THE MICHIGAN DAILY a 4 4+ 1 Hi nckleyi Each year, on March 15th, Hinckley, Ohio witnesses the clock-like return of some 75 turkey vultures to their roost trees by the cliffs and the caverns of Old Whipps Ledges in the Northeast corner of Medina County. Although the legend goes back 150 years it was only in 1957 that Walter Nawalaniec, a police officer for the Cleveland Metropolitan Park Sys- tem told Cuyahoga Valley Press reporter Bob Bardner that he had personally "clocked-in" the birds every March 15th for the previous six years. decessor on the police force for Hinckley reserva- deccessor on the police force for Hinckley reserva- tion, the late Charlie Willard, had watched them come, always on that day." The Cleveland Press picked up the story and printed it February 15, 1957. The story carried Nawalaniec's prediction of the buzzai'ds return in exactly one month. "Old timers, naturalists, ornithologists, editorial writers, reporters, radio announcers, movie and television cameramen, got into the act as the tension built up over the following month," wrote Bordner in his definitive work on Hinckley's buz- zards. "The History of the Legend of the Buzzards of Hinckley Ridge." The following Sunday, as expected by park of- ficials, a great throng of sight-seers descended on Hinckley. There were not. enough police to handle the traffic. Because of the chaos the enterprising chairnan Buckeyed Buzzards of the local "Chamber" (of Commerce) began planning early for what he knew was a forthcom- ing financial bonanza. By next year the women of the township were organized into labor squads and a pancake kitchen was set up at the schoolhouse. Displays were on show for the visitors, the schoolchildren painted pictures and decorated classrooms and the volunteer firemen helped di- rect traffic. Buzzard Day 1971, 14 years later, was notable for its lack of buzzards, however. Les (above, cen- ter) informed us on arrival that the Buzzards, unaccustomed to making public appearances, were unlikely to appear. So the visitors could see at least some buzzards, Dave Bitner of the Cleveland Museum of Natural Science was on hand with three of his birds. 4 Outside of town, ground thousands of police stood around, seeing any. at the buzzards' roosting tourists and an entourage of looking for buzzards without Eventually a sheriff's car pulled out and Bitner, with a buzzard on his shoulder, got out and waded through the mud so everyone could take his picture. But buzzards or no, everyone had goodtimes in Hinckley that day. The Chamber of Commerce president was interviewed by the television men from Cleveland while the community stood tall and had Ohio to lunch. 4 This page by Jim Judkis and Jonathan Miller 0-