Public Appearances

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Public Appearances PUBLIC APPEARANCES Lecture, “Artillery Shells and Garage 9/17/18 Danish War Museum Door Remotes: The Future of Wars Copenhagen, Denmark Past,” at The Future of War, with Louise Amoore, Mark B.N. Hansen, Caroline Holmqvist, and James Der Derian Interview with Rithy Panh, 45th 9/1/18 New Sheridan Opera House Telluride Film Festival, on “A Tribute to Telluride Film Festival Rithy Panh” Telluride, CO Interview with Werner Herzog, 45th 9/1/18 Werner Herzog Theater Telluride Film Festival, on “Meeting Telluride Film Festival Gorbachev” Telluride, CO Panel Discussion with Charles 8/31/18 Abel Gance Open Air Theater Ferguson, Richard Benveniste, Leslie Telluride Film Festival Stahl, 45th Telluride Film Festival, on Telluride, CO “Watergate—Or, How We Learned to Stop an Out of Control President” Interview with Charles Ferguson, 45th 8/31/18 Chuck Jones Theater Telluride Film Festival, on Telluride Film Festival “Watergate—Or, How We Learned to Telluride, CO Stop an Out of Control President” “Writing War, Writing Politics: Mark 4/12/18 Wheeler Hall, Berkeley, CA Danner in Conversation with Robert Hass,” The Berkeley Department of English “Holly Pickett’s Syrian Refugee Photos,” 4/9/18 North Gate Hall, Berkeley, CA Introduction and Interview, Graduate School of Journalism “On Mic: Spiral -- Mark Danner in 4/5/18 North Gate Hall, Berkeley, CA Conversation with Deirdre English,” Podcast of UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism -1- www.markdanner.com “Lunchtime Book Chat on Spiral,” With 2/28/18 Stephens Hall, Berkeley, CA Interviewer Joyce Carol Oates, Townsend Center for the Humanities “Reds,” Film Introduction and 2/15/18 North Gate Hall, Berkeley, CA Discussion, Graduate School of Journalism, Berkeley “A Tribute to Michael Krasny,” 2/8/18 North Gate Hall, Berkeley, CA Introduction, Graduate School of Journalism, Berkeley “ In Conversation with Fran Liebowitz,” 2/3/18 Berkeley, CA Berkeley Repertory Theater “Saving Capitalism,” Interview 1/27/18 Berkeley, CA w/Director Jacob Kornbluth, JCC “Making America Great: Nationalism, 11/17/17 Stone Auditorium, Tulane, New Terror and the Forever War,” Public Orleans Lecture, Tulane “The Insult,” Introduction and Interview 9/3/17 The Nugget Theater, Telluride, w/Director Ziad Doueri CO “The Venerable W,” Introduction and 9/2/17 Sheridan Opera House, Q&A w/Director Barbet Schroeder Telluride, CO “A Man of Integrity,” Introduction and 9/1/17 The Nugget Theater, Telluride, Interview w/Director Mohamed CO Rasoulof, Telluride Film Festival -2- www.markdanner.com “What Will Trump Do If There’s A Terror 7/22/17 Los Angeles, CA via Remote Attack?” Radio Dialogue w/Terence McNally, Free Forum Tribute to Robert B. Silvers (1929 – 4/26/17 New York Public Library, NY, 2017), Eulogy at Memorial NY Trump Abroad, Trump at Home: 2/2/17 Fischer Center for the Declaring the New War. A Dialogue Performing Arts, Bard College, w/Leon Botstein. Annandale, NY “Obama’s Press Freedom Legacy,” with 1/20/17 San Francisco, CA via remote Rose Aguilar of “Your Call,” KALW “The Real Trump,” Radio Interview 1/7/17 Chicago, IL via Remote w/Chuck Mertz, “This Is Hell” “Trump: A World Turned Upside Down?” 11/2/16 Fischer Hall, Bard College, Dialogue w/Leon Botstein, Bard College Annandale, NY