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Morgan Hill
February 4, 2026

Gavilan men’s and women’s soccer teams pick up wins

Gavilan football and men’s and women’s soccer are having great seasons. The Rams’ men’s soccer team is 3-4-2. Wins have come against Redwoods 2-1, Contra Costa 3-0 and Monterey Peninsula 10-1, with a 1-1 tie against Lemoore and a 1-1 tie against Siskiyous.  Edisson Torres and...

Top stories of the week: Dam could fail and road rage leads to arrest

We take a look at some of the biggest stories of the week. This

Morgan Hill native Jared Allen elected to NFL Hall of Fame

There are 382 members of the National Football League Hall of Fame. And one of them was raised on a horse ranch in Morgan Hill and attended Live Oak High.  On Aug. 2, the NFL enshrined Jared Allen into the Hall, its highest honor. Allen,...

‘Li’l Abner’ opens

Performances of 'Li'l Abner' are Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m.

Local students to present family comedy at Sobrato theater

The Morgan Hill-based performing arts school and production company South Valley Dance Arts will present the family musical comedy “La Fille Mal Gardee” next weekend at Ann Sobrato High School.Written in 1960 by Frederick Ashton, the SVDA’s musical rendition of the play will feature 110 student/performers, “ages 2 to 45,” from throughout the South Santa Clara Valley, according to SVDA instructor Juliet Smith.The tale centers around country beauty Lise, who falls in love with farm boy Colas against the wishes of her mother, Widow Simone. That’s where wealthy vineyard owner Thomas and his son Alain enter the picture, unraveling a string of hilarious results.The SVDA production features original choreography by Smith, an associate of the Royal Academy of Dance.The SVDA offers a full annual schedule of ballet and dance classes at the company’s headquarters at the Morgan Hill Grange, on East Fourth Street. They also offer summer dance camps.Students produce performances throughout the year, including the upcoming Spring Concert, which will feature SVDA’s emerging artists and experienced performers. The concert will also feature a full evening of musical theater as well as contemporary, folk, salsa and Ukrainian dance.The Spring Concert will take place 7 p.m. May 29 and 1 p.m. and 5 p.m. May 30 at the Morgan Hill Playhouse, 17090 Monterey Road. Tickets cost $15, and proceeds help raise money for outreach and scholarships, according to the SVDA website.

Saint Louise announces first baby of 2026

The first baby of 2026 in South Santa Clara County is 5-pound, 10-ounce Brittany Sanchez.  Sanchez was born on Jan. 1 at Saint Louise Regional Hospital in Gilroy, according to county officials. Brittany was 18 inches long. Her parents are Antonia Lopez Sanchez and Bartolo...

Gavilan College recognized for strong return on investment 

Gavilan College ranked No. 16 statewide and No. 5 in the Bay Area among 327 California community and career colleges for return on investment, according to a new report from College Futures Foundation and the HEA Group.  The “Golden Returns” report shows that students at...

Religion: The Plan

I learned long ago that I prefer to work, play and live by planning things out, studying ideas in my mind, and then embarking on a journey to achieve whatever it is that I set out to accomplish. Even at a young age, when friends...

Viewpoints exhibit showcases three artists in Morgan Hill

A new art exhibition known as Viewpoints on display at the Morgan Hill Community & Cultural Center showcases a range of works from local artists. The exhibit, which runs through July 11, features the works of Jennifer Blalack, Marylin Host and Diana Earl, who provide...

BookSmart served with 10-day eviction notice

BookSmart, a family-owned Morgan Hill bookstore that has been a beloved community gathering place for more than 20 years, is in danger of being forced to shutter its doors if the owners can’t gain a sudden large infusion of financing.Brad Jones, who owns the store located at 1295 East Dunne Ave. with his wife Cinda Meister, informed his customers July 11 that he received a 10-day eviction notice from the store’s landlord. The store owes about $60,000 in back rent, but Jones said the owners actually need to bury a mound of other debts—which eat into BookSmart’s ongoing cash flow—in order to stay open. And they don’t have much time.“We need to have an angel that’s willing to finance us,” Jones said. “We’ve spent every penny we’ve made in the last 25 years in the bookstore business.”In total, the company needs about $250,000 in long-term financing to cover the back rent (about $7,500 per month) and to pay off high-interest short-term debts. Jones explained that if he could pay off the short-term debts—about $150,000 worth—the store would be on solid financial ground, and would in fact make enough money to continue to grow.“Business is profitable enough to make payments on our long-term financing, but not enough to make payments on the short-term financing,” Jones said. “Unless we can refinance the (short-term) debt, we’re gone.”Jones and Meister have owned BookSmart for 23 years. They initially opened the store in a small shop at Monterey Road and Second Street in downtown Morgan Hill, then moved to the former Depot Center shopping center at Second and Depot streets as they outgrew their former space.Last year, the owners of the Depot Center property sold the site—under a deal set in motion years earlier by the City of Morgan Hill and the former Redevelopment Agency—to make way for a mixed-use residential/commercial project that is now under construction.The new location is located on the eastern outskirts of town, in a more modern shopping center near the intersection of Dunne and Murphy avenues. Jones said while business started off slow in the current location, it has picked up steadily since they moved in.BookSmart has always been more than just a book retailer and toy store. It also has a café with ample comfortable table seating, and serves as a de facto community center for many Morgan Hill residents.It is a center for “music, arts and literacy,” according to Karen Fitch, coordinator for the nonprofit BookSmart Community Advantage, which the store created last year in order to promote arts and culture. Part of BCA’s agenda is a summer-long calendar of fun and educational workshops, art lessons, music classes and more, primarily geared toward children.One of these ongoing events is the weekly “Baby Blanket Babble-On” infant storytime, led by Fitch. The storytime takes place every Tuesday at BookSmart.A frequent attendee of Baby Blanket Babble-On is Morgan Hill resident Brenda Glimpse, who brings her 9-month-old son Hunter to each weekly story. She carefully arranges her busy work schedule just to make time for the Tuesday stories. Glimpse was also a frequent customer of BookSmart’s previous downtown location.“This store is a good environment for him,” Glimpse said.Count Fitch’s 10-year-old son Matthew among the young faithful customers of BookSmart’s too. The store is a safe, welcoming place with plenty of activities for him and other children—not to mention his preferred spot to pick up the latest novels in the “Ranger’s Apprentice” and other series he follows.“We’re trying to create a place where Matthew has caring adults in his life. This is home to him,” Fitch said.BookSmart has been in a similar, if not quite as dire, situation before. In 2014, Jones and Meister found themselves similarly overextended in debt after a store they opened in San Jose failed. They turned to their customers, who helped raise enough money to keep their doors in Morgan Hill open.Jones acknowledged the support of BookSmart’s customers Tuesday as he worried about the long odds of staving off an eviction.“The community has already done an awful lot for us,” Jones said.BookSmart will begin liquidating its inventory Friday, July 14 unless Jones and Meister can come up with the financing to stay open.

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