all things that can help people with mental illness. Yet, let's not forget conventional treatment; these are biologically produced conditions.  


ECLECTIC RANT: Open letter to trumpsters

Ralph E. Stone
Friday July 28, 2017 - 02:54:00 PM

Dear Trumpsters:

Even after observing Trump's hate-filled, bullying campaign for president, I can understand, but not excuse, why you voted for him.

Perhaps, you thought Trump would bring change for the common folk or you just couldn't vote for a woman who had so much perceived baggage. Of course, you totally disregarded Trump's obvious baggage.

Since taking office, Trump has done nothing for the average working man and woman. Instead, he has championed big business and the wealthy. In sum, Trump's presidency to date is grounded in ignorance, irrationality, and immorality.

You Trumpsters are in deep self-denial that is downright shameful. I implore you to wake up and face reality. You really don't want the America envisioned by Trump. 


Arts & Events

New: Theater Reviews: Two Excellent Small Company Productions of Shakespeare--'Midsummer Night's Dream' Free! at Hinkel Park and 'Hamlet at the Phoenix Theatre

Ken Bullockl
Saturday July 29, 2017 - 12:48:00 PM

Summer's Shakespeare time, hereabouts, and excellent productions of two of his best-known plays have just opened--his fantastic comedy 'A Midsummer Night's Dream,' staged for free at the old Civil Works administration (CWA) amphitheater in John Hinkel Park, and the most iconic Shakespearean tragedy of all, 'Hamlet, Prince of Denmark,' at the intimate Phoenix Theatre in the Native Sons Building near Union Square in San Francisco. 

--''If we shadows have offended ... " Puck's epilogue to and apology for the bawdy comedy of 'A Midsummer Night's Dream,' which mocks social conventions stifling young love, love itself--and finally theater--is maybe the archetypal apology of artists standing in front of their peers to show them what they're like ... 

What's often passed off as a light, old-fashioned comic fantasia for summer diversion--and it has that aspect--is also a cunningly sophisticated thing, operating on three overlapping layers at once--the young lovers of the ancient city of Athens (and their king, Theseus, who's just taken Hippolyta, Queen of the Amazons, captive, intending to marry her) who take to the woods to escape, or pursue, and end up enchanted and romantically confused; the Rude Mechanicals, craftsmen who moonlight as thespians, rehearsing to put on an entertainment for Theseus and Hippolyta's wedding, until their bombastic lead, Bottom the Weaver, is transfigured with an ass' head; and the band of fairies in the woods, whose own performance consists of trickery, of mortals and each other, Oberon their king commisioning his waggish jester Puck to importune his feuding fairy queen, Titania, which ends when Titania falls in love with ass-headed Bottom. 

And that's the success of Inferno Theatre, with a big (20 person), young cast, most new to Inferno, consolidating into an active. flexible ensemble with the direction of Inferno's founder, Giulio Perrone, whose expertise in both Grotowskian style contemporary theater and the venerable Commedia Dell'Arte comedy of the Renaissance (with roots going back to antiquity, the comic mimes who performed when these romances originally entertained around the Mediterranean) informs every scene, tableau and vignette. 

Inferno's production nimbly juggles the three stories, which slide seemlessly and coyly together and apart, graced with physical comedy, song, dance and acrobatics, often seen multiply at once. To quickly single out three of the performers, Sharon Shao as Helena, the spurned admirer of Demetrius, who pursues Lysander's love Hermia instead, proves a lithe practitioner of physical comedy, cast against type in a way as Helena, but interpreting the part perfectly, with charm, exceptional focus and clarity--and plenty of juice ... enchanting and enchanted Indigo Jackson as Titania, the Fairy Queen, also fine as a gestural actor (she's the choreographer as well), her ethereal character heightened, not diminished by the bawdy love affair with Bottom as the ass ... and Jack Nicolaus, who played a clown in last summer's splendid production of 'The Tempest' by Inferno at Hinkel, again the genial, if overbearing comedian, too willing to take on any and all roles, till he's cast in one by the fairies he never auditioned for. His transformation, realized as he gallops roaring, ass-headed, across the outdoor stage with Puck astride him as the rehearsing Mechanicals scatter, is a great tour-de-force of magical slapstick. 