In Memoriam: Jonathan Schell, 12/5/16 Park Avenue, NY, NY Memorial, w/Orville Schell, Wallace Shawn, Tom Engelhardt et al, The Asia Society “Mark Danner: Talking Spiral with Brian 10/27/16 Washington, DC Lamb” C-SPAN Television One Hour Interview Talk, “Spiral and Shame,” The Strategic 10/8/16 Kennedy School of Government, Consequences of Torture (Conference), Harvard, Cambridge, MA The Carr Center for Human Rights Policy, Harvard University -3- www.markdanner.com “Torture, Security and Law: Lessons for 9-30-16 NYU Law School, NY, NY the Future,” NYU Torture Symposium, w/Jeremy Waldron, Bill Roller, Robert Cole, Dror Ladin Spiral Interview, w/Rose Aguilar, KALW 9/16/16 Remote from SF “Finding Oscar,” Introduction and Q&A, 9/4/16 Telluride, CO w/Frank Marshall and Ryan Suffern, Telluride Film Festival “The Films of Pablo Larraín,” 9/4/16 Telluride, CO Introduction and Q&A, Palm Theater, Telluride Film Festival, w/Gael Garcia Bernal and Pablo Larraín Spiral Interview, “One on One w/Rose 8/5/16 SF Studio Aguilar,” KALW “Spiral: Trapped in the Forever War,” 7/28/16 312 Sutter Street, SF Public Lecture, World Affairs Council (w/interview by Nancy Jarvis) Spiral Interview, “Your Call,” KALW 7/26/16 San Francisco Studio “Spiral: Trapped in the Forever War,” 7/13/16 Cedar Street, Berkeley, CA Public Lecture, The Hillside Club Spiral Interview, w/Chuck Mertz, “This 7/9/16 Chicago, IL remote from Is Hell” Berkeley, CA -4- www.markdanner.com Spiral Interview, Linda Khoury, KPFA 7/7/16 Martin Luther King Blvd, Berkeley, CA “Spiral: Trapped in the Forever War,” 6/23/16 555 Post Street, SF Lecture and Signing at the Commonwealth Club Spiral Interview, Pacifica Radio, Live 6/23/16 Pacifica Studios, SF Interview with Sonali Kolkatkar Spiral Interview, KQED Forum 6/21/16 2602 Mariposa, KQED, SF w/Michael Krasny Spiral Interview, “A Public Affair,” 6/17/16 Madison, WI via Remote, North WORT Gate Hall, Berkeley Spiral Interview, Gary Null Show, WBAI 6/16/16 NY via Remote, North Gate Hall Spiral Interview, WAMC 6/16/16 NY via Remote, North Gate Hall Spiral Interview, Brian Lehrer Show, 6/16/16 NYC via Remote, North Gate WNYC Hall Spiral Interview, Mitch Jesenich’s 6/14/16 Martin Luther King, Berkeley, “Letters and Politics,” KPFA CA -5- www.markdanner.com Trump Interview, Chroniques 6/14/16 Via Telephone from Paris Mediapart, w/Iris Doereux Spiral Interview, “The Ronn Owens 6/13/16 750 Battery Street, SF, CA Show,” KGO SF “Scheer Intelligence: Mark Danner’s 6/4/16 Berkeley City College Spiral,” Interviewed by Robert Scheer, Auditorium, Berkeley, CA Bay Area Book Festival “The Age of Czeslaw Milosz,” Film 6/1/16 Pacific Film Archives, Berkeley Introduction w/Robert Hass and Antoni Museum of Art, Berkeley CA Milosz Should and Will Guantanamo Close? A 5/12/16 North Gate Hall, University of discussion with Christopher Kurtz, Jess California, Berkeley Bravin, Alberto Mora, Ashika Singh, Sharon Weill Introduction and Moderator, Dancing 4/14/16 North Gate Hall, University of on Fire: Photographs from Haiti, with California, Berkeley Maggie Steber “Honoring Robert Hass,” Lunchtime 2/29/16 Morrison Room, Doe Library, Poets Series, w/Robert Hass, Lyn University of California Hejinian, Brenda Hillman, Cecil Berkeley Giscombe, Patricia Spears Jones, Maxine Hong Kingston, Joyce Carol Oates, Geoffrey O’Brien, Michael