62.4 F
Morgan Hill
December 19, 2025

Vigil Wednesday night for missing teen Sierra LaMar

Volunteers as well as friends and family of Sierra LaMar will have a vigil at City Hall Wednesday to raise funds for the ongoing efforts to find the missing teen, and to bring awareness to her disappearance which is approaching the six-month mark.

Going the distance

From the scorching Saturday morning heat of Napa Valley, through an uncharacteristically clear late night across San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge, to a stormy, overcast Sunday afternoon at Santa Cruz’s coastal Natural Bridges State Park, two local relay teams ran for about 30 hours last weekend without stopping, assisted by little sleep and loads of teammate camaraderie.

Parolee Evades Arrest

Santa Clara County Sheriff's Office deputies and Morgan Hill Police staked out a perimeter around an area just north of the city Thursday for several hours, hunting down a wanted parolee.

The End of the Garlic Fest’s Dynamic Duo

It was during the fall of 1992 when Gene Sakahara and Gene Bozzo were called in at the last minute to replace Rudy Melone, Garlic Festival co-founder, for a cooking demonstration at the Nob Hill Foods Hecker Pass Family Adventure Park.A year later, when they made their way to the cooking stage for the first time as SakaBozzo, the comedic culinary duo were a hit with the crowd. This Friday will mark the 25th appearance at the festival for these Gilroy residents.But the sad part is it’s also going to be their final show.“We thought that we had a good run at it,” Sakahara said. “We want to go off while we’re still welcomed and then give other people a chance at it.”The show might be done with after this week, however Sakahara, 68, and Bozzo, 75, plan to be part of the garlic festival in a more low key situation.“The festival is in both of our bloods,” Bozzo said. “We believe in the festival. We believe what good it does for the community and we’re just moving over to another assignment. That’s all.”This year the two former garlic festival presidents are adding their grandsons to the show. Bozzo will have his grandson Dominic, 8, accompany him, while Sakahara will bring up his grandsons Bode, 10, and Kiden Gonzales, 9.“That’ll be fun because we’ve always tried to portray cooking for the family,” Sakahara said. “That’s what we’re about, is family. And we really enjoy the meals together.”Sakahara and Bozzo are known to mix it up year after year with new recipes that include garlic and this year will be no different. Sakahara will make Mendocino crab cakes with Bode and Kiden. Bozzo will make southern Italian red sauce with pork and Dominic will make a family recipe known as Carmela’s Meatballs.Bozzo said the inspiration for SakaBozzo came from someone he watched at the festival, but it wasn’t quite the vision he wanted to model the show after.“He cooked the same thing every year,” Bozzo said “People kind of got tired of that. We never did that, every year was a different recipe.”The SakaBozzo show was also all about cooking for the family and over the years the Gilroy Garlic Festival became a big family to them.Bozzo said they both have strong beliefs in cooking with family and friends. Nowadays, he said, people are always on the go and don’t have time for a family meal.What started as a friendly favor to substitute for an ill friend quickly turned into a success for the SakaBozzo show. They have been asked to make a special appearance at the 40th annual garlic fest in 2018 and they agreed without hesitation.“We’ll still be involved but not on the cook-off stage every year,” Sakahara said “But it’ll be good to just relax a little bit too.”

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Police Arrest Gilroy Parolee on Suspicion of Stealing Movies

Cops say suspect, 0companion had drugs with them and were under

Friends, family to celebrate life of local ‘legend’

There’s a lot to celebrate about the life of longtime Morgan Hill resident Willie Wilkinson, and his friends and family will memorialize him with a May 20 blowout complete with some of his favorite pastimes—music, dancing and time spent with hundreds of those who knew and loved him best.Wilkinson died unexpectedly April 28 at the age of 68, at his girlfriend’s home in San Juan Bautista. He grew up in Sunnyvale, and has lived in Morgan Hill since 1994, according to his daughter Adrianne Wilkinson.Adrianne was backstage at the Morgan Hill Community Playhouse preparing for the South Valley Civic Theater’s production of “Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike,” when she heard about her father’s death. The crew told her they could delay the show that evening, but she insisted on performing as scheduled, for her father.“He wouldn’t want that,” Adrianne said a few days after Willie’s death.It’s hard to keep up with all the stories and memories about Willie Wilkinson—a “legend”—shared recently by Adrianne and Willie’s son Cody, along with a handful of local friends who were drawn to his natural ability to find and enjoy good company.Almost everywhere he went, Willie was likely to run into someone he knew, “from all walks of life” and of all ages, according to Cody.“One thing that made my father such a great person (is) every interaction a person would have with him would leave (them) with a great memory,” Cody, who now lives in Carlsbad, said in an email. “My dad would do anything for my sister and myself, and that really flowed over to his friends as well. That is why you hear all of his friends refer to each other as a family.”Willie Wilkinson was a U.S. Army veteran who was proud of his service, which included two tours in Vietnam in 1968 as a flight engineer on a Chinook helicopter. After returning to the states, he enjoyed a variety of livelihoods, including as a dance teacher, bouncer, bodyguard, rodeo performer, ski instructor and mechanic. At the time of his death, Willie was retired from his most recent career as a precision machinist.In his later years, perhaps his favorite thing to do—other than spend time with old friends and make new ones—was to ride his motorcycle. Many of his friends in Morgan Hill enjoyed riding with him, and the group often traveled hundreds of miles to attend regional and national motorcycle gatherings.“Willie rode in the front on every ride,” said Will Anderson, a Morgan Hill resident who has been riding with Willie since he met him a few years ago.“He’s our Biker Buddha,” added Twyla Sulesky, also of Morgan Hill. She was referencing Willie’s penchant for dispensing with profound advice and observations about life and the universe—a wisdom he shared with his own brood and complete strangers alike.“Everybody loves him,” Twyla said. “Willie was such a people person.”He was a fixture at some of downtown Morgan Hill’s most popular establishments, and at the summertime Friday Night Music Series at the Community and Cultural Center, where the May 20 celebration of his life will take place.“He had a way about him that would just draw people in,” Cody added.Willie and his girlfriend, Shawn Lovering of San Juan Bautista, were together for about a year before he died, Lovering said. She described how “generous” he was in taking her to doctor’s appointments and treatment sessions during her recent bout with cancer.“It’s like we’re kindred spirits. We immediately had a connection” when they first met, Lovering said.The most important part of Willie’s life were his two children, Anderson noted. Willie was a devoted follower of Adrianne’s theater productions, and even made lasting impressions on some of her young students. Cody said whenever he said goodbye at the end of any conversation—on the phone or in person—his father never failed to say, “I love you.”“We talked every morning on the phone,” added Adrianne, who teaches at a school in Gilroy. “This is really hard for us, but I feel lucky in a way because this is my dad. How many people can say (their) dad touched so many lives?”Anderson said, and other friends agreed, Willie died “on top of the world,” after recent years recovering from cancer, back surgery and heart complications seemed only to strengthen his spirits.“He was walking tall (and) he was in love,” Anderson said.

Sun shines on renewable energy

It's a challenge, but the rewards are potentially significant.

Turner calls for unity, infrastructure progress in annual speech

Morgan Hill Mayor Mark Turner called for increased unity among residents while highlighting infrastructure projects, public safety needs and potential revenue challenges during his March 13 State of the City address at the Granada Theater. Turner emphasized the importance of collaboration, likening the city’s progress...

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