At the play's conclusion, the opening day audience, many of them picnicking families of all ages, roared out an ovation. Each of Inferno's three annual Shakespeare plays at Hinkel has been intriguing--and the last two have topped what came before. It's a delightful way to spend a summer afternoon in the amphitheater's hollw under the branches of the park.  

Saturdays and Sundays at 4 through August 13 at John Hinkel Park, 41 Somerset (take Southampton off northbound Arlington onto Somerset), not far from Indian Rock. For questions & to reserve spots on the amphitheater teraaces, especially for people of limited mobility, infernotheatrecompany@gmail.com or call 229-8137. Lawn chairs, cushions, blankets, layered clothing advised. infernotheatre.org 

--"What a piece of work is man! ... And yet to me, what is this quintessence of dust?" Distracted, the seemingly mad Prince of Denmark (Lijesh Krishnan as Hamlet, by turns boyish and imposing) extolls the virtues of humanity and parades his own disgust in a soliloquy witnessed by his bemused and alarmed schoolmates, Rosenkrantz and Guidenstern (a marvellously syncophantic comic duo, Alan Quismorio and Myles Wynn), who Hamlet skewers satirically as agents of his uncle the king, in the Ninjaz of Drama's lucid production of this most elusive of great plays at the Phoenix Theatre near Union Square in San Francisco. 

Ninjaz founder Rey Carolino has directed a committed ensemble of 13 to realize a rendering of 'Hamlet' rare in its fluid movement, scene to scene, and its clarity of both parts and the whole. Like last year's production of 'Lear,' which Carolino also directed, this 'Hamlet,' trickier in so many ways to do, is constantly illuminated by lines and scenes that suddenly stand out as if the spectator (well. this spectator) had never heard or seen them before. The court scenes in particular are arresting in their atmosphere. And the Player King's speech (spoken excellently by Greg Gutting, also a fine Osric), requested by Hamlet and alternately panned and admired by the unctious Polonius (a fine Geoffrey Colton, last year's Lear--and a fine sarcastci Gravedigger in this show), is wonderfully mimed by the other players (Jackie Haslam, Tim Foley, Tracey Baxter), whose 'Murder of Gonzago,'the "mousetrap" play-within-a-play "to catch a king!" (an alternately smooth and discomfitted Claudius, well-presented by Federico Edwards) is another high point, as are the appearances of Hamlet's father's ghost (played with gravity by Edwards) on battlements and in bedchamber when Hamlet corners his mother the queen (a splendid Kathryn Wood). 

David Abad has expertly cut the script, as he did with 'Lear' before. I couldn't always agree with Carolino and Abad's presentation of Ophelia and Hamlet, displacing their encounter from immediately after his most famous soliloquy, contemplating death, maybe suicide, then greeting his erstwhile love: "Nymph, in thy orisons be all my sins remembered," which as philosopher Gaston Bachelard commented, immediately identifies Ophelia as a kind of scapegoat for suicide or sacrifice--and "nymph" suggesting the water where she drowns, truly mad as Hamlet toyed with madness. Her lines, in many cases, must be spoken in a kind of ironic style, which I think blunts the integral meaning, paired so closely with Hamlet's. 

But this is at most a quibble. This production, which has plenty of contemporary touches, abandons the usual, rather passive anachronistic "interpretation" of Shakespeare, which has become such a cliché--kitsch, even, a one-to-one transference of time and place, "signifying nothing"--and attempts an original interpretation, which works in light of its genuine contemporary sense, and with an excellent performance by Emily Ludlow. 

Arcady Darter (who handled the choreography) as Laertes and Krista White (fight coordinator) as Horatio are cast croos-gender successfully, a contemporary practice with good results here. Maria Graham's costuming is imaginative.  

