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September 17, 2025

Monthly Archives: October 2016

Anna Mae Powell ~ June 5, 1930 – September 8, 2016

A memorial service will be held on October 29 at Glad Tidings Church in San Juan Bautista at 11 a.m.Ann Powell passed away on September 8 surrounded by family and friends. She is survived by: her daughter, Sharon (Robert) Cole; son, Steve Hatfield and brother, James (Jewel) Moen. Ann is also survived by: her granddaughter, Mackenzie Cole-Hignel (Shyloh) and grandsons, Justin Cole, Jeff Hatfield (Jackie) and David Hatfield. She also leaves behind 9 great grandchildren and several great-great grandchildren.

Mary Kawakami Yokoyama ~ March 17, 1934 – September 8, 2016

A funeral Mass will be celebrated on Friday, October 21, 11:00 AM, at St Julie Billiart Church in San Jose. A reception will follow. Private interment will be at Oak Hill Memorial Park.Mary Kawakami Yokoyama, age 82, of San Jose, entered into eternal rest on September 8, 2016. Mary was born in Denver, Colorado, in 1934, to Kenzo and Margarita (Mungia) Kawakami. She met her husband, Shigeru Yokoyama in San Jose. Their 56-year marriage was a model for all couples. Mary believed in education and hard work. She was the first in her family to go to college, SJSU. She mentored students in Migrant Education across the MHUSD in her long teaching career.  Family was important to Mary. She left the paid workforce to raise her children. Mary instilled her love of reading, often taking them to several libraries in a day. Mary took pride in cooking from scratch, most famous for her apple pie.

Mary Jane Valentine May 19, 1925 – October 10, 2016

Memorial services will be held on Sunday, November 6, 2016 at 11:00 AM at The IOOF Lodge in Hollister. A reception will follow the services at the lodge hall. Officers of Rebekah Lodge No. 29 will officiate.

100K Visit San Martin Pumpkin Patch

Uesugi Farms’ pumpkin patch in San Martin has grown like one of its prize-winning pumpkins.

Judy Streeter Keith June 13, 1938 – October 7, 2016

Services were held in Lake Mills, IA where she was born.Judy Streeter Keith, former resident of Gilroy passed away on Oct 7, 2016 in Coarsegold, CA. Loving wife of 58 years to Gary Keith. Mother of Kerie Keith Caliri (Al Ciacco) and Dean Lee Keith. Grandmother to Krystal Romero & Tony Caliri. Great-grandmother to Conner & MaKenzie Romero. Services were held in Lake Mills, IA where she was born.Condolences at www.HabingFamilyFuneralHome.com

Come to the Dispatch Open House Wednesday

The Gilroy Dispatch is celebrating its move downtown with a ribbon cutting and grand opening celebration with food and drink Wednesday, 5:30 p.m.-6:30 p.m.

Parks for Everyone

This year marks the 100th anniversary of the National Park Service. Between the establishment of Yellowstone National Park in 1872 and the birth of the National Park Service 44 years later, who managed our parks? Who protected archeological sites from vandals? Who kept out the miners, the loggers and the hunters?One of the most interesting and unlikely stories of early park management happened right here in our backyard.African American regiments fought with distinction as a part of the Union Army during the Civil War, but it wasn't until 1866 that Congress created the first all-black regiment in the U.S. Army. While serving in the Great Plains during the Indian Wars, Native Americans called them Buffalo Soldiers because their hair reminded the Indians of the curly clump of hair between the Bison's horns. The name stuck.After the Spanish-American War, the Ninth Cavalry Regiment of the Buffalo Soldiers wintered at the Presidio in San Francisco. Their summer orders: ride across the Central Valley to Yosemite National Park. For the next several years, these men acted as forerunners of today's park rangers, patrolling and protecting Yosemite from those who would harm it.“National Parks are the best idea we ever had. Absolutely American, absolutely democratic, they reflect us at our best rather than our worst.” Few would argue with Wallace Stegner’s famous quote. These lands are not the fenced-off private property of some monarch or oligarch. They are open to all of us for the cost of a day-use fee. But many don’t come.Shelton Johnson is an African American man who has traveled a remarkable path from the streets of Detroit to his job as a park ranger in Yosemite National Park. According to a 2009 survey conducted by the Park Service, only one percent of the visitors to Yosemite that year were black, a fact that saddens Shelton, but doesn’t surprise him. He is quick to point out that the legends of the Old West and our wilderness have not included people who look like him.When Shelton learned the story of the Buffalo Soldiers, he was thrilled. That bit of hidden history turned America’s wilderness heritage into his heritage as well. And it gives all African Americans ownership of our frontier story. Shelton tells the Buffalo Soldier story hoping to awaken disenfranchised kids and lure them to national parks where nature can do her work. He knows that national parks are more than a lovely view. Time spent in wilderness and nature builds physical and psychological health in so many ways.Wallace Stegner was right. Our national parks are a great gift to us all. The centennial of the National Park Service is an opportunity to remember and be thankful that those who came before us had the wisdom to set aside portions of our grand landscape. National Parks preserve a legacy that belongs to all of us.

‘Little Mermaid Jr.’ Live

There’s nothing quite like a stage full of kids dressed as starfish, sea anemones and seagulls singing and dancing their little hearts out to lift one’s spirits these days. And the cast and crew of South Valley Civic Theatre do a charming job of it in their current children’s musical production of The Little Mermaid Jr. in Morgan Hill through Oct. 22.The story, loosely based on Hans Christian Andersen’s Danish fairy tale and adapted into a Disney movie and then a musical, involves a young mermaid, Ariel (Emily Pember) who falls in love with a human prince (Gannon Janisch) and is tricked into giving up her lovely singing voice to an evil sea witch (Jenna Hernandez) in exchange for legs so she can walk on land. She is surrounded by a cast of hilarious characters including the woebegone crab Sebastian (Tegan Leong) charged by Ariel’s father (Paul Maack) with keeping her safe.As the little mermaid of the title, Pember does fine work singing while managing the tricky aspects of swimming gracefully through the air (with flight direction by Jason Chamberlain). Unfortunately, her voice is sometimes overwhelmed by the recorded soundtrack on “Part of Your World.”As Ursula, the sea witch—in a wonderful costume of purple velvet and satin with sequined octopus’s tentacles—Hernandez has no such problems. She’s got a big voice and knows how to use it to best effect on “Poor Unfortunate Souls.”Stealing the show every which way is the spark plug Tegan Leong as the crab Sebastian, who knocks everyone out with a fish ensemble in “Under the Sea” and really tears things up in the sassy calypso “Kiss the Girl,” well supported by an undersea cast of seemingly thousands.Among the numerous other characters, well directed by Colleen Blanchard, Catherine Drayton stands out as the lead seagull, Scuttle (in a terrific costume, designed by Alice Gracey). Set designers Blanchard, Larry Tom and Jason Leong have created a wondrous undersea world, all wavering watercolors studded with bubbles and seaweed.The Little Mermaid Jr. Music by Alan Menken, lyrics by Howard Ashman and Glenn Slater, book by Doug Wright. Directed by Colleen Blanchard at South Valley Civic Theatre, Morgan Hill. Final performance is Oct. 22. For tickets call (408) 842-SHOW or visit www.svct.org. 

Victor C. Yanez May 8, 1945 – October 1, 2016

A celebration of life will be held on Sunday November 6, 2016 at Yuba City Moose Lodge 205 S Walton Ave, Yuba City, CA 95993 from 1-5pm.

Eunice Ruth Cancilla September 7, 1922 – October 8, 2016

The Family will be holding a private ceremony.