The Opinion Pages

Editorials

Dona Spring: An Appreciation

By Becky O’Malley
Monday July 14, 2008

Dona Spring was the bravest person I’ve ever met. No, she wasn’t just brave, she was fierce, as fierce as a lioness defending her cubs. She loved justice as much as she despised injustice, and for Dona “Justice for All” included all species, not just all humans. -more-


Oil, Out-Gassing and Mad Tea Parties

By Becky O'Malley
Monday July 14, 2008

A recent correspondent took umbrage at my use, in an “Editor’s Back Fence” column on the Planet website, of a line from My Fair Lady to describe UC Berkeley’s main flack (or less colloquially, principal spokesperson) Dan Mogulof: “Oozing charm from every pore, he oiled his way across the floor.” Well, I listened to Mogulof at length on Monday night on KALW’s City Visions call-in program on UC’s stadium gym proposal, and I stand by my story, as we say in the trade. He’s an oily kinda guy. -more-


Editorial Cartoons

Dona Spring

By Justin DeFreitas
Tuesday July 15, 2008

Falling Statues

By Justin DeFreitas
Tuesday July 15, 2008

Democratic Principles

By Justin DeFreitas
Tuesday July 15, 2008

Letters

Letters to the Editor

Thursday July 10, 2008

Letters to the Editor

Tuesday July 15, 2008

Police Misconduct Along the Berkeley-Oakland Border

By Joseph Buddenberg
Thursday July 10, 2008

A Failed Effort to Feed the Tree-Sitters

By Carol Gesbeck DeWitt
Thursday July 10, 2008

Berkeley’s Anti-Environmentalist Movement

By Charles Siegel
Thursday July 10, 2008

No Sense

By Pamela Collett
Thursday July 10, 2008

Reader Commentaries

Fix Memorial Stadium Before Building Athletic Center

By Doug Buckwald and Shirley Dean
Thursday July 10, 2008

It does not take a degree in engineering to notice that California Memorial Stadium is in very bad shape—it just takes common sense. Even a casual observer cannot help but notice the cracks throughout the structure; the cavities where concrete has fallen away revealing rusted reinforcement bars; the support columns that are leaning and separating; the warped and splintered bench seats; and the weathered metal plate that covers the expanding gap in section KK caused by fault movement. The Hayward Fault that runs from goal post to goal post is slowly splitting the stadium apart and the effects are clearly visible. The geological reality is that two giant pieces of the earth’s crust, the Pacific Plate and the North American Plate, are slowly sliding in opposite directions, building up a tremendous amount of strain. When the Hayward Fault next suffers a major rupture, and there is no doubt that this event is imminent, the stadium itself will be severely damaged. -more-


Absurdity at the Top

By Marvin Chachere
Thursday July 10, 2008

In 1955 the late Jacques Barzun put his teaching and research on hold to be dean and then provost at Columbia University. He wanted, among other things, to learn first hand just what a top university administrator had to do. Not surprisingly he did not like the job and after a decade or so he eagerly returned to his former position on the faculty. -more-


Commercial Sports Is Not UC’s Mission

By Anamaria Sanchez Romero
Thursday July 10, 2008

Big-time college athletics” training facility destroying the oak grove—far from the mission of the university: teaching, research and public service—yet so close to the Hayward Fault? -more-


Bulldozed in Berkeley

By Kim Fogel
Thursday July 10, 2008

I sent this letter about to the American Pain Foundation, a national pain patients’ advocacy group (www.painfoundation.org). -more-