Orange County Register August 8, 1980 (Part 1)
Orange County Register August 8, 1980 (Part 1)
Orange County Register August 8, 1980 (Part 1)
The Rams special auction In Sunday's Register not only will be the largest special section ever produced by The Register, but Its pages will be flooded with the most lavish layouts of four-color process photography and artwork ever reproduced In a single Issue of the paper. Get the colorful Rams special section Sunday and help welcome Orange County's new football team to Reglsterland.
WATCHFUL NEWSPAPER
tioned, then said that William Bonin, now charged with 14 of the so-called freeway murders, was not well known around the neighborhood. The house down the street belongs to his parents, and Bonin would occasionally stay there, the man said, adding that "it looks like he put us on the map." A group of children, riding bikes, dared each other to ride across the Bonin lawn. One of them, pedaling furiously, finally did, then all three pumped frantically until they were out of sight. The elder Bonins for years have frequented the Ric-Rac tavern a few blocks from their house. A reporter waited there for several hours, hoping they would come in. Several times groups of children shoved the door open and yelled, "Weirdo weirdo!" Some of the children were
Please See BONIN, Page AlO
At LA Convention
AP LAURPHOTO
JOYOUS REUNION Nine-month-old Arthur Lee Orange is hugged by his mother, Cynthia Orange, of Houston, after the two were reunited Thursday at Houston's Intercontinental Airport. Arthur was kidnapped June 16, but was later left behind in Knoxville/iTenn. He required hospitalization before being returned to his mother. A teen-age girl suspected of kidnapping Arthur hitched a ride in Knoxville, and was later apprehended in Wyoming.
"A tax system that penalizes achievement and success is a tax on progress itsell." Paul W. McCracken
NIWSMNR
Warm, Sunny
Patchy late night and early morning clouds, otherwise sunny and warm through Saturday. Highs in the 70s at the beaches, near 90 inland. Lows tonight in the 60s. For late news of area weather and road conditions, call (714) 972-9980.
(Additional weather. Page A2)
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WASHINGTON - A mob of about 200 Iranian militants shouting their support of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini carried their protests from the streets of Queens to the nation's capital Thursday and were met by an angry crowd of jeering, flag-waving Americans who pelted them with eggs and rotten tomatoes in Lafayette Park across Pennsylvania Avenue from the White House. The Iranians including some who were hssailed by rock-throwing Queens,' residents Wednesday night were protesting the treatment of 192 of theirt countrymen who were arrested herfc 11 days ago during an antiAmeriian demonstration. Tryii g to avoid an international incident, i cores of mounted District of Colurr.jia riot policemen surrounded the denonstrators. Whit > House sources said that President Carter was incensed that the Iranitfis had received a permit from Washington police to demonstrate throughout the sweltering afternoon because he had warned authorities 'Please See ANGRY, Page AlO