Updates

Cody’s Books to Move Downtown, Close Fourth St. Store

By Judith Scherr
Tuesday February 19, 2008
Posted Wed., Feb. 21—Cody’s is leaving Fourth Street for downtown Berkeley. -more-

University Takes Down Tree-sitter’s Platform

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday February 19, 2008
Posted Tue., Feb. 19—The 444-day-old battle of attrition between UC Berkeley and the Memorial Stadium tree-sitters flared again Tuesday morning, with the university claiming the victory. -more-

Video: UCPD Raid on Oak Grove

By Berkeley Citizen
Tuesday February 19, 2008


News

Richmond Improvement Agency Offers a Faith-Based Approach

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday February 19, 2008
For Rev. Andre Shumake Sr., head of a faith-based community alliance in the East Bay’s most troubled city, Richmond’s Green Party mayor has proved a strong ally. -more-

Police Officer Kills Berkeley Woman

From Bay City News and news reports
Tuesday February 19, 2008
A shrine has been set up on the Ward Street porch where Anita Gay was shot and killed by a Berkeley police officer.
Posted Mon. Feb 18, 2008--An officer responding to reports of a domestic disturbance at a south Berkeley apartment building Saturday night used deadly force on a woman who allegedly confronted the officer with a knife, according to the Berkeley Police Department. -more-

School Board Investigates Willard School Asst. Principal

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Tuesday February 19, 2008
The Berkeley Board of Education is investigating Willard Middle School Vice Principal Margaret Lowry for allegedly giving a student money to buy marijuana from another student, the Planet has learned. -more-

Council Begins Discussions of November Tax Measure

By Judith Scherr
Tuesday February 19, 2008
Pools, police, pipes, fire prevention, youth services: fulfilling city needs will take new funding—perhaps $30 million. And that greatly surpasses the dollars flowing into Berkeley’s coffers. -more-

Children’s Hospital Representatives Meet with Neighbors

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Tuesday February 19, 2008
Representatives of Oakland’s Children’s Hospital and many of the hospital’s North Oakland neighbors danced around each other at a North Oakland Senior Center community meeting for two hours last Wednesday night, with neither side seeming to be sure what music was being played, or even if the band had stopped altogether. -more-

County Superintendents, Students Protest State Cuts

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Tuesday February 19, 2008
A broken red heart with a band-aid taped on it peeked out of Westlake Middle School student Jabari Valentine’s pocket. -more-

New Superintendent Welcomed, Lobbied by Community Groups

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Tuesday February 19, 2008
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenneger’s proposed $4.8 million budget cuts from state education funds dominated the conversation during a reception held for Berkeley’s new superintendent of schools Bill Huyett at the City Council chambers Wednesday. -more-

Protests Continue at Recruiting Center In Berkeley — And in Mountain View

By Judith Scherr
Tuesday February 19, 2008
Since the Marine Recruiting Center in downtown Berkeley was locked Friday morning when the World Can’t Wait protesters arrived around 7:30 a.m. aiming to shut it down and risk arrest, the group and its allies from Code Pink and ANSWER (Act Now to Stop War and Racism) went to Plan B. -more-

Candidates Begin Filing for June Races

By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor
Tuesday February 19, 2008
With the presidential primary over, Alameda County voters will now have to turn their attention to several hotly contested local legislative races in the June 3 first-round voting, as well as a rare, contested Superior Court judge seat. -more-

West Berkeley Zoning Tour Opens to Public

By Richard Brenneman
Tuesday February 19, 2008
Planning Commissioners and interested citizens will tour West Berkeley March 1 as the commission prepares to ease new zoning rules in the city’s core industrial area. -more-

Rev. Raymond Landry, right, said that without Rev. Shumake’s prodding he wouldn’t have begun the effort that is leading to the construction of Macdonald Place Senior Housing in the heart of Richmond’s Iron Triangle. Larry Fleming, left, runs the Richmond Improvement Association’s job training program, which will run a cafe and a barber/beatutician training program on the ground floor of the 66-unit complex.
By Richard Brenneman
Rev. Raymond Landry, right, said that without Rev. Shumake’s prodding he wouldn’t have begun the effort that is leading to the construction of Macdonald Place Senior Housing in the heart of Richmond’s Iron Triangle. Larry Fleming, left, runs the Richmond Improvement Association’s job training program, which will run a cafe and a barber/beatutician training program on the ground floor of the 66-unit complex.

