Reader says 8th-grade graduations unnecessary
“Red Phone, this is in response to the canceled middle school graduations. It has been a tradition to walk across the platform to receive your diploma for all your accomplishments. And change is not easy, but it does allow the parents and children to look at the positive side, which may include some quality time and celebrate the graduation at home and reflect on the love and work it took to achieve this promotion. Parents are given the opportunity to role model for their children and teach them how to face challenges in life that are difficult. Children are our future, instruct them now and they will never forget when they get older! Peace in difficult times.”
By signing Cain, Giants show they’re not afraid to spend
We have our hero for the day and his name is Charles Bartlett Johnson.
Wildflower Run was my first 5K; what’s the ‘K’ mean?
I am not a runner. Let’s get that out of the way first. I have no desire whatsoever to move my legs quickly for fun. Hiking, yes – running, no. Carrying 30 extra pounds around doesn’t help either.
Man suffers minor injuries in stabbing
A man in his 50s suffered a superficial stab wound when an unknown suspect cut him with a knife north of Morgan Hill Sunday afternoon, police said.
The Raid: Redemption
There are 63 individually described fatalities in “The Raid: Redemption,” and enough maimings to overwhelm a regional trauma center. The film is a sort of high-speed demolition derby except with human actors. It is 100 percent highly concentrated whoop-ass, and it is sensational. It follows the Aristotelian unities of action, place and time, following an Indonesian police SWAT team through an attack on tenement housing the scurviest thugs on the archipelago. The battle rages. Through group melees, one-on-one duels and every form of warfare in between, the action pauses only long enough to reload. Yet the film doesn’t stint on character and story. Director Gareth Evans knows how to tell a frenetic story with fastidious care. Action star Iko Uwais plays Rama, a young cop who is at the point of the spear. He practices silat, an Indonesian martial-arts discipline that’s closely associated with the teachings of Islam as a form of character building. The objective is to capture Tama (Ray Sahetapy), a coldblooded drug lord whose chief enforcers are the brutal Mad Dog (stunt choreographer Yayan Ruhian) and brainy Andi (Doni Alamsyah). Amid spattery death by machine gun, machete, stair railing and filing cabinet, there are revelations and complications aplenty, with hidden corruption, secret family ties and innocent bystanders caught in the crossfire. Every element fits (including the propulsive score by Mike Shinoda of Linkin Park), adding richness to the story without slowing the action. There are stunt set pieces here that will be talked about for years. The movie is a kick that will leave your head ringing for days.
Online vigil encouraged for Sierra LaMar
The KlaasKids Foundation is asking users of social media Internet sites to participate in a 24-hour online vigil for Sierra LaMar, the Sobrato High School sophomore who has been missing from her north Morgan Hill home for 17 days.
Lakers defeat Golden State 120-112
If Sunday's 120-112 loss to the Los Angeles Lakers showed anything, it's that Warriors players aren't interested in tanking.
Search continues for missing teen
It's now been over two weeks since Morgan Hill teen Sierra LaMar, 15 went missing on March 16 and the community is not yet ready to give up on the search.