Ondaatje, John Shoptaw, Linda Spaulding Lecture, “Journalism As A 21st Century 2/16/16 Wheeler Hall, University of Career,” Berkeley Connect Series, California, Berkeley moderator Eric Falci -6- www.markdanner.com Panel, Rethinking Washington’s 12/8/15 “Reinvent” Web Series, dir. Counterterrorism Strategy, with Peter Leyden Stephen Walt, Rachel Kleinfeld, and Suzanne Nossel. Moderator: Peter Leyden. Lecture, “The Management of Savagery: 12/1/15 Science Center Hall, Bard The Islamic State, Extreme Violence and College, Annandale, NY Our Endless War,” Public Evening Lecture Lecture, “The New Normal: The Paris 11/14/15 Olin Hall, Bard College, Attacks, Terror and Our Forever War,” Annandale, NY Model UN Conference Ridley Scott’s “Blade Runner,” An 11/11/15 Bard College, Annandale, NY Introduction and Interpretation Stanley Kubrick’s “A Clockwork 10/28/15 Bard College, Annandale, NY Orange,” An Introduction and Interpretation Lecture, “Spiraling Down: Human 10/22/15 Eldman Courtroom, Law School, Rights, Endless War,” The Frances University of Texas, Austin Tarlton “Sissy” Farenthold Inaugural Lecture in Peace, Social Justice and Human Rights Panel, “Can the China Model Succeed?” 10/15/15 The Asia Society, NY, NY with Orville Schell, Taisu Zhang, Andrew J. Nathan, Timothy Garton Ash and Daniel A. Bell Panel, Double Blind, Discussion with 9/1/15 Telluride Film Festival, Michael Ware and Bill Guttentag about Telluride, CO the documentary “Only the Dead,” -7- www.markdanner.com The 50 Year Argument, Q&A with Linda 6/28/15 The Moscone Center, San Hollick, American Library Association Francisco, CA Annual Conference. Panel Discussion, Shocking Stories, 6/7/15 The Brower Center, Berkeley, Profound Truths: Two Master Journalists CA Unpack Mass Murder, with Asne Seierstad, Bay Area Book Festival. Panel Discussion, The Secret State: The 6/7/15 The Brower Center, Berkeley, Rise of National Surveillance and the CA Conflict Between Freedom and Security, with Robert Scheer and Karen Paget, Bay Area Book Festival. Panel Discussion, Transforming Terror, 6/6/15 The Brower Center, Berkeley, with Susan Griffin (moderator), Claudia CA Bernarndi, Rebecca Solnit. Bay Area Book Festival. Panel Discussion, Fiction and War, with 5/31/15 Oakland City Hall, Oakland, CA Anthony Marra, Nayomi Munaweera and Anastasia Edel, Oakland Book Festival. War Correspondents Panel with Adam 4/29/15 Mechanics Institute, San Hochschild, Elizabeth Farnsworth and Francisco, CA. Orville Schell. Marc Thiessen Debate, Resolved: The US 3/31/15 Maude Fife Room, Wheeler Hall, has been a force for good in the Middle Berkeley, CA East. Marc Thiessen Debate, Resolved: The US 3/31/15 Maude Fife Room, Wheeler Hall, has been a force for good in the Middle Berkeley, CA East. -8- www.markdanner.com Talk, Our Ignorance, Their Pain: Torture 2/15/15 Boalt Hall, Berkeley, CA and The Forever War, Boalt Law School Torture Symposium. NY Times Book Review Podcast, 1/29/14 Berkeley, CA ‘Guantanamo Diary’ with Pamela Paul. KPFK, Conversation with Ian Masters. 12/14/14 Los Angeles, CA KALW Media Roundup, Torture Report. 12/12/14 Red Hook, NY KQED Forum, Torture Report, with 12/10/14 Red Hook, NY Michael Krasny. Conversation with Nuruddin Farah, 11/17/14 Bard College, Annandale-on- Bard College Hudson, NY VICE, How the US Created the Islamic 11/14/14 Brooklyn, NY State.
