The Week

JESSE JACKSON came to UC Berkeley this week to add his own distinctive voice to the campaign against Proposition 54.
JESSE JACKSON came to UC Berkeley this week to add his own distinctive voice to the campaign against Proposition 54.
 

News

Prop. 54’s Author Skips UC Debate

By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR
Friday September 19, 2003

When the main attraction at last Tuesday evening’s UC Berkeley Proposition 54 debate didn’t show—University of California Regent Ward Connerly—it was still business as usual at the packed session in Booth Auditorium at Boalt Hall. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Friday September 19, 2003

FRIDAY, SEPT. 19 -more-


Letters to the Editor

Friday September 19, 2003

PALESTINE PROPAGANDA -more-


Arts Calendar

Friday September 19, 2003

FRIDAY, SEPT. 19 -more-


Adult School Move Foe Vows School Board Suit

Staff
Friday September 19, 2003

Opponents of the move of Berkeley’s Adult School to the vacant Franklin School site will file a legal challenge to the Berkeley Unified School District today, said Tim Arai, lead plaintiff for the group. -more-


FCMAT Critique Overhyped, Says Schools VP

By JOHN SELAWSKY
Friday September 19, 2003

I’m responding to Sally Reyes’ commentary “Many Failings in BUSD Report Card,” Daily Planet, Sept. 12-15), regarding the Fiscal Crisis Management Assistance Team (FCMAT) report issued in July 2003 to the Berkeley Unified School District (BUSD). Of course, the Planet’s headline for the commentary was inaccurate to begin with. However, I believe it will do more good to offer information regarding the FCMAT report, rather than to argue over Ms. Reyes’ opinions in her commentary or the Planet’s biases. There has been a general misunderstanding and misreading, as well as a misuse, of the FCMAT report since it was released to BUSD in July. The report chronicles about 500 legal, professional, and educational standards for the BUSD as part of FCMAT’s advisory role with Berkeley. One section of the FCMAT report deals with Facilities Management, and this is the section that Sally Reyes’ commentary refers to. In this one section there are 111 standards addressed, with recommendations in several areas for improvement and progress. -more-


Legal Clinic Celebrates Birthday

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Friday September 19, 2003

The East Bay Community Law Center will be celebrating its 15th anniversary Saturday, honoring the people who have helped the center become one of the most important resources for low-income residents battling to stay alive and in need of legal help. -more-


Schools Failing Janitors, Union Official Charges

Friday September 19, 2003

Editors, Daily Planet: -more-


Activist Fred Lupke Injured in Accident

Friday September 19, 2003

Fred Lupke, 58, a popular Berkeley activist for the disabled community, was seriously injured Thursday evening when his wheelchair was struck by a car as he was crossing Ashby Avenue. -more-


Council OKs Rental Fee, Kayos 2nd Mideast Vote

By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR
Friday September 19, 2003

The Berkeley City Council split the baby on three contentious issues this week, passing a new housing inspection fee over the objections of landlords, putting off for a week a decision on the Sprint Wireless roof antennae on Shattuck Avenue, and dropping for good its plans to discuss a second resolution concerning American deaths in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. -more-


UC Seeks Fresh Funding

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday September 19, 2003

The University of California may be getting a different type of diversity next year—part of a drive to find new revenue sources. -more-


Police Blotter

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday September 19, 2003

Judge Orders Pair Evicted From Late Activist’s Home

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday September 19, 2003

The saga of one of Berkeley’s most derelict and contested properties, in legal limbo after a series of controversies and misadventures—one of which found the elderly owner abandoned and stranded in a Paris bathroom two years ago—ended with a whimper Thursday. -more-


Oakland Grants Reprieve to Berkeley Crew Team

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday September 19, 2003

The Berkeley High School Girls Crew Team will continue to paddle the waters of Lake Merritt for at least two more years, thanks to an agreement brokered by Berkeley Mayor Tom Bates and Oakland Mayor Jerry Brown. -more-


Proposed Dream Law Gives Hope to Young

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday September 19, 2003

Deana Lopez graduated from Berkeley High School last year with her future very much in doubt. Although she is starting her second year at Vista College, as an undocumented immigrant she has no hope for financial aid to transfer to a four-year school and couldn’t work legally even if she graduated. -more-


