Passer au contenu principal
La plus grande collection de journaux en ligne
Un journal d’éditeur Extra®

Reno Gazette-Journal du lieu suivant : Reno, Nevada • Page 1

Lieu:
Reno, Nevada
Date de parution:
Page:
1
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

4- no Gaze 35 Maybe higher outside melronrea SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1995 TV Guiu Imimul is primed ming recycled paper. LOt R-NAJL Voices Former Nevada star freed from house arrest "I've come to learn in the last three months that the sentence that was handed to me was dealt out for a eason. I had to deal with it. I don't like to look back. I like to look forward." Jimmy Moore Ex-UNR star speaks out, 12A seek counseling from a psychologist, who will make monthly reports to the judge.

Dilworth granted permission for Moore to live out of state. Moore, from Lcmoore, said he will live with an aunt in southern California's Orange County. "There's not a whole lot of feeling," said Moore, outside the Municipal Court. "I just want to move my life forward and put this ugly incident behind me." Moore was arrested about 1 a.m. Nov.

27 for striking two women and a U.S. Marine who attempted to intervene during an incident near Reno's Keystone Shopping Center. Moore declined to answer questions about his future in basketball. The 6-foot-8 forward wasn't selected in the two rounds of the recent National Basketball Association draft of college players but is believed to be a candidate to play in the Continental Basketball Association or with a foreign team. He led the Big West Conference in scoring with a 19.2-a-game average as a junior for the Wolf Pack.

Last season, as a senior, Moore averaged 12.7 points and 6.8 rebounds for a team that had an 1 8-1 1 record. Friday's review hearing in Municipal Court took only 10 minutes. It was a follow-up to an agreement reached June 23 with his attorney, Dean Heidrich. "If I get monthly reports from your counselor that you're doing well, I don't need to see you," Dilworth told Moore on Friday. The judge said if there were bad reports or reports aren't sent to him he would order Moore back to court.

"Do you promise me, if I say to come back, you will come back? Will TX you do that?" Dilworth said. "Yes," Moore said. Heidrich, who began representing Moore in May, said he and Moore were satisfied with Friday's outcome. Dilworth said Moore should be counseled by a psychologist. "This will be counseling to deal with alternative ways to handle tough situations," Heidrich said.

Dilworth said, "I think it will be very helpful if the counselor has a background in domestic violence." Reno City Attorney Patricia Lynch said her office was satisfied with the outcome. "We just felt at this point it really was the judge's decision," she said. "We were pleased with the initial decision (the sentence). The case was handled appropriately, and it was the proper decision given the severity of the battery." Vintage sports i(o)W(ipIl(fi)P -riJi test ri- 7 u--r vi 3 1 'A 1I'V Vl' Vc-1 ttlf JxlZ lZT I By Steve Sneddon GAZETTE-JOURNAL Former University of Nevada star Jimmy Moore was free Friday for the first time since he was jailed March 31 after pleading no contest to two counts of misdemeanor battery. Moore, 22, was released from house arrest by Reno Municipal Court Judge Jay Dilworth.

Moore had been in the Washoe County Jail until June 30, when he was placed on house arrest, for one count. Moore gained the early release from the six-month sentence because of good behavior and work credits. He paid a $205 fine plus a $65 administrative assessment Friday. Dilworth suspended another six-month sentence for the second battery count after Moore agreed to Date with death: Confessed killer Due Cong Huynh says he wants to be executed Sept. 1 1 so he can join his slain 4-year-old son in heaven.

IB Mormon crickets: This year Mother Nature beat the pesky varmints where pesticides failed. 1B Homefinder News Opinion RenoSparks iMetro Watch Lottery Obituaries Business Markets Classified 1-6C Auto 1-1 4D Sierra Life 1-8E Dear Abby 2E 1-1 4A 13A 1-4B 2B 2B 4B 5-8B 5-7 TV Watch Religion Comics Crossword Sports 4E 6E 7E 7E 1-6F 101' HIGH LOW uu Today: patchy clouds. Tonight: partly cloud through Sunday. 14A Shopping for a mountain bike: Find out what models and features will meet your needs. 1E va "i pi ri ID for Reno event Weekend schedule Today 10 a.m.

