Correction: An earlier version of this post incorrectly stated that UC schools had seen "sharp" drops in international student applications. The drop was small, but nonetheless represents the first decline in a decade.
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- An elderly homeless man was given a quality of life citation for eating a slice of pizza in a Muni shelter, which he reportedly found amusing. [Chron]
- SF Bike Coalition officially opposes Turk Street bike lane. [Streetsblog]
- A bee attack in the Stanislaus County city of Ceres killed a dog and wounded two people. [AP]
- Here's how to give funds to the victims of the deadly West Oakland fire that displaced 80 people. [KRON4]
- Foreign applications to UC schools have dropped for the first time in ten years, which could have something to do with President Trump's anti-immigrant overtures but who's to say! [Daily Cal]
- Legislators propose new rules basically eradicating California's bail system. [KRON4]
- New documents in the Google/Waymo lawsuit against Uber say the exec accused of stealing secrets and bringing them to Uber was double dipping pay. [Business Times]
- Mount Umunhum in the Santa Cruz Mountains will be accessible once again for the first time in 60 years starting this September. [ABC7]
- You can track these Yosemite black bears online, from a safe distance. [AP]
- A new poll shows that voters think Dianne Feinstein is too old to run for reelection, especially when they're reminded she'll be 84 next year. [KQED]
- How does this SF meter maid — er, parking control officer — keep his head up after being called every name in the book? “Tough skin," he says in this profile. [Chron]
- Apple announces a new Mac Pro, an effort to cater to a neglected user base. [TechCrunch]
- President Trump has officially ended federal online privacy rules, all data is for sale, tremendous! [Recode]
- In effort to get pay equity for women, Supervisor Mark Farrell will introduce legislation that would ban employers in San Francisco — including San Francisco city government — from asking job applicants how much money they made at their current or previous positions today. [Chron]
- AG Jeff Sessions and the head of homeland security sent a chastising letter to the chief justice of the California Supreme Court, Tani Cantil-Sakauye, criticizing the jurist for asking federal immigration agents to quit “stalking” local courthouses in order to arrest people who are in the country illegally. [CBS5]