Sunday mogzine Page Three inside: page four-books Number 13- January 18, 1976 Gambling One mansge, anotherman's/i fe Last year Dale thought he knew the answer to his problem: suicide., Then he joined Gamblers Anonymous. Sin City. Gaud and Glitter. But this observer found there was more to Las Vegas than loose money By BILL TURQUE "1 HEARD THE DOOR lock behind me, and I knew that I was in big trouble," Dale C. recounted in his suburban Detroit apartment. "There was Jack and this other guy that I had never seen before. He had a hammer in one hand and a gun in the other. They took me into a back room and put me in a crouched position and he fired the gun into the floor." Jack, an owner of a "schlock plumbing repairplace" in north- west Detroit, was Dale's creditor. Dale owed him $9,000. Before this harrowing incident, Dale, not- his real name, gambled compulsively for 23 of his 32 years. From his first roulette game at age nine to his last role of the dice in Las Vegas a year ago, Dale fig- ures to have placed a bet in some form during five out of every seven days of his life. Horses, football, baseball, or poker, gambling was an integral, irreplaceable element of his exstence, much like liquor for an alcoholic or' food for a chronic overeater. When Dale was iucky, he was very lucky. When times were hard, they were rock hard. He places his losses over the years at "well in excess" of a million dollars. LAST YEAR, however, Dale looked as if he had run his luck into the ground. He was $28,000 in debt. His wife received a threatening phone call from his most impatient creditor. The police were also har- rassing him about the disappear- ance of several thousand dollars in American Express checks from his father's store. A desperate trip to Las Vegas only increased his losses ("You can nev- er win when you're pressing," he said.). Returning to Detroit, he at- tempted to remove himself from the scene with 15 barbiturates and a bottle of Cutty Sark Dale was going down for the count. Last February 11, with some coax- ing from his wife, Dale walked into his first meeting of Gambler's An- onymous (GA) in the basement of a church near his home. It was on that night, he said, that his life "started to make some sense."' His appearance is improbable for one self-described as "at one time the most dynamic gambler in De- troit." A pastel colored shirt and flared bluejeans do not fare well over a stocky frame that is los- ing a battle against an excess 20 pounds. Disheveled brown hair and a pallid complexion belie a recent Florida vacation. He looked burned out. A mortar fragment wound he re- cei.ved in Vietnam ten years ago severed a nerve and restricts the use of his arms, and he can write with -his right hand only with great difficulty. The nerve damage has resulted in-slightly uncontroled mo- D..I M . __. _1 _~~i _ u . tions iii his hands and can hardly imagine him ing cards, or throwing smoke-filled casino. arms. One cooly deal- dice in a By RICH LERNER VUT AT 16, he was already do- ing between $500 and $1,000 rth of "action" every week rough bookies and poker. That same year, he won $1,600 at a To- ledo race track only to have it evaporate four days later through more bets on baseball and horses. He was not alone either. Some of his childhood friends were just as hardcore. "At least one is dead because of gambling," Dale said. "We used to sit on the porch and bet on what color the next passing car would be. I know a guy who would bet you on whether or not it rained tomorrow." Dale enjoyed a materially com- fortable childhood in an affluent Detroit suburb. He remembers his parents as being very preoccupied with a burgeoning retail business. His father was and still is an avid gambler, though not to the same degree as his son. What bets Dale could not cover with his own earn- ings from poker an bowling, he made up for by stea ing from his father, starting at age 13 by slip- ping into his wallet for ten dol- lars at a time. His best guess is that he has taken $125,000 from . his father. GA, according to its official his- tory, owes its beginning to a chance encounter between two Los Angeles gamblers in January, 1957. Their association matured into a fellow- ship of nearly 5,000 members. But it is only a handful. According to GA, there are six million people in the U.S. who have serious trouble controlling their gambling. GA CONDUCTS its meetings in the tradition of its counter- part, Alcoholics Anonymous, with members "giving testimony" and sharing their experiences with oth- ers. Obligations are minimal-only a monthly contribution of 1 to 3 dollars and an honestddesire to stop gambling. They made a be- liever of Dale at his first meet- ing, when they asked him their traditional 20 questions (see box). One need answer "yes" to only seven to be considered a compul- sive gambler. Dale answered "yes" to 17. Hehasn't placed a bet for a year, and the experience for him seems to border on the mystical. "Do you get high? Well, try to remember your highest high, and its nothing like how I feel now." His year in GA has imbued him with a missionary zeal that has made him determined to reach oth- er