Homeless Proposals Face Challanges

City leaders have been working on changes to the Homeless Services Center on Coral Street and other areas. (Chip Scheuer)

When Charles Edwards, a mentally ill homeless man from San Francisco, stabbed Camouflage co-owner Shannon Collins on Ocean Street in May, he sent shockwaves through the Santa Cruz community. “Everyone felt so much pressure to act,” Rowland Rebele says of the intense debate over the city’s homeless problem that arose after Collins’ murder.

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How We Remember

Benjamin Storm of UCSC’s Psychology department keeps up with the latest breakthroughs in our understanding of memory. (Photo by Chip Scheuer)

When I was about four years old I had a play date at Meryl Streep’s house. It was just an informal kind of a thing where my dad, who built sculptures designed by Streep’s husband, Don Gummer, dumped me off at the front door and picked me up a few hours later. I remember very little: getting lost in a maze of hallways, losing my velcro-fastened shoes and hanging out with the Gummer girls in a large bathroom, where they seemed to do a lot of their hanging out.

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Q&A: Orin Martin

Orin Martin (Photo by Chip Scheuer)

What gets me up and into the garden daily is I am a creature of habit, creature of doses—doing the same thing in the same way day after day after day. I’m afraid I’m locked in to being a servant of the seasons and the morning’s early light. Actually it’s a privilege. I/we teach people to grow plants organically, the applications are many and varied. It’s powerful.

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Piedmont Celebrating 100th Anniversary

Piedmont Court was kind of a big deal 100 years ago, and it still is. Photo by Jacob Pierce.

Santa Cruzans took notice when they heard a new hotel apartment building on High Street would be heated by steam. That’s because in 1912, most homes were heated by wooden flame. “The whole point of building was to adopt the most modern and efficient innovations at the time,” local historian Ross Eric Gibson says of the Piedmont Court building, which is celebrating its 100th anniversary this weekend.

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Hammer Campaign Pledges to Keep Clean

Hammer isn't sure exactly what negative campaigning he's denouncing.

The supervisor’s race isn’t just getting personal. This time, it’s…hypothetical. The Weekly received a press release from the Eric Hammer for 5th District Supervisor campaign that reads, “Both my opponent and I signed the Code of Fair Campaign Practices pledging to run a clean campaign and I am sticking by my pledge. I challenge him to do the same and to denounce any negative campaign activities.”

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