Swim Marathon Teams Tread Water for Pools

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Friday September 19, 2003

Hoping to raise the $60,000 needed to keep Berkeley public swimming pools open this winter, the United Pool Council, a Berkeley community group, is sponsoring a swim-a-thon fund raiser this Saturday at the King pool, 1700 Hopkins St. -more-


Preschool Students Return After Blaze at Franklin

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Friday September 19, 2003

Students returned to Franklin Preschool Wednesday, four days after a suspected arsonist destroyed two classrooms in the school’s north wing. -more-


UC Plan Portends Major Changes for City

By ROB WRENN Special to the Planet
Friday September 19, 2003

EDITOR’S NOTE: This is the first of a two-part series on UC Berkeley’s expansion plans. Part two will look at other impacts related to the Long Range Development Plan and UC expansion, including fiscal impacts and impacts related to housing, construction and permit parking -more-


Public’s Input Sought by UC Monday Night

Friday September 19, 2003

The public will get a critical opportunity to comment on future growth plans for the UC Berkeley campus when the University of California conducts a scoping meeting for the 2020 Long Range Development Plan and the Tien Center Environmental Impact Report Monday from 5 p.m to 9 p.m. at the Clark Kerr Campus Krutch Theater, 2601 Warring St. The session will provide an opportunity for public comment on the proposed scope of the environmental analysis. -more-


Unasked Question Haunts Bustamante Visit

J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR
Friday September 19, 2003

Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante made a campaign stop in Oakland the other day to answer questions by members of the Black Elected Officials of the East Bay organization and the progressive Socially Responsible Network. The Bustamante appearance was marked by the question that wasn’t asked, and the question that wasn’t answered. -more-


Greeks Celebrate Greek Theatre’s Centennial

By STEVE FINACOM Special to the Planet
Friday September 19, 2003

It has hosted concerts and commencements, demonstrations and divas, mass meetings and memorials. The home fires of university spirit have burned bright on its sandy floor, and many of the great names and performing groups of the past century have trod its stage. -more-


Woe Betide the Hapless Hummer Driver Here

By ZAC UNGER Special to the Planet
Friday September 19, 2003

I saw a Hummer last month. More than that, I touched it. I rode in it. I even sat in the driver’s seat and pretended to run an armored car off the road. For a Berkeley kid like me, getting intimate with a Hummer is the ultimate taboo. It’s like a Bostonian rooting for the Yankees or a Kennedy marrying a Republican weight lifter. -more-


City Rents Hit Y2K Levels

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Tuesday September 16, 2003

Katherine Case and Andrew Moore hope their third attempt to move to Berkeley is the charm. In 1999 the housing crunch forced them to Lake Merritt and in 2001 to Richmond in their quest for affordable housing. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Tuesday September 16, 2003

TUESDAY, SEPT. 16 -more-


Letters to the Editor

Tuesday September 16, 2003

RACHEL CORRIE -more-


Hilarity Abounds in Du Bois’ ‘Much Ado’

By DAVID SUNDELSON Special to the Planet
Tuesday September 16, 2003

The gorgeous staging alone is worth the price of admission to “Much Ado About Nothing,” the final production of the season at Cal Shakespeare. The costumes, with a good deal of flamboyant silk, place us in a vaguely but not obtrusively modern Italy (there is one silly joke about a cell phone, however). -more-


Arts Calendar

Tuesday September 16, 2003

TUESDAY, SEPT. 16 -more-


Judges Call Halt To Recall Vote

By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR
Tuesday September 16, 2003

A three-judge federal panel Monday postponed next month’s election because it would involve the use of outdated and unreliable punch card ballots by almost half the state’s voters. -more-


Why I Support Cruz Bustamante For Governor

By MAL BURNSTEIN
Tuesday September 16, 2003

To my progressive friends: -more-


Berkeley Rep’s Leonardo Offering Long on Effects, Short on Drama

By DAVID SUNDELSON Special to the Planet
Tuesday September 16, 2003

Berkeley Rep’s new Roda Theater is a winner: Handsome and comfortable auditorium, good sight lines, a lobby with polished concrete floors and an elegant bar. There is a book shop. Even the bathrooms are pleasant. -more-


NAACP Leader Bond Signs Pledge in Berkeley

By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR
Tuesday September 16, 2003

NAACP National Chairman Julian Bond addressed an early Saturday morning City Hall civil rights breakfast meeting mistakenly billed briefly as an anti-Prop 54 rally. -more-