Recommended publications
  • Radical Berkeley Supported Radio Station
    J. Stitt Wilson: the 1st Savio Hauled off the Stage, Oak Grove Tree-Sit, Dec. 2, 2006–Sept. 9, 2008 The Fight for Accessibility, 1972 (and last) Socialist Mayor Dec. 7, 1964 Activists took to the trees when plans for a new sports complex included the destruction of When Ed Roberts applied to UC Berkeley he of Berkeley, April 1, 1911 After 2 months of FSM protests, a long-standing grove.The protestors likened the tree removal to a hate crime. Ultimately faced resistance, not because of his qualifica- Wilson ran for Berkeley mayor strikes, and sit-ins, UC President theactivists—and the trees—came down, but not before they had accomplished the longest tions, but because he was quadriplegic. Ulti- on a platform of city ownership Clark Kerr called a meeting at urbantree-sit in history. Student Athlete High Performance Center, SAHPC (formerly the mately he was admitted, and he and several of utilities. After election, his the Greek Theatre where he oak grove) other disabled students formed a group called socialistagenda was stymied by addressed 16,000 students and the“Rolling Quads,” which was instrumental in a conservative city council, and faculty members. After Kerr openingup the campus to the severely disabled. he declined to run for a second spoke, Savio took the stage, but The Naked Guy Emerges, 1992 Roberts is considered by many to be the father of term. 1745 Highland Place was hauled off by police before thedisability rights movement. Berkeley sophomore Andrew Marti CowellHospital (Wilson’s house) he could speak. GreekTheatre Strikes for Ethnic Studies, Jan.
    [Show full text]
  • Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} the Last Days of Publishing a Novel by Tom Engelhardt the Last Days of Publishing: a Novel by Tom Engelhardt
    Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} The Last Days of Publishing A Novel by Tom Engelhardt The Last Days of Publishing: A Novel by Tom Engelhardt. Our systems have detected unusual traffic activity from your network. Please complete this reCAPTCHA to demonstrate that it's you making the requests and not a robot. If you are having trouble seeing or completing this challenge, this page may help. If you continue to experience issues, you can contact JSTOR support. Block Reference: #c6efbf00-cf31-11eb-8e13-e3ab07f9b397 VID: #(null) IP: 116.202.236.252 Date and time: Thu, 17 Jun 2021 06:03:46 GMT. The Last Days of Publishing: A Novel by Tom Engelhardt. Tom Engelhardt created and runs the TomDispatch.com website, a project of the Nation Institute, where he is a fellow. He is the author of The American Way of War and The United States of Fear , both published by Haymarket Books, a highly praised history of American triumphalism in the cold war, The End of Victory Culture , and a novel, The Last Days of Publishing . Many of his TomDispatch interviews were collected in Mission Unaccomplished: TomDispatch Interviews with American Iconoclasts and Dissenters . With Nick Turse, he has written Terminator Planet: The First History of Drone Warfare, 2001–2050 . He also edited The World According to TomDispatch: America in the New Age of Empire , a collection of pieces from his site that functions as an alternative history of the mad Bush years. TomDispatch is the sideline that ate his life. Before that he worked as an editor at Pacific News Service in the early 1970s, and, these last four decades as an editor in book publishing.
    [Show full text]
  • ACCOUNTABILITY PROFILE University of California, Berkeley
    ACCOUNTABILITY PROFILE University of California, Berkeley California’s Investment in Berkeley GRAND ASPIRATIONS built this university more than 140 years ago when Berkeley, the flagship institution of the University of California system, was established. The goal was to create an institution with attributes “equal to those of Eastern Colleges,” what today are called the Ivy League schools. This new university not only would educate students but also serve and assist the people of California. As a public research university, Berkeley was charged with seeking new knowledge and discovery to serve the public interest, and providing Californians access to its excellent educational opportunities. Public research universities are pivotal in realizing society’s potential for opportunity, innovation, social justice, and prosperity — extending the public good for the benefit of all. Today, Berkeley is recognized as a leader among the world’s universities in offering true breadth, access, and comprehensive excellence. As UC’s oldest campus, Berkeley is home to many historic sites, including South Hall [the first UC building, constructed in 1873], Hearst Greek Theatre [1903], California Hall [1905], Hearst Memorial Mining Building [1907], the Campanile [1914], Doe Library [1917], and Wheeler Hall [1917]. The campus has many world- class research museums, field stations, and other research centers, along with a library collection that ranks as one of the “Berkeley — the university — seems to best in the nation. In 2007 the Association of Research Libraries ranked me, more and more, to be California’s Berkeley’s library among the top five university research libraries in North America. Its rare and specialized collections, such as the Bancroft Library’s highest, most articulate idea of itself.” Mark Twain Papers and Project [the world’s largest collection of Twain — JOAN DIDION ’56 materials], serve educators and scholars from around the state and the Author world.