to 2 p.m.: Show 'N Shine, Virginia Street 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.: swap meet. Comstock Hotel-Casino 9 p.m.: photos under the arch Music Main Stage, Virginia Street (free) 9:30 a.m.: Jeff Leep Quartet 11:40 a.m.: Bill Hecht Trio 1:50 p.m.: Latin group, No Comprende 4 p.m.: Tom PeronBud Spangler Quartet 6:20 p.m.: Kitty Margolis and Quartet Wingfield Park (free) 10 a.m.: One-Foot-ln-The-Grave Dixie Band 12:10 p.m.: Lin Phillips Quarte Pioneer Center 8 p.m.: Dave Brubeck; tickets, $25 and $35 Sunday 9 to 11 a.m.: Jazz Brunch, downtown Reno 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.: Funkhana obstacle course, Virginia Street Music Main Stage, Virginia Street (free) 1 Mi Gazette Journal tile photo JIMMY MOORE: The former star Wolf Pack forward is shown in action during this past season. Boosted parental involvement: Measure sponsored by religious right.

By Martin Griff ith ASSOCIATED PRESS Gov. Bob Miller on Friday vetoed a religious-right sponsored bill aimed at increasing parental involvement in the public school system. "I believe all of us agree that more parental involvement in our children's schooling would be beneficial," Miller wrote in his veto message. "However, Senate Bill 341 has too many flaws to appropriately address this desire." The bill was one of four Miller vetoed Friday. The school bill, sponsored by Sen.

Ann O'Connell, R-Las Vegas, and supported by the Christian Coalition and Eagle Forum, would have required schools to provide parents full access to records of their children. It also would have prohibited school officials from asking pupils, any questions about a variety of top- State Department spokesman Nicholas Burns hinted Friday that Clinton may be prepared to exchange ambassadors with Hanoi, citing what he described as a "new level of cooperation" with Vietnam on the MIA and POW issue. But veterans and family groups reject such claims, contending that Vietnam has not lived up to the demands for an accounting that Clinton had set as a condition for normal relations. "I'd be totally against it at this time," said Tony Patterson, a Vietnam veteran who is commander of the Reno-Sparks chapter of a disabled veterans organization. "I know guys in the hospital right now suffering from Vietnam." Patterson, an Army paratrooper, was among the first U.S.

combat soldiers in Vietnam. He was wounded Planning Commission chairwoman, continues to question the deal. "They have not told the people any of the facts, but are indebting the county for $32 million, which is as much as the school bond," Patrick said. "The County Commission went out and spent $32 million of taxpayers' money, and I don't know how they can ethically doit." Patrick said she also questions whether the county can legally spend $1.7 million set aside to develop Dangberg Home Ranch as a historic park. mm car buffs jazzed Northgate Golf Course V4f 1 mile N.ran 3 miles Gabriel MorbnGazette-Journal I DA's view Shootings like Friday's are a legal gray area.

1 2A early 1994. Allgeier said he had no overnight regrets for his multimillion-dollar vote. "I slept well," Allgeier said. "We have all had plenty of time to think about everything involved in the ranch, and I made my decision. Like I always tell my constituents, I spend their money like I would spend my money.

And I would take advantage of the same opportunity if it was my money." It is $686 for every man, woman and child in Douglas County. The $4 million down payment (' Tt; Tim DunnGazette-Journal 10 a.m.; Fear Of FOND MEMORIES: Ed Malatesta, 89, of Los Gatos, Friday admires a 1958 Corvette Success owned by Marc Dodson of Reno on Virginia Street downtown. Malatesta, a retired mechanic 12:20 p.m.: Joyce who worked on such cars, was in town for Reno's Sports Cars and All That Jazz activities. Cooling Group Groups oppose Vietnam shift Northwest Reno resident 4' shoots car burglary suspect LEGISLATURE 95 ics, including "behavior that is illegal, antisocial, self-incriminating or demeaning." Miller said the latter provision would have created an "impossible task" for school officials in dealing with day-to-day administration and crises. He said the other provision allowing parents full access to their pupils' records is in violation of the Federal Education and Family Privacy Act.

