58.6 F
Gilroy
January 27, 2026

Baseball – a game of life

Gilroy's Jack Headley suits up again, fights to get back to pro

Plenty of flower power

GILROY

Buzzed for a ‘good cause’

Fifteen people received new haircuts outside a downtown bar Thursday afternoon as patrons raised more than $800 for a popular employee of the establishment who is undergoing treatment for stage 3 lymphoma. Morgan Hill resident Bob Matts and local hairstylist Ashley Sulesky helped organize the “Buzz A Thon” outside the M & H Tavern in an effort to help raise money bartender Teresa Glover and her medical expenses. Matts donated $10 for each customer who agreed to have their head shorn by Sulesky, who donated her time to the fundraising effort. Matts encouraged other patrons to match him, and together they raised a total of $830, which will be donated directly to the Teresa Glover Fund, Matts said. Matts said he became “teary-eyed” reading about Glover’s plight in the news last month, and he and other Tavern patrons decided to do something for the 39-year-old mother of two who was diagnosed with lymphoma in December 2013. “So we made an event on Facebook, and I said I would match everybody who shares it with me,” Matts said. In addition to contributions by Matts and those who matched him, a silent donor agreed Thursday to donate $1,000 to cover expenses for another fundraiser for Glover on Saturday if longtime Tavern bartender Bob Allman agreed to shave his head. Allman - who couldn’t refuse the offer - and other residents thought up the Saturday evening fundraiser at Troy’s Bocce Ball, which will feature a DJ and full lineup of live music, to be closed out by the hit rock band SmashMouth. Morgan Hill resident Norbert Diaz said he heard about Thursday’s fundraiser on Facebook and decided to have his seven years’ worth of long black locks shaved in honor of his cousin who was recently diagnosed with breast cancer. “This is for a good cause,” Diaz said. Mike DiRubio, one of the producers of the Saturday event, had his head shorn for Thursday’s fundraising effort. He said the haircuts are “just symbolic” but that support for friends and family suffering from cancer is a social and family obligation.“We’ve all lost somebody to cancer,” DiRubio said. “It’s a community’s responsibility to do something for people.”For more information about Saturday’s fundraiser or to donate go to www.teresagloverfund.com.

Computerized Crime-fighter

Ben Charnota is an unlikely computer nerd: an outdoorsy guy who

Lifeless traffic signal boxes given shot of adrenaline

The next wave of eye-catching public artwork depicting celebrated Gilroy landscapes, culture, wildlife and American pride will color the Garlic Capital one brushstroke at a time at an intersection near you by mid-April or May.

“I wish this was” in downtown: [Fill in the blank]

Imagine that empty storefront in downtown as an artisan bakery. Instead of the bleak cement slab, there are black-and-white tiles and tables to meet with friends or co-workers. Instead of a “for lease” sign, the greeting reads, “fresh croissants and coffee.”

Briefs: Tip a cop at Applebees, help the homeless

On April 24, the Gilroy Police Department will be serving the community as usual, but in a slightly different capacity than usual - serving food.

Plant sale set to bloom in S. County

The South Valley Fleurs Garden Club is set to host an annual plant sale between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. on Apr. 12 at the corner of East Second and Depot streets in Morgan Hill.

Working for a living

Dale Holley is passionate about his job. The 21-year-old Gilroy

SOCIAL MEDIA

10,025FansLike
1,463FollowersFollow
2,589FollowersFollow