    [Show full text]
  • CENTER for the HUMANITIES UC BERKELEY September/October 2012 HIGHLIGHTS
    TOWNSENDCENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES UC BERKELEY September/October 2012 HIGHLIGHTS 21 Fiat Lux Redux 22 Depth of Field Film + Video Series 26 Litquake: Language and Politics Vikram Seth, see p. 6 Wendell Berry, see p. 4 TOWNSEND NEWSLETTER The Doreen B. Townsend Center for the Humanities SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2012 at the University of California, Berkeley STAFF DIRECTOR Alan Tansman, Professor of Japanese TABLE OF CONTENTS ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR Teresa Stojkov 3 A Note from the New Director WEB AND COMMUNICATIONS SPECIALIST Alan Tansman Julie Van Scoy BUSINESS AND OFFICE MANAGER 4 Labor of the Hands Melissa Wong Juliana Chow FELLOWSHIPS ADMINISTRATOR Scott Roberts 6 Vikram Seth, Una's Lecturer Kristin Hanson FACULTY ADVISORY COMMITTEE David Bates, Rhetoric 8 Visions from the Peripheries Lawrence Cohen, Anthropology Jacob P. Dalton Catherine Cole, eater, Dance & Performance Studies 11 Program News Victoria Kahn, English Ken Goldberg, Industrial Engineering and Operations Research Suzanne Guerlac, French 17 Calendar of Campus Events Niklaus Largier, German and Comparative Literature Francine Masiello, Spanish and Comparative Literature Nancy Scheper-Hughes, Anthropology Hans Sluga, Philosophy Mary Ann Smart, Music TOWNSEND CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES University of California 220 Stephens Hall, MC 2340 Berkeley, CA 94720-2340 TEL.: 510/643-9670 FAX: 510/643-5284 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: http://townsendcenter.berkeley.edu TOWNSEND CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES | SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2012 A Note from the New Director by Alan Tansman groups will be formed in particular to foster conversations between humanists and their non-humanist colleagues. You will be hearing more about these groups in the coming months, and we, in turn, look forward to learning of your ideas about creating others.
    [Show full text]
  • National Register of Historic Places Continuation Sheet
    NFS Form 10-900 OW8 Mo. 1024-C018 (Rev. 8-86) United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places FEB1319& Registration Form NATIONAL REGISTER This form is for use in nominating or requesting determinations of eligibility for individual properties or districts. See instructions in Guidelines for Completing National Register Forms (National Register Bulletin 16). Complete each item by marking "x" in the appropriate box or by entering the requested information. If an item does not apply to the property being documented, enter "N/A" for "not applicable." For functions, styles, materials, and areas of significance, enter only the categories and subcategories listed in the instructions. For additional space use continuation sheets (Form 10-900a). Type all entries. 1. Name of Property historic name Bowles Hall_______________________________________________ other names/site number N/A 2. Location street & number Stadium and Gayley Way ^\J not for publication city, town Berkeley JA| vicinity state California code nnfi county A lamed a code 1 ° -1 zip code 94720 3. Classification Ownership of Property Category of Property Number of Resources within Property I private [x] building(s) Contributing Noncontributing __ public-local district 1 0 buildings _% public-State site 0 sites public-Federal structure 0 structures I I object . objects 0 Total Name of related multiple property listing: Number of contributing resources previously N/A listed in the National Register 0____ 4. State/Federal Agency Certification As the designated authority under the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966, as amended, I hereby certify that this H nomination Lj request for determination of eligibility meets the documentation standards for registering properties in the National Register of Historic Places and meets the procedural and professional requirements set forth in 36 CFR Part 60.