"Finally, the bill is flawed in that it provides no financial support for educating school personnel on how to stay within the bill's requirements and (for) providing duplicates to parents of all school records," the governor wrote. Representatives of the Christian Coalition and Eagle Forum testified in support of the bill, saying it was needed because of the obtrusiveness of government into family relationships. "I thought the bill was the key to true parental involvement, to open and honest communication," said See SCHOOL on page 10A in 1965. "Why in the hell should we recognize a country that wouldn't give us half our (prisoners) back?" Patterson asked. But John Wernsing of Reno, an Army medic in Vietnam in 1969, is ready for recognition.

"When I first heard the announcement, I was a little mad," he said. "But I think we're dealing with a new generation of (Vietnamese) people. I think it would only be fair if we gave them a (chance)." The administration lifted a trade embargo against Vietnam in February 1994, contending at the time that the step would enhance Hanoi's cooperation. Clinton said then that normal relations would have to await a "full and final accounting" of missing Americans. Wire service and staff reports ToCarsonf COUNTY 1 MINOEN qq Toler Mark NowlirVGazette-Joumal jjjl Stephanie I Stockyard El DA reviewing incident: Wounded under guard at FWashoe Med.

By Phil Barber 'GAZETTE-JOURNAL i The Washoe County District Attorney's Office will decide whether a northwest Reno resident acted properly early Friday in shooting and wounding a 15-year-; old suspected car burglar. Police placed a hold and a guard CARSON VALLEY Clinton ponders normalizing ties: Issue leaves two Reno-area vets split. With a White House decision perhaps just days away, Vietnam veterans and family groups are making a last-ditch lobbying effort to dissuade President Clinton from normalizing relations with Vietnam. All of Clinton's top national security aides, including Secretary of State Warren Christopher, are recommending that he establish normal ties with Hanoi, and a "decision memo" on the subject has been drafted for his approval. half due by Oct.

5 and the last half due by close of escrow on Jan. 10, 1996 will come from room-tax money set aside to develop Dangberg Home Ranch and 7-cent property tax collected to buy water rights. The $20 million balance along with another $8 million in interest charges will have to be financed one way or the other. Some say the financing should go on the ballot and see if voters want to approve a property-tax increase. Critic Joan Patrick, former on the wounded teen-ager at Washoe Medical Center.

They did not arrest the shooter pending the DA's review. Police did not name the wounded boy because he is a minor, but he will be charged with burglary in juvenile court. And, in an unusual move, police also withheld the name of the man who shot him. Lt. Rick Saulnier described it as temporary protection for the resident and his family.

"The boy's father has threatened to retaliate with a gun," Saulnier said. He said the man said his son was shot because he is black and the resident is white. See SUSPECT on page 12A Haldan, hoping to defer forever any development on nearly a fourth of the Carson Valley floor. Commissioners have said buying the ranch and preempting development will save the county mill ions of dollars in unneeded public services like streets and schools. It will also preserve thousands of acre-feet of water and provide land for effluent storage, parks and other county services.

Haldan and her late husband, James, bought the property for $23 million from Robert Helms during bankruptcy proceedings in panch owner accepts Douglas County's $24 million offer By Lisa A. Kirk tJAZETTE-JOURNAL Slash Bar owner Ethelmae 'Haldan has agreed to Douglas County's $24 million offer to buy Jhe ranch, signing the paperwork just hours before Friday's 5 p.m. deadline. Douglas County Commission Chairman Bob Allgeier said the ales document was hand-delivered to the county just before 5 The board Thursday voted unanimously to make the offer to 1.

Obtenir un accès à Newspapers.com

  • La plus grande collection de journaux en ligne
  • Plus de 300 journaux des années 1700 à 2000
  • Des millions de pages supplémentaires ajoutées chaque mois

Journaux d’éditeur Extra®

  • Du contenu sous licence exclusif d’éditeurs premium comme le Reno Gazette-Journal
  • Des collections publiées aussi récemment que le mois dernier
  • Continuellement mis à jour

À propos de la collection Reno Gazette-Journal

Pages disponibles:
2 580 093
Années disponibles:
1876-2024