BOSS Woes Will Fade, Says Nonprofit Director

By BOONA CHEEMA
Tuesday September 16, 2003

I’m writing in response to some recent sensationalized headlines in the Planet that conveyed a very different story about what BOSS is going through than what I know the reality to be. -more-


Decision Vindicates UC Prof

By BECKY O’MALLEY
Tuesday September 16, 2003

Monday’s 9th Circuit Court of Appeals decision to delay California’s recall election was a victory, though perhaps short-lived, for UC Berkeley Political Science Professor Henry Brady’s two-year crusade against punch card voting machines. -more-


Huffington Battles Long Odds

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Tuesday September 16, 2003

Polling only three percent in the runup to the on-again, off-again California gubernatorial recall and election campaign, conservative-turned leftist candidate Arianna Huffington has been waging an uphill battle. -more-


Flames Gut Classrooms, Arson is Suspected

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Tuesday September 16, 2003

School officials are scurrying to relocate about 30 three- and four-year-old pupils after a suspicious fire roared through a wing of their preschool Saturday, one of two suspected arson-caused fires set just blocks apart. -more-


Berkeley Ferry Service Hangs on Davis’ Decision

By MATTHEW ARTZ
Tuesday September 16, 2003

Governor Gray Davis now controls the fate of Berkeley residents who one day hope to zip to work along the waves of San Francisco Bay. -more-


Fair Trade Coffee Fans Get Grounds for Grins

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Tuesday September 16, 2003

Berkeley corporate accountability activists and coffee drinkers alike will be pleased to hear that a large coalition of organizations, including San Francisco-based Global Exchange, has won their campaign to force Procter and Gamble, the largest seller of coffee in the U.S., to start carrying Fair Trade Certified coffee. -more-


School Board Gets Budget

Tuesday September 16, 2003

Berkeley Unified School District Superintendent Michele Lawrence Board Meeting, will submit the final 2002-2003 budget Wednesday for the school board approval. -more-


Berkeley Briefs

Tuesday September 16, 2003

Gallery renaming proposed -more-


Indian Incomes Highest Among Bay Immigrants

By RICHARD SPRINGER Pacific News Service
Tuesday September 16, 2003

Asian Indians in seven San Francisco Bay Area counties have a median family income of $88,540—24 percent higher than the total population and the highest of any Asian group—but there are severe pockets of poverty in the South Asian community in the region. -more-


A Tale of ‘Tweeners’ And Ersatz Lemonade

From Susan Parker
Tuesday September 16, 2003

My thirteen-year old friend Jernae wanted to open a lemonade stand on my front porch. -more-


Jim Hightower Regales Local ACLU Chapter

By JAKOB SCHILLER
Tuesday September 16, 2003

Mix a rich ersatz cowboy and politics and you might get George Bush. Use a real cowboy who’s not so rich and you might get Jim Hightower, one of the nation’s leading progressive political commentators, and a real Texas cowboy in his own right. -more-


Timely Fascination Keeps Berkeley Biz Ticking

By SUSAN PARKER Special to the Planet
Tuesday September 16, 2003

When I migrated from the East Coast to the Bay Area in 1983 I wound up living in a communal household on Margarido Street along the border of Berkeley and Oakland. Among my housemates was a graphic artist/raft guide/old car aficionado/baseball nut named Steve Kowalski. -more-


Mexican History Offers Hints of Prop. 54 Impacts

By THEODORE G. VINCENT Special to the Planet
Tuesday September 16, 2003

What might happen to California if we adopt Prop 54 and its race privacy? -more-


Dangers Confront Migrants Winging South

By JOE EATON Special to the Planet
Tuesday September 16, 2003

It may have felt like summer last week, but the birds know otherwise. The southbound migrants are on the move. -more-


Opinion

Editorials

Davis Picks Berkeley Lawyer for Judgeship

By RICHARD BRENNEMAN
Friday September 19, 2003

Gov. Gray Davis Thursday named Berkeley attorney John Marshall True III to the Alameda County Superior Court. A graduate of UC Berkeley’s Boalt Hall, True is a partner with Leonard Carder LLP, an Oakland law firm. -more-


State Cuts Force City to Rethink Budget

By J. DOUGLAS ALLEN-TAYLOR
Tuesday September 16, 2003

How to make up a $1.43 million Berkeley General Fund shortfall caused by the 2003-04 state budget? That’s the gloomy and wholly expected task the Berkeley City Council will take up at tonight’s regular 7:30 p.m. meeting at the Old City Hall. -more-