    [Show full text]
  • COB Landmarks Updated April 2015
    City of Berkeley Designated Landmarks Date of Number Street Name1 Name2 Construction Architect Designation Type DEMO Binder Number Note Joseph McVay Oceanview Sisterna 814 Addison Street House Historic District 1888 Roarke 3/1/2004 CBDist 267 Joseph and Wilson Oceanview Sisterna 816 Addison Street McVay House Historic District 1892 Unknown 3/1/2004 CBDist 267 Carrington House, Seth Babson & R. 1029 Addison Street Bartine 1893 Wenk 3/15/1982 SOM 54 1124 Addison Street John Brennan House 1891 Unknown 7/9/2001 LM 237 Cooper Woodworking Walter Crapo / Ben 1250 Addison Street Building 1912 Pearson 4/21/1986 LM 100 Saint Joseph the 1640 Addison Street Worker 0 Shea & Lofquist 3/18/1991 LM partial 160 Sanford G. Jackson / 1900 Addison Street Framat Lodge 1927 Sommarstrom Bros. 4/7/1997 LM 193 The John Boyd 1915 Addison Street House 1893 Unknown 1/5/2012 SOM 310 Golden Sheaf 2071 Addison Street Bakery 1905 Clinton Day 12/19/1977 LM 21 2110 Addison Street Underwood Building 1905 F.E. Armstrong 11/1/1993 SOM 178 Heywood Apartment 2119 Addison Street Bldg 1906 Unknown 4/7/2003 LM 251 Frederick H. Dakin Walter H. Ratcliff & 2750 Adeline Street Warehouse 1906 George T. Plowman 8/9/2004 LM 273 The Hoffman 2988 Adeline Street Building 1905 Henry Ahnefeld 7/6/2006 SOM 286 The William Clephane Corner 3027 Adeline Street Store 1905 C.M. Cook 9/7/2006 LM 290 William Wharff / C. 3228 Adeline Street Carlson's Block 1903 Ekman 7/19/1982 LM 64 3250 Adeline Street India Block 1903 A.W.
    [Show full text]
  • Loafer's Guide to the U.C. Berkeley Campus file:///Volumes/Music and Pictures/All Writing/Loafers Guide/In
    Loafer's Guide to the U.C. Berkeley Campus file:///Volumes/music and pictures/all writing/loafers guide/in... A LOAFER’S GUIDE TO THE U.C. BERKELEY CAMPUS b Caroln Doughert (last updated November 2004) Introduction, 2000 I started this book while attending graduate school at Berkeley in 1987, and completed the manuscript (to the extent that it is completed) in 1994, at which time I was living in the Midwest and was unable to show it to anyone who might have been interested. As I state in the following Prolog, a book like this is dated before it's begun-in the six years since I finished it several buildings have been demolished and several more of varying quality and prominence have been added to the campus. Departments have moved, services have disappeared and others have been created. And many of the places I mention, like the lobby of Hearst Mining and the Environmental Design library, are currently closed while undergoing renovation or seismic retrofit. I'm hoping, though, that the information in this book will be useful and entertaining to people who either remember what the campus used to be like (or want to know) and people who will find that many of the things I describe can still be found on campus. I'd like to encourage anyone who has additional information to add, or who would like to take on the task of updating this manuscript, to contact me at carolyn dot webmail at ntlworld dot com. Enjoy the book, and have fun exploring our beautiful and historic campus.
