Lunches that make the grade
It’s a good thing Kaitlyn Tyson doesn’t get to pack her own school lunch box. While getting ready for school last year, Ashley Tyson of Lexington, Ky., asked her daughter what she would like in her lunch.
Missing Sierra LaMar case makes it to “Nancy Grace” show tonight
The case of missing Morgan Hill teen Sierra LaMar story will be featured on tonight’s “Nancy Grace” show on HLN.
Henner, Diaz named to first team
Sobrato senior Shawn Henner and Live Oak junior Alexis Diaz have been named first-team all-league in boys soccer for their respective Blossom Valley Athletic League divisions.
Stop, Look, and Listen for Tweets
Spring is the season for gardening and getting yards back into shape after winter rains. A word of warning: LOOK BEFORE YOU START! Before you begin tree trimming, construction work, yard maintenance, or roofing, take note—
SJ armed robbery, police chase ends on 101 in Gilroy
An armed robbery and car chase that began in San Jose culminated on southbound U.S. 101 just before the 10th Street off-ramp about 11:30 a.m. Tuesday.
UPDATED: Missing teen’s father not a suspect, authorities say
Investigators are still in the process of interviewing area sex crimes offenders, as well as any teens in Morgan Hill and Fremont who might know anything about missing teen Sierra LaMar.
Young Ducks get the better of Sharks
If it wasn’t a tacit admission, it was certainly implied when goaltender Jeff Deslauriers led the Ducks onto the ice instead of Jonas Hiller to finally give the workhorse goalie a rare night of rest.
Cespedes to start in center for A’s
Yoenis Cespedes will start the season as the A's center fielder and Coco Crisp will move to left field, manager Bob Melvin announced Monday.
The Hunger Games
Gary Ross’ movie version of “The Hunger Games” obeys the iron-clad rule of transforming beloved fantasy fiction into a big-budget film franchise: Do not offend the fans. This is a dutiful adaptation of an imaginative, evocative page-turner; it renders the most vivid passages of Suzanne Collins’ best-selling novel exactly as you picture the scenes while reading them. The result is well-made and absorbing, but never especially exciting. Collins’ novel takes place in a nightmarish future, where North America has become a country called Panem, comprised of 12 districts. Panem’s leaders insist on an annual ritual, broadcast across the nation, called “The Hunger Games.” Twenty-four teenagers, a boy and a girl from each of the districts, are chosen to compete in this fight to the death. Katniss Everdeen (Jennifer Lawrence), 16 and living in District 12, who volunteers to take the place of her younger sister, Primrose (Willow Shields). Katniss’ sort-of boyfriend is Gale (Liam Hensworth), who doesn’t want to see her go, especially not with her male counterpart in the Games, Peeta Mellark (Josh Hutcherson). During the draggy first hour of the film, Katniss and Peeta travel to the capital, as the movie introduces us to their handlers (Woody Harrelson, Elizabeth Banks and Lenny Kravitz), their fellow “tributes” and other assorted oddballs. Once the Hunger Games begin, the kids are trapped in an artificial forest from which only one survivor can emerge. But the mayhem Ross serves up is toothless. This “Hunger Games” is afraid of giving its young viewers nightmares. It’s just enough to make you curious for the inevitable, and hopefully less polite, sequel.
GPD suspect war vet killed mother; search suspended
Gilroy police have suspended the search for the body of Martha Gutierrez, 52, who they believe was shot and killed inside a car by her son Abel Gutierrez, 27. She was last seen Tuesday, the day before her 11-year-old daughter Lucero Luna-Gutierrez was murdered by Abel in their apartment off Kern Avenue in northwest Gilroy. Abel, an Iraq war veteran who apparently was suffering from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, then shot and killed himself.