Editorials

Reader Commentaries

Letters to the Editor

Tuesday February 19, 2008

Commentary: Does Berkeley Need Better Alcohol Regulation

By Lori Lott
Tuesday February 19, 2008
Becky O’Malley’s Jan. 22 editorial criticizes the Berkeley City Council for considering a new ordinance to replace out-dated ordinances that do a poor job of managing problems with the city’s alcohol outlets. Berkeley Daily Planet readers should know how this ordinance came about. -more-

Commentary: The Farce of Using Biocrops for Energy

By James Singmaster
Tuesday February 19, 2008
Two reports in Science, the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) journal, got considerable media coverage on Feb. 8-9 with results in both showing that expanding biocrops for energy will greatly increase the soil emission of greenhouse gases (GHGs) mainly carbon dioxide from the exposing of buried plant debris. The UN report released in Spring 2007 and prepared by the Scientific Expert Group (SEG) under the aegis of Sigma Xi said that “Even if human emissions could be instantaneously stopped, the world would not escape further climate change.” The Winter 2006 issue of AAAS Matters called for carbon dioxide sequestering. So we are going the wrong way with bioenergy thinking sponsored by BP at Berkeley and need to get a program that will actually remove some of the 35 percent overload of carbon dioxide mentioned in my Nov. 30, 2007, commentary. -more-

Commentary: The UC Berkeley Tree-Sit

By David Weinstein
Tuesday February 19, 2008
With the tree-sit protest at the UC Berkeley Memorial Oak Grove having reached its year-anniversary, the university’s tactics to thwart the protest have taken a have taken a harsh and dark turn. A double-fenced, barbed wire ghetto with blinding lights shining into the trees and street with loud generators running all night as an attempted form of mental torture to the tree-sitters is reminiscent of some state of siege. The university and its private police department’s interpretation of a recent civil injunction order constitutes a direct assault on basic American civil liberties and constitutional rights. An assault on these cherished rights and freedoms that amounts to, in my opinion, the first step into martial law. -more-

Commentary: A Few Thoughts on the Anti-Marines Protests

By Alan Swain
Tuesday February 19, 2008
I would like to make just a few simple comments about the Marine Corps recruiting office stand-off. First, the U.S. Marine Corps is a military organization with a long history, dating back nearly to the time of the Continental Army. The Marine Corps has been involved in all of the nation’s conflicts since the revolution. The Marine Corps has a proud record of fighting with dignity that compares favorably to any other military organization in the world. It is an all volunteer force that draws its officers and men from across America and responds and is directed by the elected government of the United States. In other words, the Marine Corps is America and America is the Marine Corps. -more-

Columnists

Column: Mary Dean Owes Me Three Bucks

By Susan Parker
Tuesday February 19, 2008
I hate to sound like a broken record, but I’m fixated on keeping privately run Children’s Hospital Oakland (CHO) from eating me and my neighborhood alive. Soon there’ll be nothing left of me but a small oil slick in front of my 100-year-old house. That should make it easier for the bulldozers to roll down Dover Street. At least there’ll be no me to run over. -more-

Column: The Politics of the Oscars

By Bob Burnett
Tuesday February 19, 2008
It’s always dangerous to read too much into trends in popular culture. Nonetheless, there seems to be a strong relationship between the five movies nominated for best picture of 2007 and polls showing 67 percent of Americans believe the United States is headed in the wrong direction. -more-

Green Neighbors: Still Pruning? Take Care of Your Wildlife

By Ron Sullivan
Tuesday February 19, 2008
Plumblossoms, a male lesser goldfinch, and an old nest-not his; this one’s probably a squirrel’s.
Never mind that it’s caught me unarmed and ill-prepared, as usual; I love this sample of early spring we’re getting. We didn’t have it quite the same way last year, I guess. As happened, I was ‘way out of town and in another climate for most of last February on a most urgent and unfortunate errand, so I’m only guessing. -more-

Arts & Entertainment

Arts Calendar

Tuesday February 19, 2008
TUESDAY, FEB. 19 -more-

The Theater: Aurora Theatre Stages Diana Son’s ‘Satellites’

By Ken Bullock, Special to The Planet
Tuesday February 19, 2008
A Korean-American architect and her African-American husband move with their baby daughter into a fixer-upper Brooklyn brownstone—holes in the plaster, boxes everywhere, a makeshift architect’s office—when a black neighbor, who seems to have been the original kid-on-the-corner, drops by repeatedly offering one deal after another, and the husband’s ne’er-do-well adoptive brother blows in from an Asian getaway, wanting to move in and start a business with his bro’—and the new Korean nanny inadvertently starts pushing a new mother’s buttons. Then a brick comes crashing through the window. -more-

Events Calendar

Berkeley This Week

Tuesday February 19, 2008