    [Show full text]
  • Resource Guide for Parents
    RESOURCE GUIDE FOR PARENTS CalParents elena zhukova RESOURCE GUIDE FOR PARENTS GETTING INVOLVED 4 STAYING CONNECTED 7 ACADEMICS 10 STUDENT HEALTH 17 CAMPUS SAFETY 19 STUDENT LIFE 22 RESOURCES 28 elena zhukova WELCOME TO BERKELEY Dear Cal Parents: UC Berkeley is a place of immense intellectual vitality, where some of today’s brightest students and scholars work together to deepen understanding of the world we live in. It is also a place that is steadfastly committed to widening the doors to educational opportunity, a place that sets young people from all backgrounds on a path towards success in their lives and in their careers. This combination of excellence and access is what defines and animates us; it is truly Berkeley’s DNA. I arrived at Berkeley in 1970 as a freshly minted PhD who had never been west of Philadelphia, and this institution transformed me – just as it continues to transform so many of those who study here, work here, visit, and otherwise come into contact with our campus. I know that Berkeley will prove just as transformative for your sons and daughters. This resource guide provides a wealth of information about UC Berkeley, and can serve as a starting point for any questions you might have about our campus. We also invite you to call on Cal Parents at any time if you need additional assistance. On behalf of the entire UC Berkeley community: Welcome to our family, and Go Bears! CAROL CHRIST Chancellor It is with great honor that we welcome you to the Cal family! We are excited that your student has chosen to study at the University of California, Berkeley.
    [Show full text]
  • Campus Parking Map (PDF)
    Campus Parking Map 1 2 3 4 5 University of Mediterranean California Botanical Garden of PARKING DESIGNATION Human Garden Asian Old Roses Bicycle Dismount Zone Genome Southern Australasian South 84 Laboratory Julia African American (M-F 8am-6pm) Morgan New Hall World C Central Campus permit Rd Desert vin 74 al Campus building C Herb 86 83 Garden F Faculty/staff permit Cycad & Chinese Palm Medicinal Garden Herb Construction area 85 Garden S Student permit 85B Miocene Eastern Mexican/ Forest North Central Botanical American P American Visitor Information a Disabled (DP) parking Strawberry n Garden Botanical o Entrance Mather r Lot Garden Californian a Redwood m Entrance ic A Grove Emergency Phone P Public Parking (fee required)** A P SSL F P H V il la a No coins needed - Dial 9-911 or c911 Lower r e H T F Lot e L r M i Motorcycle permit aus e G s F W H Mathematical Molecular e Campus parking lot a SSL r n y l D R Sciences ia Foundry a nn d 73 Upper te National d Research en r RH Residence Hall permit Lot C Center for o Institute J Electron r Permit parking street Lo ire Tra e F i Microscopy w n l p e 66 r Jorda p 67 U R Restricted 72 3 Garage entrance 62 MSRI P H Hill Area permit Parking 3 Garage level designation Only Grizzly 77A ce 3 Peak CP Carpool parking permit (reserved until 10 am) erra V T Entrance Coffer One way street C Dam F Hill 77 31 y P H ce 2 Lot a rra Terrace W CS CarShare Te 69 Parking ic Street Barrier P V race 1 Lots m Ter ra o n V Visitor Parking on-campus P V Lawrence a East P Bicycle Parking - Central Campus Lot 75A
    [Show full text]
  • ZAB Staff Report Template
    L ANDMARKS P RESERVATION C OMMISSION Staff Repor t FOR COMMISSION ACTION APRIL 2, 2015 Campanile Way, UC Berkeley Campus Consideration of City of Berkeley, Landmark designation I. Application Basics A. Land Use Designation: General Plan: Institutional B. CEQA Determination: The designation qualifies for a Categorical Exemption under Section 15061 of the Public Resources Code, Guidelines for Implementation of the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA). C. Parties Involved: Designation Initiation: Application of Residents Property Owner: Regents of the University of California 1111 Franklin Street, FL 6 Oakland, CA 94607 2120 Milvia Street, Berkeley, CA 94704 Tel: 510.981.7410 TDD: 510.981.7474 Fax: 510.981.7420 CAMPANILE WAY LANDMARKS PRESERVATION COMMISSION Page 2 of 11 April 2, 2015 Figure 1: Campanile Way and Surrounding Landmarks Figure 2: Campanile Way, the UC Berkeley Campus, and Surroundings LANDMARKS PRESERVATION COMMISSION CAMPANILE WAY April 2, 2015 Page 3 of 11 I. Background At the November 6, 2014 LPC meeting the LPC reviewed the Draft Environmental Impact Report (DEIR) for the 2211 Harold Way Mixed-Use Project, including the Historic Resources Technical Report (HRTR) http://www.cityofberkeley.info/uploadedFiles/Planning_and_Development/Level_3_- _ZAB/Draft%20EIR_Appendix_part3.pdf . During the public comment period on the Draft EIR, community members raised concerns about potential impacts of the high-rise project to views from Campanile Way. The DEIR included the consideration of potential impacts to the views from Campanile Way under Cultural Resources. The Draft EIR identifies Campanile Way as a contributor to the Classical Core of the UC Berkeley Campus and therefore as a historical resource whose views are character-defining features, finding that the project would introduce new construction into the view, but not destroy it; in particular the formal view, from the center of the base of the Campanile, over the City below.