There are few enough productions of 'Hamlet' that grasp asense of the whole play. It's a poetic chimera, pressed into service over the centuries to reflect afull spectrum of ideas--and this one deserves its place with the truly cognizant renderings. I hope you see it. 

Thursdays through Saturdays at 8 through August 5, with a 3 pm matinee Sunday July 30, at Phoenix Theatre, 414 Mason, suite 601, just off Geary, a block from Union Square. $20-$25 (discount tickets through Goldstar, all ticket lnks at ninjazofdrama.com)


West Edge Opera offers an evening of Mozart's Vienna

Reviewed by James Roy MacBean
Friday July 28, 2017 - 03:38:00 PM

On Saturday, July 22, West Edge Opera presented an evening of music by Mozart and his contemporaries. This concert was held at Dashe Cellars, an Oakland winery. The performers in this concert will be heard again in West Edge Opera’s forthcoming season, which will include L’Arbole di Diana/The Chastity Tree by Vicente Martin y Soler, Hamlet by Ambroise Thomas, and Frankenstein by Libby Larsen. 

Making his American debut was German bass-baritone Malte Roesner, who will later perform the role of Doristo in The Chastity Tree. Making her West Coast premiere was soprano Aurora Perry, who recently became the wife of Malte Roesner. Tenor Samuel Levine will later take the title role in Libby Larsen’s Frankenstein. Finally, Robert Mollicone performed as piano accompanist at this concert and he will later conduct The Chastity Tree.  

The July 22 program at Dashe Cellars focused on music involving Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, the librettist Lorenzo da Ponte, and composers Antonio Salieri, Franz Xaver Süssmayr, Vicente Martin y Soler, Maria Theresia von Paradis, and, last but not least, Ludwig van Beethoven. All of these remarkable individuals were active in Vienna during Mozart’s lifetime and often collaborated with Mozart in one way or another. Thus, this concert was dubbed “Mozart and Friends.” 

First on the program was a series of songs by Vicente Martin y Soler, a Spanish composer best known perhaps for his opera Una cosa rara, a brief passage of which features in the banquet scene in Mozart’s Don Giovanni. In Soler’s Songs for Miss Miller, the lyrics are by Lorenzo da Ponte. Soprano Aurora Perry offered a lively, richly expressive performance of these five songs. Next came bass-baritone Malte Roesner singing three songs by Franz Xaver Süssmayr, a composer best known as Mozart’s copyist and the man chosen by Mozart’s widow, Constanze, to complete Mozart’s unfinished Requiem after his death. With his dark-toned bass-baritone, Malte Roesner excelled in the Süssmayr songs. 

A change of pace was offered by pianist Robert Mollicone, who performed Beethoven’s Variations for piano on a theme from Süssmayr’s opera Soliman II oder die drei Sultaninnen. True to form, this instrumental work by Beethoven was the most musically complex piece of the entire program, exquisitely performed here by Robert Mollicone. Following the Beethoven came three songs in German by Antonio Salieri, sung here in duets by Samuel Levine and Aurora Perry, whose voices blended nicely. Then Aurora Perry sang four songs by Mozart. Especially lively was the fourth and final song, Die Veilchen/The Violet.  

Next we heard three songs by Maria Theresia von Paradis, a noted Viennese woman composer and virtuoso instrumentalist on violin and piano. These Songs for the Duchess of Saxony were elegantly sung by tenor Samuel Levine. Finally, all three singers joined in to perform Songs and Duets for the Princess of Wales by Vicente Martin y Soler. And, finally, the singers performed a canon by Martin y Soler in which they plead, “We sang for you. Now we want to be paid, for we must eat!” 

On this humorous note, which suggested to the audience that they might wish to contribute to the West Edge Opera coffers, the evening’s musical program came to a close, though audience and performers alike then gathered to eat delicious cheeses and drink refreshing wines courtesy of Dashe Cellars.