problem gamblers. He says if he reaches just one, it will be worth it. Las Vegas. Just like I pictured it. Neon lights, big name stars and armies of hungry slot machines poised at full alert. The Big Time.. A real sensory over load for this small-time hustler from West To- ledo. I had the occasion to spend a few days in the city of glitter dur- ing this past Christmas vacation. The first evening there I donned an electric shirt and my, finest string of beads, and slid my ones between my twenties. Bowing my legs and gritting my teeth in the best Vegas Kid tradition, I swung back the doors to my first casino. But unlike the usual course of events, I entered the confident, ar- rogant pro - and left the budding bug-eyed novice. If I learned one thing from my first bout with Las Vegas, it was that there's a lot more to gambling than risking money. The Sin City is steeped in artifice and tacky savoir faire and people don't take kindly to you if you shatter their bubble of glitter- ing pomp. FOCUS YOUR FANCY,. for in- stance on the "cosmopolitan" game of roulette. The "proper" way to play roulette is in silence. If one is forced to talk, any lan- guage other than English is pre- ferable, although, I must admit my pig latin didn't go over too well. Hopping onto a stool, I tossed a five dollar bill in the direction of "le croupier" and requested a stack of 25 cent chips. In my best James Bondian style, I scattered an assortment of chips across the board. -Mv birthday was the first number, and with one throw my stack of chips had doubled. The system worked, alas, only briefly, hbrause my spell of good fortune fizzled like a wet match. 007 didn't have to worry about me at the roulette table any more. Slot machines are just as much a matter of jive as feeding coins and pulling levers. And this year Rich Lerner is a Daily Sport's night editor and staff writer. slot machiners had the extra bon- us of playing the Bicentennial ma- chine. MOST OF THE slot players are women. They stand expres- sionless, stuffing the gaping slot with coin after coin after coin, pulling the lever with robot-like precision. "First you have to find one you like," explained a Los Angeles schoolteacher who has been flirt- ing with the one-armed bandits for over fifteen years. "Personally, I go for the ones with four or five symbols. "The first time you play a par- ticular machine, always put in the maximum amount allowable," she said as she demonstrated her smooth technique. "'Cause if you hit the jackpot and you didn't put in as much as you could have, you'll kick yourself. "After the first time you have to go by feel, and when the ma- chine pays, always give it a kiss or a pat on the side. "They're Just like my sixth-graders. They love atten- tion." I set out to tackle my first ma- chine. Zilch. I decided that .even though I was losing, I'd still give it a pat on the side. That way it would know I'm friendly. And then I hit it-jackpot. Twelve nickels spewed forth like manna. I gave the machine its requisite love tap and fed more coins into its hun gry mouth. AFTER IT HAD eaten everything short of my hand, I decided to-ask my schoolteacher friend for additional advice. "Use both hands to put in the money," she suggest- ed. A common mistake for a rookie. But, not once, did the machine reciprocate my generosity. Must have been constipated. I decided to abandon the one- armed bandits. I'd probably be aw- ful with six-graders, too. I figured the crap table would be one place where I could loosen my tie and my tongue and let my- self go a little. But even this row- See LAS VEGAS, Page 5 --Photos by Las Vegas News Bureau Twenty questIions Most compulsive gamblers will answer yes to at least seven of these questions. 1. Do you lose time from work due to gambling? 2. Is gambling making.your home life unhappy? 3. Is gambling affecting your reputation? 4. Have you ever felt remorse after gambling? 5. Do you ever gamble to get money with which to pay debts or to otherwise solve financial difficulties? 6. Does gambling cause a decrease in your ambition or efficiency? 7. After losing do you feel you must return as soon as possible and win back. your losses? 8. A f/er a win do you have a strong urge to return and- tin more? 9. 10. 11. Do you often gamble until your last dollar is gone? Do you ever borrow to finance your gambling? [azve you ever sold any real or personal property to finance gambling? 12. Are you reluctant to use "gambling money" for normal e vpenditures? 13. Does gambling make you careless- of the welfare of your family? 14. Do you ever gamble longer than you had planned? 15. Do you ever gamble to escape worry or trouble? 16. Hare you .crer committed, or considered committing, an illegal act to finance gambling? 17. Does gambling cause you to have difficulty in sleeping? 18. Do arguments, disappointments or frustrations create within you an r-ge to gamble? 19. Do you have an urge to celebrate any good fortune by a few hours of gambling? - I If t- i:---....1. - Bill Turque is a Daily night editor 20. cHaie y O ever considered self destruction asC-esuirs of and staff writer. See A MAN, Page 6 your gambling? i