    [Show full text]
  • Sixteen of Tfoe\$Everiteen Items Comprising This Multiple Resources Nomination Are Structures; One Item, Founders' Rock, Is a Natural Feature of the Campus
    Check one Check one JL ©KCfsllent __ deteriorated X unaltered X original site JL gooft __ ruins -X altered __ moved date _ fair __ unexposed the present and original (if known) physical appearance Sixteen of tfoe\$everiteen items comprising this Multiple Resources Nomination are structures; one item, Founders' Rock, is a natural feature of the campus. The manmade structures are located on the central campus of the University of California (see appended maps). By their location, orientation toward major and mirldr axes, and Neo-Classic architectural style, they define the formal, turn-of-the-century concept of the University. Although a few of the structures have received exterior and interior alterations, their general architectural integrity is high. The items are divided into the following categories and described in sequence on the continuation pages. a. Individual Buildings or Structures 1) Hearst Greek Theatre, John Galen Howard, Architect; 1903 2) North Gate Hall, John Galen Howard, Architect; 1906 3) Hearst Memorial Mining Building, John Galen Howard, Architect; 1907 4) Sather Gate and Bridge, John Galen Howard, Architect; 1910 5) Hearst Gymnasium for Women, Bernard Maybeck and Julia Morgan, Architects; 1927 b. Buildings or Groups of Buildings and Their Landscaped Settings 1) Faculty Club a) (Men's) Faculty Club and Faculty Glade, Bernard Maybeck, Architect; 1902 2) Campanile Way and Esplanade a) Sather Tower (Campanile) and the Esplanade, John Galen Howard, Architect; 1914 b) South Hall, David Farquharson, Architect; 1873 c) Wheeler
    [Show full text]
  • Campanile Way, UC Berkeley Campus Consideration of City of Berkeley, Landmark Designation
    L ANDMARKS P RESERVATION C OMMISSION Staff Repor t FOR COMMISSION ACTION MARCH 5, 2015 Campanile Way, UC Berkeley Campus Consideration of City of Berkeley, Landmark designation I. Application Basics A. Land Use Designations: Zoning: R-5 High Density Residential General Plan: Institutional B. CEQA Determination: The designation qualifies for a Categorical Exemption under Section 15061 of the Public Resources Code, Guidelines for Implementation of the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA). C. Parties Involved: Designation Initiation: Application of Residents Author: Carrie Olson 1408 Grant Street Berkeley CA 94703 Property Owner: Regents of the University of California 1111 Franklin Street Oakland, CA 94607 2120 Milvia Street, Berkeley, CA 94704 Tel: 510.981.7410 TDD: 510.981.7474 Fax: 510.981.7420 E-mail: [email protected] CAMPANILE WAY LANDMARKS PRESERVATION COMMISSION Page 2 of 2 March 5, 2015 Figure 1. Location Map I. Background On November 25, 2014 a Landmark Initiation for Campanile Way roadway and environs was submitted by at least fifty residents of the City. Pursuant to Section 3.24.130 the public hearing was in January within seventy days of the initiation. To designate a property as a landmark, historic district, or structure of merit, the LPC must find that the property meets one or more of the criteria delineated in Landmarks Preservation Ordinance (LPO) Section 3.24.110. The significance criteria for Landmarks and Historic Districts in the City’s Preservation Ordinance are relatively specific and appear to align with the California and National Registers. In order to analyze potential findings the application needs to include: the location and boundaries of the landmark; and accompanying data required by the commission, including the characteristics which justify its designation and the particular features that should be preserved.
    [Show full text]