A Great Crop of Merola Singers in 3 One-Act Operas

Reviewed by James Roy MacBean
Friday July 28, 2017 - 12:28:00 PM

I don’t know if it was this year’s rainy winter, but something gave us a bumper crop of Merola singers for 2017, as seen – and heard – in a program of three one-act operas presented July 20 & 22 at San Francisco Conservatory of Music. On tap were La serva padrona by Giovanni Battista Pergolesi (1710-1736), Savitri by Gustav Holst (1874-1934), and The Bear by William Walton (1902-1983). All three operas were conducted by Christopher Ocasek and directed by Peter Kazaras, with set designs by Donald Eastman.  

Pergolesi’s delightful 1733 opera La serva padrona is similar in plot to Donizetti’s much later Don Pasquale, with both operas treating relations between an older man and a much younger woman who manages to twist him around her little finger. Here the young woman, Serpina, was coquettishly sung by Jana McIntyre, who posseses exquisite vocal technique, great acting ability, and a soprano voice that will take her far. Jana McIntyre is definitely a singer to watch! Equally impressive was bass-baritone Daniel Noyola, a native of San Luis Potosi, Mexico, who sang the role of Uberto, the old codger who gets outwitted at every step by Serpina. Noyola has a robustly masculine voice, excellent diction in Italian, and a flair for comic roles. Together, Jana McIntyre and Daniel Noyola were as superb in their roles as one could ever hope to hear. 

Gustav Holst’s Savitri, which premiered in London in 1916, is based on an episode from the Mahabharata. Savitri is the loving wife of Satyavan, but Death comes to claim the life of Satyavan. Savitri pleads her case so eloquently, even offering to die in her husband’s place, that Death consents to offer her one wish, but it can only be for herself, not for her husband. Savitri phrases her wish in such a way that her own happiness necessarily includes continuing to share her happy married life with Satyavan. Death, outwitted, retreats. Sung in English, the role of Savitri was beautifully sung by soprano Kelsea Webb. She possesses a mellifluous, powerful voice with tremendous range, from Wagnerian high notes to the burnished chest-tones of a mezzo-soprano. Kelsea Webb also possesses admirable technique. 

Death was sung by David Weigel, whose stentorian bass-baritone has great power and elegance. Satyavan was sung by tenor Addison Marlor, and though his role is the least important of the three roles in this opera, Marlor sang with ringing clarity. A lush orchestral score was occasionally accompanied by a subtle soprano chorus.  

William Walton’s 1967 opera The Bear is adapted from Anton Chekhov’s play of the same title. Walton composed it for Benjamin Britten’s Aldeburgh Festival. The plot of The Bear revolves around a Russian widow in mourning who is confronted by one of her dead husband’s creditors who demands repayment of a loan. Though chided by her servant, Luka, for her excessive fidelity to her dead husband, the widow resists all social intercourse with the world, until the moment when, in the midst of a raging argument with her husband’s creditor, both the widow and the creditor realize a flaming spark of sexual interest in each other. Walton’s music playfully highlights the mock-melodrama of this plot. Performed here in English, Popova, the widow, was lustrously sung by mezzo-soprano Ashley Dixon. Her servant, Luka, was robustly sung by bass-baritone Daniel Noyola; and the role of the creditor, Smirnov, was uproariously sung – and acted – by bass-baritone Cody Quattlebaum. All three singers were superb in their roles. Ashley Dixon’s aria, “I was faithful all my life,” accompanied largely by solo piano, was a highlight of this opera, though it was matched again and again by the blustering masculinity of Quattlebaum’s Smirnov, whom Popova disdainfully refers to as “The Bear,” until that moment near the end when “The Bear’s” macho demeanor suddenly seems overwhelmingly seductive to her, and they couple passionately onstage. 

If the seven singers heard in this Merola program of one-act operas are any indication, the Merola 2017 Grand Finale scheduled for Saturday, August 17, at the War Memorial Opera House promises to feature a bumper crop of young singers well on their way to outstanding careers in opera. Don’t miss it!


