This month, Santa Monica’s Chief Resilience Officer and Emergency Operations Director, Lindsay Call, will be honored by two local organizations for her unwavering leadership and service to the Santa
Santa Monica College’s John Drescher Planetarium continues its Friday evening events in April 2022 with free, live virtual shows presented online at smc.edu/planetarium. This month’s friendly
The Santa Monica Public Library presents the workshop series Teens, Tweens and Their Digital Lives each Wednesday in March. Join us at the Pico Branch Annex, 2201 Pico Blvd., from
As soon as the pandemic hit, environmental and sustainable practices went out the window. In early 2020, with the spread of the virus at the forefront of everyone’s minds,
The return to normalcy means many welcome things, but also a few unwelcome ones like the end of California’s rent relief program.
Still the news is not all dire,
Civil rights attorney Erin Darling is running as a progressive candidate for L.A. City Council District 11 and is calling on residents to not fall prey to animosity or
Senior thesis projects may be associated with prestigious liberal arts colleges draped in ivy, but school administrators in Santa Monica believe they may offer an important educational opportunity for Samohi
For the 71st year, the Santa Monica-Malibu Unified School District will present Stairway of the Stars, a musical extravaganza highlighting the outstanding music education programs, and showcasing the talents of
Crime Watch is culled from reports provided by the Santa Monica Police Department. These are arrests only. All parties are innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.
On
Photos began cropping up on social media around January 25: seabirds, ensconced in glistening sand, crumpled grotesquely in the golden hour light and strewn up and down the beach in
DARLENE SUPERVILLE / Associated Press
Keep a smile on your face. Don’t talk too much. Avoid the news media.
It’s advice Supreme Court nominees have heard for decades from
KATHLEEN RONAYNE / Associated Press
California’s urban water users and farmers who rely on supplies from state reservoirs will get less than planned this year as fears of a third