Two new ideas, one involving a twist
What can Washington do now to help consumers, housing and stocks? Options remain. The Obama administration and the Federal Reserve are reportedly considering two interesting tactics: one first employed 50 years ago, and another that could bloom into a multi-faceted effort to aid homeowners under pressure.
Groundbreaking for AIM Brings out Dignitaries
Adding a vital new twist to life in South County, in the math
Returning town history to Gilroy
Imagine my surprise when I received a phone call from a woman who said she had some Gilroy history to return our town. Her name was Carol Cox Faust, and it turned out that her father had been Rev. Ezelle Cox, pastor of the Methodist Church of Gilroy in 1938 when it burned to the ground.
Pulido leads Eskrima team to world championships
Linda Pulido, a Gilroy resident and owner of Pulido's Pro
Historic El Camino Real and modern travel
Inwardly grumbling about the hassles of modern day traveling, I
Buy some flowers, play some golf and help brand Gilroy …
Gilroy is great reason #14 ... Give it up for Goldsmith's Seeds
‘The Snow Queen’: The dark side of serendipity
When Hans Christian Anderson wrote “The Snow Queen” in 1845, he could never have fathomed in his wildest imagination (and as we all know he had a wild imagination), that his story would become a steampunk musical. He never dreamed that in the never, never, once-upon-a-time land of future theatre there was a director named Rick Lombardo and an associate director named Kirsten Brandt who would supply songs and lyrics and a reworked story. A talented Haddon Kime adds music to create an enchanting (at times confusing) “Snow Queen” that tells a story of valor, loyalty and the triumph of love.