New: Around & About: Theater--The Founder of Anton's Well Reflects On Its Past Productions--& On 'Tender Napalm,' Now Onstage

Ken Bullock
Saturday July 29, 2017 - 11:24:00 PM



Robert Estes, born in Oakland, was for years someone you'd meet at theater productions and events all around the Bay, as a spectator or helping out behind the scenes. I first ran into him at Novato Theatre Company over a decade ago, when he offered me a ride back to Berkeley, saving me an early exit before curtain to catch the last bus to the cross-Bay transfer.

But it wasn't till the approach of his sixth decade, in 2010, that Estes directed his first full-length play, after years of assisting for a wide range of productions & directing staged readings, with 'The Curse of the Starving Class' for Actors Ensemble of Berkeley at Live Oak Theater. (Robert reminded me that I wrote about that show for the Planet; I remember Holly Bradford's impressive performance well ... ) A few years and about a half dozen plays as director later, Estes founded Anton's Well Theater Company, named after one of the great Chekhov's many social projects, water wells and libraries among them.

"Chekhov believed every person should leave something behind. Younger people, with their own concerns and sense of time, usually are the ones to set up new theater companies. I'm 57 years old. I want to bring some fresh water to theater. Like in baseball, which goes from the rookie leagues up to the majors, there's a lot of room between, say, in the East Bay, community theater and Berkeley Rep. By starting a company that's in between layers, I can develop as a director, help others develop, keep people from having to go somewhere else to make theater, help fill the gap. we've premiered several plays new to the Bay Area. [including Sam Shepard's two-hander, 'Ages of the Moon'--it was a Sam Shepard play that was the first professional stage production Estes ever saw, which his father took him to.] And a small company can sometimes put on a better show than the major companies do."

Right now, Estes has a show running through August 6 at the Temescal Arts Center, the Bay Area premiere of another two-hander--though one with a difference--Philip Ridley's 'Tender Napalm.' And by year's end, with another show, title to be announced, at the Berkeley City Club, Anton's Well will celebrate its third anniversary with its seventh production.  

 

Of 'Tender Napalm,' Estes said "I love plays involved in language, that finds a way to talk about love, falling in and out of love, about children, the passage of time--elliptical, immediate, yet very precise, which could also be said of another Bay Area premiere of ours at the City Club, 'what Rhymes With America.' " 

Estes hopes to expand Anton's Well's seasons to three plays a year, bring in other directors--and keep introducing new plays to the Bay Area, helping audiences and theater people, including himself, to go forward, their eyes on the future. 

Anton's Well's production of ''tender Napalm,' Fridays & saturdays at 8 through August 5 at Temescal Arts Center, 511-48th Street (just off Telegraph), Oakland. $17-$20. antonswell.org


Dogs in Office

Poem by Julia Ross
Friday July 28, 2017 - 12:30:00 PM

Lear. What! art mad? A man may see how this world goes with no eyes. Look with thine ears: see how yond justice rails upon yon simple thief. Hark, in thine ear: change places; and, handy-dandy, which is the justice, which is the thief? Thou hast seen a farmer’s dog bark at a beggar?

Glouscester: Ay, sir.

Lear. And the creature run from the cur? There thou mightst behold the great image of authority; a dog’s obey’d in office.



I saw a replay of women in soul
Sing at the Obama Whitehouse

Front row Barack and Michele

What love I feel
How much beauty they brought us
What beauty they brought to lead us
Such dignity
Such warmth
As Aretha belts it out, so much
Respect

Michele in her seat gets down and dirty with
Rhythm
Half time clapping
Shining lipstick on such a kind face

I am grateful they brought the strut to the
Whitehouse
Brought the rhythm and the culture in
Radiating dignity and love

I loved my country then
A leader radiating dignity
Calm
peace
love
Dignity again and again
Always

Now, one vote later,
Dogs in Office

Face of pouty rage
Contempt
Resentment
Destruction
Dignity melted like chocolate in the sun
Replaced by infantalism
Schoolboy rage
Meanness

Was Dignity and love so painful that
Contempt and hate were needed?

Dogs in Office
Is all lost?